Incompatibility Between Regulations and Implications: Under-Explored Impacts of Sindh’s Local Government Policies on Sukkur’s Urban Governance

Although Article 140-A mandates the decentralisation of political, administrative, and fiscal authority to local governments, Sindh retains key municipal functions. This study investigates whether such partial devolution impairs Sukkur’s local governance and whether the resulting governance gap is...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zubair Ahmed Pirzada, Nida Shafaat, Dr. Shoukat Ali Mahar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology 2024-12-01
Series:JISR Management and Social Sciences & Economics
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Online Access:https://jisrmsse.szabist.edu.pk/index.php/szabist/article/view/753
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Summary:Although Article 140-A mandates the decentralisation of political, administrative, and fiscal authority to local governments, Sindh retains key municipal functions. This study investigates whether such partial devolution impairs Sukkur’s local governance and whether the resulting governance gap is genuine or overstated by political rhetoric. The research hypothesises that incomplete devolution constitutes a measurable governance gap that degrades service delivery and citizen trust. The research adopts an exploratory qualitative case-study design and triangulates the transcripts with official documents and scholarly literature. Six semi-structured interviews have been conducted with policymakers, municipal officials, and residents. Inductive thematic analysis extracted recurrent patterns of authority overlaps and fiscal dependency. The stakeholder findings confirm the gap’s reality while revealing competing narratives that sometimes magnify or downplay its scale. Findings revealed 80% reliance on provincial transfers, overlapping jurisdictions that delay infrastructure, and chronic water, sanitation, and waste services failures. Stakeholders broadly link these deficits to insufficient local autonomy, confirming the hypothesis. The research clarifies that statutory authority and guaranteeing predictable fiscal resources are prerequisites for responsive urban governance in Sindh’s secondary cities; the findings guide policymakers seeking to operationalise constitutional mandates and enhance service delivery nationwide.
ISSN:2616-7476
1998-4162