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Browsing by Author "PHIRI, Matilda Isaac"

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    Evaluation of successes and challenges in service delivery through decentralization. A Comparative study of Katete and Chipata Local Authorities
    (2026) PHIRI, Matilda Isaac
    This study evaluated the successes and challenges of service delivery under Zambia’s decentralization policy through a comparative analysis of Katete and Chipata Local Authorities. The research was guided by four objectives: assessing the extent and quality of service delivery, examining institutional and fiscal factors shaping performance, identifying major challenges affecting decentralized service provision, and proposing strategic interventions to strengthen local governance effectiveness. A mixed-methods design was employed, drawing on quantitative data from questionnaires and qualitative insights from open-ended responses. The findings reveal marked disparities between the Two (02) Districts. Chipata demonstrated stronger institutional capacity, clearer administrative structures, better staffing levels, more reliable infrastructure development and higher community participation. Katete, in contrast, faced deeper fiscal constraints, staffing shortages, limited community engagement and weaker monitoring mechanisms. Recurrent challenges across both districts included delayed fiscal transfers, political interference, bureaucratic inefficiencies, inadequate human resource capacity and insufficient transparency. Despite these constraints, respondents emphasized that enhanced fiscal autonomy, continuous staff development, participatory governance and improved administrative coordination are essential for strengthening decentralized service delivery. The results affirm decentralization theory, which posits that local authorities deliver effectively when equipped with adequate resources, autonomy and accountability systems. The study concludes that meaningful improvements in Zambia’s decentralization programme require strategic reforms that align fiscal empowerment, administrative efficiency and citizen engagement. Recommendations focus on reinforcing institutional capacity, deepening accountability mechanisms and expanding local participation. The study proposed further research to explore district-level political dynamics, digital governance innovations and long-term impacts of fiscal decentralization on rural service delivery

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