The Problematic of Legislative Oversight in Nigeria: A Study of Delta State
Main Article Content
Abstract
This study examines the problem of legislative oversight in Nigeria using Delta State as a case study. Four research questions were raised to guide the study and four null hypotheses were formulated for the study. The design of the study was a descriptive survey. The population of the study comprised 600 staff in the Delta State House of Assembly. The sample of the study consisted of 245 staff drawn from nine (9) departments using stratified and simple random techniques. The instrument used for data collection was the legislative oversight questionnaire and the collated data were analyzed using mean rating and chi-square. The findings of the study revealed that there is a significant relationship between politics of trade-off and pay-off between the legislators and the executive as well as poor commitment to oversight functions by the legislators and legislative oversight in Delta State. The study equally showed that there is a significant relationship between the culture of corruption as well as perceptual legislative subservience to the executive and legislative oversight in Delta State. The study recommended that that the legislature in Nigeria, particularly in Delta State, should be truly independent rather than operate and seen as a subservient extension of the executive arm of government, a new culture that is void of the politics of trade-off and pay-off between the legislature and the executive, as well as corruption, should be established.
Article Details
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The copyrights of the article in Indonesian J. Int'l Clinical Leg. Educ. is on the Author(s), however, before publishing, it is required to obtain written confirmation from Author(s) in order to ensure the originality (Author Statement of Originality). The statement is to be signed by at least one of the authors who have obtained the assent of the co-author(s) where applicable. This work licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0). All writings published in this journal are personal views of the authors and do not represent the views of this journal and the author's affiliated institutions.
References
Ana-Maria, R., Bastida, F. and Benito, B. (2016). Budget Transparency And Legislative Budgetary Oversight. The America Review of Public Administration. 46 (5), 34-47.
Coleman, D.N. (2016). Public finance: A contemporary application of theory to policy. New York: Harcourt Brace.
Ejikeme, J. N. (2014). Legislative oversight in Nigeria: a watchdog or a hunting dog? Journal of Law, Policy and Globalization, 22 (16), 15-24.
Ewuim, N. C., Nnamdi, D. O and Eberinwa, O. M. (2014). Legislative oversight and good governance in Nigeria National Assembly: An analysis of Obasanjo and Jonathan’s administration. Review of Public Administration and Management, 3 (6), I-14.
Fashagba, Y. J. (2017). Legislative oversight under the Nigerian presidential system. Journal of Legislative Studies, 15 (4), 439-459.
Gogo, J. T. (2018). Influence of legislative oversight on public accountability in rivers state, Nigeria, 1999-201. Unpublished Ph. D Thesis. Department of Political Science University of Nigeria, Nsukka, 1-227.
Lemos, R.T. (2014). Handbook of government budgeting. San Francisco: Jossey – Bass.
Madue, J.G. (2015). Managing value for money in the public sector. London: Champman & Hall.
Mbete, L. (2015). Internationally oversight and accountability in South Africa. Unpublished Ph.D Thesis, Department of Public Administration, Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences, University of Stellenbosch, 1-223.
Onwe, S. O. (2015). Imperatives of legislative oversight function in Nigerian democratic system. Research on Humanities and Social Sciences, 5 (4), 72-79.
Orji, P.N. (2015). Developing the Nigerian economy for an enduring democracy. Lagos: CSA Productions.