Governing disaster risks locally: Insights from COVID-19 responses by local governments in a federalising Nepal

Authors

  • Dil Khatri Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal
  • Gyanu Maskey Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal & Kathmandu University School of Arts, Nepal
  • Hemant Ojha Institute for Study and Development Worldwide, Australia & Australian National University, Australia
  • Kaustuv Raj Neupane Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal
  • Andrea Nightingale University of Oslo, Norway

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53037/egjzph83

Keywords:

COVID-19, decentralisation, disaster management, governing capacity, institutions, Nepal

Abstract

Local risk governance is an underexplored topic in disaster risk management and decentralisation literature. Key knowledge gaps centre around whether and to what extent the devolution of authority leads to effective local responses to disaster risk. In this paper, we assess the local government’s response to COVID-19 risk in Nepal as a contribution to filling this knowledge gap. The COVID-19 crisis hit Nepal soon after officials were elected for the newly created local governments (Palikas) as part of the new federal governance reform. Drawing on the evidence from eight Palikas, we identify key factors determining local risk governing capacity. We found some Palikas were better able to provide immediate local response to COVID-19 than others, and we discuss why. Most of the Palikas faced constraints to provide health services such as COVID tests and treatments to infected patients. Our analysis shows that the ability of Palikas to respond to the risk was shaped by two key factors: a) the functioning of institutional mechanisms and decision-making abilities and b) the ability to access and mobilise resources including financial and human resources, infrastructure, and knowledge. This analysis shows that devolution of power alone is not a main criterion of local risk governance capacity and suggests the need to consider other factors that shape local institutional capacity. 

References

Acharya, K.K., 2018. The capacity of local governments in Nepal: from government to governance and governability? Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration, 40(3), pp.186-197, DOI: 10.1080/23276665.2018.1525842

Acharya, K.K. and Zafarullah, H., 2020. Institutionalising federalism in Nepal: operationalising obstacles, procrastinated progress. Public Administration and Policy, 23(2), pp.125-139.

Ahmed, M. and Iqbal, K., 2009. Disaster and decentralization. Social Science Research Network.

Amaratunga, D., Malalgoda, C., Haigh, R., Panda, A. and Rahayu, H., 2018. Sound practices of disaster risk reduction at local level. Procedia engineering, 212, pp.1163-1170.

Bardhan, P., & Mookherjee, D. Eds., 2006. Decentralization and local governance in developing countries: A comparative perspective. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Bhandari, D., Neupane, S., Hayes, P., Regmi, B., Marker, P., 2020a. Disaster risk reduction and management in Nepal: Delineation of roles and responsibilities. Oxford Policy Management Limited.

Bhandari, C., Bhurtel, A., Callen, M., Kayastha, C., Lama, T., Pande, R., Paudel, B., Pokharel, T., Shahi, K., Singhania, D., Wasti, S. and Wolf, A., 2020b. Covid-19 and Nepal’s health Financing insights and recommendations based on local government response during full lockdown. Available at: https://www.nasc.org.np/sites/default/files/doc/Nepalbrief_20200803_FINAL%20-%20NASC%20website.pdf

Cheema, G. Shabbir, and Dennis A. Rondinelli, ed., 2007. Decentralizing governance: Emerging concepts and practices. Brookings Institution Press.

Chaudhary, D., 2019. The decentralization, devolution and local governance practices in Nepal: the emerging challenges and concerns. Journal of Political Science, 19, pp.43-64.

Eriksen, S.H., Nightingale, A.J., Eakin, H., 2015. Reframing adaptation: The political nature of climate change adaptation. Global Environ. Change 35, pp.523–533.

Faguet, J. P., 2012. Decentralization and popular democracy: Governance from below in Bolivia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

IOM & MoFAGA., 2019. Needs and capacity assessment of fourteen rural and urban municipalities on disaster risk reduction and management in Nepal. IOM & MOFAGA. Kathmandu.

Jones, S., Oven, K.J. and Wisner, B., 2016. A comparison of the governance landscape of earthquake risk reduction in Nepal and the Indian State of Bihar. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 15, pp.29-42.

Khatri, D.B., Nightingale, A.J., Ojha, H., Maskey, G. and Lama ‘Tsumpa’, P.N., 2022. Multi-scale politics in climate change: the mismatch of authority and capability in federalizing Nepal. Climate Policy, 22(8), pp.1084-1096.

Khazai, B., Anhorn, J. and Burton, C.G., 2018. Reliance performance scorecard: measuring urban disaster resilience at municipality levels of geography with case study application to Lalitpur, Nepal. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 31, pp.604–616.

Lund, C. and Boone, C., 2013. Introduction: land politics in Africa–constituting authority over territory, property and persons. Africa, 83(1), pp.1-13.

Mainali, R., Tosun, M.S. and Yilmaz, S., 2021. Local response to the COVID‐19 pandemic: The case of Nepal. Public Administration and Development, 41(3), pp.128-134.

Malalgoda, C., Amaratunga, D. and Haigh, R., 2016. Local governments and disaster risk reduction: Aconceptual framework. Massey University/The University of Auckland.

Malla, S.B., Dahal, R.K. and Hasegawa, S., 2020. Analyzing the disaster response competency of the local government official and the elected representative in Nepal. Geoenvironmental Disasters, 7(1), pp.1-13.

Manandhar, M.D., Marker, P., et al.,2019. Political economy analysis of disaster risk reduction and management (DRRM). Kathmandu: Oxford Policy Management – Policy and Institutions Facility.

Miller, M. A., & Douglass, M., 2016. Introduction: Decentralising disaster governance in urbanising Asia. Habitat International, 52, pp.1-4. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2015.08.028

Nepal Disaster Report. 2019. Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of Nepal. Singhdurbar: Kathmandu, Nepal.

Nightingale, A.J., 2017. Power and politics in climate change adaptation efforts: Struggles over authority and recognition in the context of political instability. Geoforum, 84, pp.11-20.

Nightingale, A. J., 2018. The socioenvironmental state: Political authority, subjects, and transformative socionatural change in an uncertain world. 1(4), 688-711. doi:10.1177/2514848618816467

Nightingale, A.J., Lenaerts, L., Shrestha, A., Lama ‘Tsumpa’, P.N. and Ojha, H.R., 2019. The material politics of citizenship: struggles over resources, authority and belonging in the New Federal Republic of Nepal. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, 42(5), pp.886-902.

Ojha, H.R., Khatri, D.B., Shrestha, K.K., Adhikari, B and Pokharel, K., 2021. Investigating institutional limits to climate adaptation: A case study of landslide in the mountains of Nepal.

Rumbach, A., 2016. Decentralization and small cities: Towards more effective urban disaster governance? Habitat International, 52, 35-42. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2015.08.026.

Sharma, P., 2014. State restructuring in Nepal: Context, rationale and possibilities. In B. Karki, & R. Shrestha (Eds.), The Federalism Debate in Nepal (pp. 77-126). Nepal: UNDP.

Shrestha, B., Pathranarakul P., 2018. Nepal Government’s emergency response to the 2015 earthquake: a case study. Soc Sci 7(8).

Shahi, M.B. and Devkota, C., 2022. Local Government Response in Corona Pandemic: An Overview of Karnali Province. Research Nepal Journal of Development Studies (RNJDS), 5(1), pp.87-105.

Sikor, T. and Lund, C., 2009. Access and property: a question of power and authority. Development and change, 40(1), pp.1-22.

UNISDR, W., 2012. Disaster risk and resilience. Thematic think piece, UN system task force on the Post-2015 UN Development Agenda.

Vij, S., Russell, C., Clark, J., Parajuli, B.P., Shakya, P. and Dewulf, A., 2020. Evolving disaster governance paradigms in Nepal. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 50, p.101911

Pokharel, K., Devkota, K., Fischer, H. & Maskey, G., 2022. Implications of decentralisation for disaster governance in Nepal’s federalism: Case study of COVID-19 response of four selected local governments. New Angle: Nepal Journal of Social Science and Public Policy, 8, 1-20.

Sharma, K., KC, A., Subedi, M. & Pokharel, B. 2018. Challenges for reconstruction after Mw 7.8 Gorkha earthquake: a study on a devastated area of Nepal. Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, 9, 760-790.

Downloads

Published

2023-11-10

How to Cite

“Governing disaster risks locally: Insights from COVID-19 responses by local governments in a federalising Nepal” (2023) New Angle: Nepal journal of social science and public policy, 8(1), pp. 1–25. doi:10.53037/egjzph83.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >>