An investigation into a viable service delivery system in relation to water and sanitation in Ugu District Municipality
Date
2021-10
Authors
Dlamini-Tshazi, Khethiwe P.
Journal Title
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Abstract
Water needs permeate all aspects of human existence and activities, and water
is fundamental and irreplaceable to humans. However, developing effective
water and sanitation governance arrangements is of increasing concern.
Although a general conceptualisation of governance exists, there is little
guidance on a governance system’s operational and evaluative components.
Therefore, fundamental challenges to improving water governance are identified
and investigated in the study. The research focus is on holistic governance issues
concerning water and sanitation provision to households and businesses, with
special reference to the Ugu District Municipality (UDM) in the KwaZulu-Natal
province, South Africa. Governance is analysed based on interconnectedness of
structures and system components to achieve organisational results. A
qualitative method, combined with systems thinking methodologies, namely a
Viable Systems Model (VSM) is used, as well as Soft systems methodology
(SSM). Semi-structured interviews to targeted municipal officials and focus
groups of ward councillors were used to gather information, share perceptions,
experiences, concerns, and perspectives in water and sanitation service delivery.
Interview results are an indicator of the generation and applicability of VSM to
service delivery issues at UDM and provided empirical evidence when VSM gaps
were identified. VSM data consisted of an initial comprehensive system map,
comparing various manifestations of the organisation within their environment.
The analysis demonstrated municipal challenges as a combination of soft and
hard issues, including leadership oversight, fragmentation of structures, lack of
information coordination and shortages of resources. VSM also fosters an indepth understanding of the UDM as a system, supporting its suitability, although
the ability to implement suggested improvements was not confirmed. The study
emphasises the necessity for a holistic approach and heeding of soft issues when
providing water and sanitation. The study contribution includes VSM application
to strengthen governance in water service authorities, highlighting VSM strengths
and shortfalls in the applied context, and presents derived methodological
lessons, which broaden the knowledge of employing VSM and support its
application in practice.
Description
Submitted in Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Leadership and Complexity Studies, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2021.
Keywords
Sanitation and hygiene, Water access, Sustainable water management
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/3899