How Capacity Building in Records Maintenance Contributes to Enhancing Citizen Participation in Open Governance at the Meru County Assembly, Kenya
Date
2025-09-11Author
Fridah Kajuju, Mariu
Paul Maku, Gichohi
Catherine, Nzioka
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Citizen participation in open governance is central to democratic accountability, yet it is often
undermined by weak record maintenance practices. In Meru County Assembly, Kenya, records
management challenges, such as disorganized systems, incomplete digitization, and
undertrained personnel, have constrained citizen access to information and diminished public
trust. The purpose of this study was to assess how capacity building in records maintenance
contributes to enhancing citizen participation in open governance. Guided by the Records
Continuum Theory, which conceptualizes records as dynamic and continuously managed
resources supporting accountability and transparency, the study adopted a mixed-methods case
study design in Meru County. The target population comprised 424 individuals, including 70
Members of the County Assembly, 84 staff, and 270 citizens. Using stratified random
sampling, a sample of 270 respondents was drawn. Data were collected through structured
questionnaires and semi-structured interviews. Instrument validity was ensured through expert
review, factor analysis, and pilot testing, while reliability was confirmed using Cronbach’s
alpha (α ≥ 0.70). Quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics (Percentages and
frequencies) and Pearson correlation analysis in SPSS, while qualitative data underwent
thematic analysis. The findings revealed a strong positive relationship between capacity
building and citizen participation (r = 0.77, p < 0.001). Training programs, workshops on digital
tools, and continuous professional development improved staff efficiency and enhanced citizen
access to records, thereby strengthening trust in governance. However, gaps persisted in
inclusivity, digital literacy, and consistency of training. The study concludes that sustained
capacity building is a critical enabler of transparency and participatory democracy in devolved
assemblies. It recommends that the Meru County Assembly, supported by the County
Government of Meru and oversight agencies such as the Public Service Commission,
institutionalize regular training, invest in digital literacy, and align staff capacity initiatives
with citizen engagement strategies. The study’s novelty lies in empirically demonstrating how
targeted human capacity building in records maintenance, not merely technological upgrades,
directly fosters citizen empowerment, offering a replicable model for other county assemblies
and developing democracies.
Publisher
Journal of Information and Technology
Subject
Capacity BuildingRecords Maintenance
Citizen Participation
Open Governance
Meru County Assembly
