Collaboration is the oil that keeps an organisation running smoothly and efficiently. To collaborate well, people must share ideas, offer feedback and voice concerns. They will only do that if they feel comfortable and respected. It is therefore, important that a leader cultivates and promotes a culture that makes everyone feel like they are heard and have value to add. Ask for input from all team members, and not just the usual suspects.
Sunday, October 15, 2017
Monday, June 19, 2017
Why African States Remain Fragile?
At independence, post-independence African states were and continue to be rooted in the political, social and economic conditions experienced under colonialism. On coming to power at independence, African elites inherited a state system established by the former colonial rulers. This system lacked legitimacy, capacity and resources. It was geared towards law enforcement and control of ‘native’ populations, and secondarily if at all to their welfare. Mechanisms of accountability did not exist and civil society was weak. Economies had been geared towards serving the needs of the colonizer rather than the needs of the colonized. It was in this context that the new elites use the state and its resources to establish their political authority.
As a consequence, African states are usually characterized as having:
a) A strong executive to the detriment of the judiciary, parliament and civil society (least unionized) – often with power concentrated in the hands of a president;
b) An weak and often corrupt civil service – with civil servants using proximity to state resources for self aggrandizement and material advancement; and
c) A marginalized civil society - very few formal associations, even where formal associations exist (such as trade unions, religious groups, traditional leaders, business associations, even political parties), they are either marginalized from the decision-making process or are co-opted by government into patron-client relations
The post-independence African states inherited the colonial boundaries that did not respect the traditional ethnic, linguistic or religious divisions that existed in pre-colonial times, and imposed artificial "nation-states" on rival ethnic groups which did not share a fundamentally distinct or internally homogenous culture. The heterogenous and multi-tribal character of African societies reflects the circumstances of Africa's colonization and partitioning that were done without regard to either the interests or the natural divisions and institutions of its peoples. The administrative and political infrastructure devised by the colonial administrators so as to effectively and economically govern the colonies was feudal, both in its basic principles and organization. The colonial state inherited by the new African leaders at independent was essentially no more than an administrative convenience and a legal fiction. The result was that the newly independent African nation-states suffer from latent ethnic conflict. In eliminating these alternative sites of political power, post-independence African states continue to rely, as colonial ones had done, on coercion that at times creates more civil conflicts.
As a consequence, African states are usually characterized as having:
a) A strong executive to the detriment of the judiciary, parliament and civil society (least unionized) – often with power concentrated in the hands of a president;
b) An weak and often corrupt civil service – with civil servants using proximity to state resources for self aggrandizement and material advancement; and
c) A marginalized civil society - very few formal associations, even where formal associations exist (such as trade unions, religious groups, traditional leaders, business associations, even political parties), they are either marginalized from the decision-making process or are co-opted by government into patron-client relations
The post-independence African states inherited the colonial boundaries that did not respect the traditional ethnic, linguistic or religious divisions that existed in pre-colonial times, and imposed artificial "nation-states" on rival ethnic groups which did not share a fundamentally distinct or internally homogenous culture. The heterogenous and multi-tribal character of African societies reflects the circumstances of Africa's colonization and partitioning that were done without regard to either the interests or the natural divisions and institutions of its peoples. The administrative and political infrastructure devised by the colonial administrators so as to effectively and economically govern the colonies was feudal, both in its basic principles and organization. The colonial state inherited by the new African leaders at independent was essentially no more than an administrative convenience and a legal fiction. The result was that the newly independent African nation-states suffer from latent ethnic conflict. In eliminating these alternative sites of political power, post-independence African states continue to rely, as colonial ones had done, on coercion that at times creates more civil conflicts.
Monday, June 5, 2017
The greatest contradiction in human – environment interactions
Today 5th June is
WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY. The World celebrates nature. The theme for World
Environment Day 2017 "Connecting People to Nature", implores us all
to get outdoors and into nature, to appreciate its beauty and its importance,
and to take forward the call to protect the Earth that we share. Land is the
foundation of environment.
Land encompasses
surface, space, soil, provision of food and water, and a basis for urban and
industrial development. Land stands for property and is a production factor
besides labor and capital. Land embodies many more dimensions, such as
homeland, place of ancestry, a prerequisite for realizing individual freedom,
and a basis for survival or wealth.
In traditional
ancient societies, land was considered a gift from God that allows satisfying
primary needs for food and shelter and, therefore, it is not transferable nor
has it value. As put poetically by Polanyi (1944:187): “Land is tied up with
the organization of kinship, neighbourhood, craft, and creed – with tribe and
temple, village, guild, and church. … It invests a man’s life with stability;
it is the site of his habitation; …; it is the landscape and the seasons”.
With the entrenchment
of market economy or capitalism societies are changing, and a growing number of
people are gradually losing the link with their ancestral land as a common
asset. Instead of viewing land as a sacred trust, a gift of God to all humans,
the idea of ownership and private property as a sacred right was introduced. The
sanctification of property rights is an essential feature of markets. The
market economy separates the man from the land, and turn both into commodities
freely available for sale and purchase.
Bringing land
into the ambit of the marketplace was a slow process, which followed centuries of
violent dispossession initially in Europe, then Americas, Australia and New
Zealand. First agricultural capitalism created the need for enclosures of vast
tracts of land. Spearheaded by philosophers like John Locke (1689)’s The
Second Treatise of Government, new theories of property were developed to
facilitate accomplishment of this transformation. Theories of property have
become a bedrock of contemporary economic thought and arguments favouring private
property over the public need for commons.
Since as early
as 13th Century in Europe, years of violent dispossession of commons
were and continue to create poor people as described by Karl Polanyi (1944:
37): “The lords and nobles were upsetting the social order, breaking down
ancient laws and custom, … by violence… They were literally robbing the poor of
their share in the commons, tearing down the houses … [of] the poor. The fabric
of society was being disrupted; desolate villages and the ruins of human
dwelling testified to the fierceness with which the revolution raged,
endangering the defences of the country, wasting its towns, decimating its
population, turning its overburdened soil into dust, harassing its people and
turning them from decent husbandmen into a mob of beggars and thieves”.
According to
Thomas Malthus, the poor were responsible for their lot because of
overbreeding, leading to an imbalance between the population and the food.
Unless this overbreeding was checked, it would lead to the spread of vice and
misery, which is the natural result of poverty. Thomas Malthus (1798:
61)’s An Essay on the Principle of Population argues that feeding the
poor would aggravate the problem of poverty by creating even more poor. With
appropriate laws of the time, the dispossessed poor are driven into a pool of
surplus labour required for mass capitalist production. A clearer expression of
the necessity of poverty for providing labour is given by Burke (1877, cited by
Winch, 1985: 240), who wrote: “When we affect to pity as poor those who must
labour or the world cannot exist, we are trifling with the condition of
mankind.” Ricardo (2010: 45) wrote that “The principle of gravitation is not
more certain than the tendency of (laws providing relief for the poor) to
change wealth and vigour into misery and weakness ... until at last all classes
should be infected with the plague of universal poverty.”
As argued by
Karl Polanyi in his 1944 monumental classic The Great Transformation: The
Political and Economic Origins of Our Times. The commodification of human
beings and land required by the dominance of the market has done tremendous
damage to society and environment. The value of human life has been degraded to
their earning power. The world was peaceful until people started selling land,
labour (turning human lives into saleable commodities in order to create a
labor market) and money – three commodities very crucial to the efficient
functioning of a market economy.
Saturday, May 6, 2017
There is nothing like free economy
All economists and non-economists acknowledge the need for some minimum rules or institutions to govern and regulate economic activities. Even the most ardent public-choice economist would agree that laws are needed to enforce contracts and protect property rights. A liberal economy certainly need agreed upon rules. A liberal economy can succeed only it it provides public goods like security and a stable monetary system, eliminates market failures, and prevents cheating and free-riding. Although the primary purpose of rules or regulations is to resolve economic problems, many governments enact rules for political rather than for strictly economic reasons. As such, the most common and noteworthy feature of organized society today is the tendency towards governmental interference in every aspect of productive effort. Almost every useful human act from selling tomato to building a multi-storey cruise ship, is supervised, taxed or subsidized by some local or national civil authority. These civil authorities tax, subsidize, license or record in one way or another almost all activities performed by the people under their jurisdictions. There is a similar governmental interference in trade as it is in the industry. Some lines of industry or trade are helped with tax holidays, concessions, credit guarantees, and many other convenient measures, while at the same time others are burdened so to be made unprofitable.The Big Question is: How Do Authorities Determine Who to Help and Who to Burden? There is basically no real principle or method to determine who to tax or subsidize, support or obstruct, however, in functioning multi-party democracy, it is the interests of the citizens that should be protected. By voting, citizens exercise their duties of constituting a local or national authority. Citizens should equally monitor the elected authorities on their behaviour with respect to the way they moderate human activities using the instruments of authority - taxes, subsidies, licenses, permits, concessions or police, and take appropriate remedy.
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