Community and Economic Development in Pakistan: The Case of Citizen Community Boards in Hafizabad and a Japanese Perspectives
In: The Pakistan development review: PDR, Band 45, Heft 4II, S. 575-585
Abstract
In 2001, a scheme called Citizen Community Board (CCB), a kind
of community-based organisation (CBO), was introduced in Pakistan as a
devolution policy, under which local people propose to the local
government development projects through forming a CCB and upon approval
the local government funds 80 percent of the project cost. Since 2001,
however, both the number of CCBs and that of approved projects have been
below the expected level. This raises a concern that the Pakistani
society with limited historical experience in CBO-based development is
too handicapped for the CCB scheme to be successful. Although the number
of empirical studies on Pakistan's CCB scheme has been increasing [e.g.,
see Cheema and Mohmand (2004), Cheema, et al. (2006)], our understanding
on conditions for a success of such schemes is limited. This paper thus
attempts to analyse the conditions in the context of community and
economic development in Pakistan from Japanese Perspectives.
Problem melden