Public participation is widely recognised as a cornerstone of democratic local governance, intended to enhance transparency, accountability, and citizen trust in decision-making processes.Despite its constitutional and legislative entrenchment in many democratic systems, meaningful public participation in local government remains largely inadequate, often reduced to symbolic or procedural compliance.This article examines the progression from citizen apathy to overt conflict as a consequence of poor public participation practices in local government.Drawing on relevant democratic governance theories and empirical evidence from local government contexts, the study interrogates how exclusionary, poorly designed, or non-responsive participation mechanisms contribute to declining civic engagement, mistrust in public institutions, and the escalation of community grievances into protests and social conflict.The article employs a qualitative desk-based approach, supported by selected case illustrations, to analyse the structural, institutional, and communicative failures that undermine effective citizen involvement in local decision-making.Key findings reveal that inadequate feedback mechanisms, elite-driven participation processes, limited access to information, and socio-economic inequalities significantly weaken participatory spaces, fostering perceptions of marginalisation and state unresponsiveness.Over time, these conditions entrench citizen apathy, which, when compounded by persistent service delivery failures, often morphs into confrontational and sometimes violent forms of engagement.The article argues that poor public participation is not merely a governance deficit but a critical catalyst of conflict at the local level.It concludes by proposing policy and practice-oriented recommendations aimed at strengthening inclusive, responsive, and deliberative participation frameworks to mitigate conflict, rebuild citizen trust, and promote sustainable local governance.
Lukman et al. (Mon,) studied this question.