The Relevance of Prismatic Sala Model to Village Administration in Otuke District: A Critical Look at Kamdini as a Presidential “Neighbourhood” Village
Abstract
The paper aims at analyzing the relevance of Prismatic Sala Model to village administration. Village
administration in Uganda was formalized by Article 181 of the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda
(1995), and CAP 243 of the Local Government Act (1997). Conceptually, in Kamdini village, traditional
elements of village administration covered the field of agriculture, health and environment. Heterogeneity
was categorized under constructs such as political diversity, religious affiliations, literacy levels, and
employment status while village administration was looked at the elements of mobilization and conflict
resolution. The Prismatic Sala Model was highly considered to guide the development of this paper. Despite
having over 70,626 villages in Uganda, there are currently limited empirical researches that provide
comprehensive analyses of in-house challenges of village administration, thus this paper was premised with
a view of analyzing the relevance of Prismatic Sala Model to village administration with two specific
objectives set: to identify the traditional elements posing threats to Kamdini village administration, and to
analyze the effects of heterogeneity on the administration of Kamdini village. The paper adopted a mixed
research approach and descriptive design. It targeted the entire population of Kamdini village but
purposively sampled the 20 elders, 09 Local Council One executive members and 01 Parish Chief to provide
interview and avail the necessary secondary data. Data was analyzed using computer generated software,
notably SPSS and STATA to generate both descriptive and inferential statistics. In the first study objective,
the finding reveals that Kamdini village is still majorly a traditional community, and that tradition
negatively affects the village administration in the study area. In the second study objective, the finding
from correlation analysis reveals that heterogeneity positively affects village administration where political
diversity (r=.811; p-value = 0.05) was found to be positive, very strong and statistically significant at the
0.05 alpha level; that religious affiliation (r=.449; p-value = 0.05) was positive, moderate and statistically
significant at the 0.05 alpha level; that literacy level (r=.614; p-value = 0.05) was positive, strong and
statistically significant at the 0.05 alpha level; and that employment status (r=.179; p-value = 0.05) was
positive, very weak and statistically significant at the 0.05 alpha level. The paper concludes that traditional
practices negatively affect the administration of a village; and that having heterogenic village is more
conducive in enhancing better village administration. The study recommends that a spirited campaign be
made to transform villages from the elements of prismatic societies to a modernized society.
Keywords: Traditions, Heterogeneity, Village Administration, Mobilization
URI
https://dx.doi.org/10.47772/IJRISS.2024.807144http://ir.lirauni.ac.ug/xmlui/handle/123456789/858
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