Brief

Complexities of service delivery and state-building

Abstract

Approximately 4.75 billion USD of international aid money was spent in South Sudan between 2012 and 2014 alone. Yet despite the intense international engagement in institution-building, supposedly to help improve people’s perceptions of governance, South Sudan descended into armed conflict in 2013. The SLRC South Sudan programme has been working since 2012 to identify and understand the realities of access to basic services and perceptions of governance in post-independence South Sudan. This paper describes the findings from research carried out in several areas of South Sudan in the context of armed conflict and raiding. The findings show that despite state-building efforts, service delivery remained inadequate in remote areas and that the interface between service delivery and people’s perceptions of the state is complex. The authors recommend that the highly political nature of state-building and post-conflict transformation processes should be more systematically taken into account by external actors involved in South Sudan. This research was funded under the Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium (SLRC) programme