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Good Governance in Nigeria
Rethinking Accountability and Transparency in the Twenty-First Century

Drawing on original fieldwork in Nigeria, Portia Roelofs reconsiders what good governance means, focusing on accountability and transparency.

Portia Roelofs (Author)

9781009235426, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 20 April 2023

264 pages
23.5 x 15.9 x 2.5 cm, 0.66 kg

'Roelofs is to be commended for taking the terms of Nigerian political life seriously, reading them not as evidence for a theory generated elsewhere, but as serious theoretical and ethical contributions to global and local discussions about accountability and transparency in politics. Paired with her refreshingly clear and direct writing, this book is as readable as it is compelling.' Leigh K. Jenco, London School of Economics and Political Science

Drawing on original fieldwork in Nigeria, Portia Roelofs argues for an innovative re-conceptualisation of good governance. Contributing to debates around technocracy, populism and the survival of democracy amidst conditions of inequality and mistrust, Roelofs offers a new account of what it means for leaders to be accountable and transparent. Centred on the rise of the 'Lagos Model' in the Yoruba south-west, this book places the voices of roadside traders and small-time market leaders alongside those of local government officials, political godfathers and technocrats. In doing so, it theorises 'socially-embedded' good governance. Roelofs demonstrates the value of fieldwork for political theory and the associated possibilities for decolonising the study of politics. Challenging the long-held assumptions of the World Bank and other international institutions that African political systems are pathologically dysfunctional, Roelofs demonstrates that politics in Nigeria has much to teach us about good governance.

Introduction: competing conceptions of good governance
1. Contested legacies of good governance
2. Good governance, what's not to love? The Lagos model in Lagos, Oyo and Ekiti states
3. Be accessible! Accountability, performance and the politician who is 'always in a meeting'
4. Theorising accountability as accessibility: communication, social sanctions and the limits of principal-agent models
5. Transparency in people: information, cabals and the politics of hidden networks
6. Socially embedded good governance: the public-private divide, out-of-office politicians and 'personal' politics in Africa
Conclusion: what Nigeria can teach us about good governance: from socially embedded governance to twenty-first-century democracy.

Subject Areas: Regional government [JPR], Political structures: democracy [JPHV], Constitution: government & the state [JPHC], Political science & theory [JPA], African history [HBJH]

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