Integrated Development Planning (IDP) in South Africa
        
Since the end of the Apartheid regime, South Africa has implemented a
        number of reform steps in order to spur the transformation process in
        the country. Political and constitutional reforms included the
        restructuring of government spheres into national, provincial and local
        tiers, the creation of new policy and legal frameworks and an extensive
        re-demarcation process which resulted in more viable municipalities.
        In this transformation process, municipalities and communities at the
        local level have become focal areas of development endeavors. It is
        here, on the local level, that non-racial and viable municipalities need
        to be established which are supposed to function as the building blocks
        of the new society. This means that local government is becoming a key
        role-player in the whole process and has to fulfill a central
        developmental role in it.
        One of the key tools for local government to cope with its new
        developmental role is Integrated Development Planning (IDP). In contrast
        to the role planning played in the past, integrated development planning
        is now seen as a function of municipal management, as part of an
        integrated system of planning and delivery. Integrated Development
        Planning is meant to be a consultative, systematic and strategic process
        that should arrive at decisions on issues such as municipal budgets,
        land management, promotion of local economic development and
        institutional transformation.
        The IDP methodology recommends that local governments initiate a
        participatory process to work their way from the visions and objectives
        for the respective municipality to localised strategic guidelines. These
        strategic guidelines need to consider important development aspects
        under the given local circumstances and will after a public debate
        finally be turned into operational strategies. Apart from spatial,
        poverty, gender and environmental aspects, local economic development is
        a crucial area that local governments need to consider for their
        strategic guidelines.
        
        More about the Roles
        and Responsibilities of District and Local Municipalities, Planning
        Approach and Methodology, Public
        Participation, and Strategies (Part
        1 and Part 2) in
        the IDP approach
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