This manuscript examines South Africa's historic crisis of institutional trust—with trust in government institutions at their lowest levels since measurement began (national government 19%, Parliament 20%, local government 18%)—and argues that this trust erosion is the direct result of institutional failures in three dimensions: corruption, incompetence, and systematic disrespect for community knowledge. Drawing on Afrobarometer governance data, government audit reports, municipal governance studies, and evidence from service delivery protests and infrastructure resistance, the paper demonstrates that community opposition to development projects is not an obstacle to be overcome but a rational institutional response to repeated institutional failure. The paper proposes Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) integration as a pathway to rebuilding institutional legitimacy. By treating community knowledge as legitimate expertise rather than cultural context, engaging through cultural authority structures, and building sustained relationships, institutions can restore the social legitimacy necessary for development delivery to succeed. This work builds directly on the author's 2026 peer-reviewed publication (Zenodo) on integrating IKS, critical involvement, and social legitimacy in South African development practice, extending that framework into institutional trust dynamics and governance failure.
Thozamile Ngcozela KaDlanga (Sun,) studied this question.