Skip to main content
Logo
Article · 8 Mar 2020

Local health governance in Tajikistan: accountability and power relations at the district level

by Eelco Jacobs, Claudia Baez Camargo · Published by International Journal for Equity in Health
Corruption Prevention and Public Governance

Relationships of power, responsibility and accountability between health systems actors are considered central to health governance. Despite increasing attention to the role of accountability in health governance a gap remains in understanding how local accountability relations function within the health system in Central Asia. This study addresses this gap by exploring local health governance in two districts of Tajikistan using principal-agent theory.

The results of the study:

  • provide insight into the complexity of local governance relations and constraints to formal accountability processes;
  • underline the importance of informal accountability tools and the political-economic context in shaping principal-agent relations;
  • serve to demonstrate the use and limitations of agency theory in health governance analysis;
  • point to the importance of entrenched positions of power in local health systems.
How to cite

Jacobs, E., Baez Camargo, C. Local health governance in Tajikistan: accountability and power relations at the district level. Int J Equity Health 19, 30 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-020-1143-7

Connect with us

Stay up to date with new opportunities to learn, engage and work with the Basel Institute

We use cookies to measure how this site is used. Accept to allow analytics cookies. Essential, cookieless measurement runs regardless. More info