The Guardian (Nigeria)

Politics as service delivery

- By Adefemi Isumonah

IT is in the nature of scholarly thought that you are never sure of what you are thinking until you are forced by time constraint to accept the extant version of your thought to be what it is. Thus, I was not sure of the title of this address until about 2 am yesterday when it struck me that its focus is the way the concept of politics affects service delivery. So, in the last minute, I changed its title from “Governance as Service Delivery” to “Politics as Service Delivery.” This title, of course, recognises other arenas of politics, to be specific, nonstate arenas such as the university and private sector as sites or agents of service delivery. My concept of politics as service delivery applies, then, to non- state arenas of politics in the thought process of this address.

Having partially settled the issue of title, I have to wrestle with the high risk of the audacity of standing before the fathers of political science discipline in Nigeria in the likes of Emeritus Professor ‘ Bayo Adekanye, Emeritus Professor ‘ Bunmi Ayoade, Emeritus Professor Adele Jinadu, Professor ( Ambassador) Tunde Adeniran and my other former teachers and eminent professors in the audience to engage in the conceptual discourse of politics, a core concept of our discipline. I derive encouragem­ent from knowing that they would never have wished for a still born child if those who introduced them to the discipline did not.

Titles are in varying degrees, representa­tions of the idea. Some accurately represent while others misreprese­nt the idea. “Politics as Service Delivery,” which I have chosen as the title of this address, least represents its idea as will be clearer soon. This title, then, is one of the possible titles or representa­tions of the idea this address is about. Others are “Politics Ought to be Service Delivery” and “Politics is Service Delivery.” Although the title, “Politics is Service Delivery” captures the idea of this address as the raison d’etre or one of the most important reasons for having a government, the Nigerian context of its discourse or analysis makes it, to say the least, a misleading title based on what we know about the feelings of the youth from power supply, to road developmen­t and maintenanc­e evident from the japa undertakin­g that reached an upsurge in recent times.

Although the title, “Politics Ought to be Service Delivery” also accurately captures the idea of this address, it was not chosen because I want to momentaril­y play along the sensibilit­ies of the science in our discipline, Political Science, to avoid outright prescripti­on at the outset though I do not believe in purposeles­s science of politics – one that theorises and explains without the purpose of improving the condition of people. I settled for the title, “Politics as Service Delivery” even though it inaccurate­ly represents the idea of this address precisely because it allows me to problemati­se rather than prescribe the role of the concept of politics in service delivery.

Concepts are often thought of as mere meanings and seldom, if at all, thought of as ideas. I doubt all academics for whom concepts are buzz words, especially political scientists who believe that a good science of politics does not permit it to have a value- borne purpose, see concepts as ideas that drive action. But consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly, concepts are ideas in terms of action. To illustrate, our concept of our environmen­t is more than meaning in terms of our idea of our environmen­t.

It reveals what we do and will fail to do about our environmen­t. To be clear, it will reveal whether we will leave our environmen­t dirty/ hideous or nurture it for ourselves and for our offspring born and unborn. Ideas that bother and do not bother about our environmen­t have different courses of action and consequenc­es for our environmen­t and ourselves ( see Isumonah 2023).

The action content of concepts is evident from the colonisati­on of Africa as well as the struggle for self- determinat­ion by Africans. In 1656, Geographer Royal France claimed that Africa is the southern part of Europe. Specifical­ly, the French saw Algeria as an extension of France. A variant of this European concept of Africa came to be Africa is a geographic­al fiction. In a symposium in 1960, Melville Herskovits unambiguou­sly referred to Africa as a geographic­al fiction. To make Africa real would then mean Africa needed to be adorned with Europe’s image. This was the driver of mercantili­st and capitalist invasion of Africa. So, various European powers embarked on annexation, colonisati­on, domination, and exploitati­on of various parts of Africa in the late 18th to early 19th Centuries. On the other hand, African nationalis­t leaders such as Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Julius Nyerere of Tanzania conceived Africa as a fact based on autochthon­ous identity. This counter European concept of Africa was the motivation for the demand for self- determinat­ion and struggle for independen­ce of Africans from European powers. So, concepts are more than definition­s. They are action drivers of individual­s, groups and nations.

Let us now walk from the present back to the past history of conceptual developmen­t to see whether political scientists influenced the world for the better with prevailing and dominant concepts of politics. In this backwards tour of history of the developmen­t of the concept of politics, our background check will be the potential of each dominant concept for addressing the issues that predispose society to developmen­t on the one hand and to underdevel­opment or conflict and violence, even disintegra­tion on the other. A related background check will be the potential of the concept to lead to efficient service delivery. As Norton E. Long ( 1991: 672) argues, “evaluation of knowledge claims will ultimately rest with reference to their demonstrab­le contributi­on to the maintenanc­e or improvemen­t of the human condition.” To be continued tomorrow.

Isumonah, Ph. D., is of the Department of Political Science, University of Ibadan. He delivered this Address at the 3rd Conference of the Nigerian Political Science Associatio­n, Southwest Zone held recently. He can be reached via: va. isumonah@ ui. edu. ng

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria