Resource information
This article is concerned with the hypothesis that devolution, understood as entrusting local government
with significant domains of autonomous discretionary power, will lead to the equitable and efficient management of
natural resources. The paper focuses on the three domains of power conceived by some theorists as critical in the management
of natural resources, namely making rules, implementing rules, and resolving disputes in relation to these rules.
Based on a case study of a village in Tanzania, the article identifies some of the main constraints the village council
encounters concerning the efficient and equitable management of common lands, and discusses whether devolution is
the solution for overcoming these constraints. It is concluded that the role and functions of higher levels of government
in decentralised natural resource management are essential and require due consideration beyond the point of arguing
for more autonomy to local government.