Dinbabo, Mulugeta F.Sibanda, DarlingtonInstitute for Social DevelopmentFaculty of Economics and Management Sciences2014-01-232024-11-052012/03/012012/03/012014-01-232024-11-052011https://hdl.handle.net/10566/17378Magister Artium (Development Studies) - MA(DVS)The purpose of this study was to examine the level and extent of community participation in the Danga Ecological Sanitation Project carried out in the Zvishavane district of Zimbabwe. The people-centered approach was chosen as a theoretical background. Both quantitative and qualitative methods were used to gather relevant information. The results indicated that the community was not fully involved in the ecological sanitation project. As a result, the project had a poor performance record. In the course of this study, political interference in community projects carried out in Zimbabwean rural communities, resulting in the failure to reach the intended beneficiaries, was also noted. Full community participation in community projects may ensure that empowerment and ownership take place. Institutional arrangements, which in most cases impede development, need to be readdressed with clear demarcation of decision-making processes.enCommunity participationDevelopment conceptualisationEcological sanitationQuantitative researchQaulitative assessmentsThe role of community participation in development initiatives: the case of the danga ecological sanitation project in the Zvishavane district, ZimbabweThesisUniversity of the Western Cape