Human Geographies: Journal of Studies and Research in Human Geography (Nov 2020)

Decentralization, jurisdictional spaces and regional development in Nigeria

  • Yemi Adewoyin,
  • Lekan M. Sanni,
  • Aina T. Adeboyejo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5719/hgeo.2020.142.6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
pp. 267 – 287

Abstract

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With the cliché of bringing development closer to the people, the Nigerian government, like many African countries, institutionalized the process of creating Local Government Areas (LGAs) and used it as a policy instrument for more than four decades. This study adopted a survey research design using data on 24 local development indicators, aimed at appraising the efficacy of this policy as a development tool. Quantitative analysis using Principal Component Analysis and its statistical outputs of initial eigenvalues and orthogonal scores shows that 36% of the LGAs ranked lowest on the dimensions of development before the creation of additional jurisdictions in 1996, while 20% and 44% ranked intermediate and highest respectively. Post-partitioning, the proportions were 24.4%, 39.4% and 36.4% respectively, thus providing evidence of the positive development impact of decentralization. The findings, however, throw up issues of distributional inequality in public investments which could be addressed by conscious planning efforts.

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