TITLE:
Citizen Voice and Accountability in County Health Systems in Kenya—Are Local Governments More Responsive to Community Health Needs?
AUTHORS:
Awuor Ponge, Antoinette Akinyi Ochieng
KEYWORDS:
Citizen Voice, Accountability, Elite Capture, Public Participation, County Health Systems, Devolution, Kenya, Health Governance
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Social Sciences,
Vol.14 No.6,
June
29,
2026
ABSTRACT: Kenya’s devolution of health services to 47 county governments, anchored in the 2010 Constitution, was premised on the expectation that geographic proximity would enhance citizen voice and improve accountability in the delivery of health services. This paper critically examines whether county-level governance structures have translated this promise into practice, with particular attention to the tension between public participation and elite capture. Drawing on theoretical frameworks of deliberative democracy, principal-agent theory, and elite capture theory, the paper argues that while devolution has opened formal spaces for citizen engagement in health governance, these spaces are routinely colonised by local political elites, health bureaucrats, and interest networks whose priorities diverge from community health needs. The paper maps the mechanisms through which elite capture undermines participatory health governance in Kenya’s counties, and proposes pathways—through social accountability tools, civil society engagement, and institutional reform—through which genuine citizen voice may be reclaimed. The analysis contributes to broader debates on decentralisation, health systems governance, and the political economy of local accountability in sub-Saharan Africa.