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The failure of the state to address the problems of rural infrastructure in rural areas of Nigeria led to the adoption of self-governing techniques by the people through collective action. The study shows that rural people organized themselves based on appropriate institutional arrangements, mutual agreements and shared understanding; and planned and executed public goods and services that directly touched the lives of their people. The paper found that rural communities in south-western Nigeria through self-organized arrangements provided rural facilities at the cost of N26, 204, 000. 00 (1, 546, 071. 7) (i. e. 98. 3%) of the total figure thus constituting the prime mover for rural facilities development, while Local Governments contributed N450, 000. 00 (20, 452) (i. e. 1. 7%) on the same facilities. The concern is that if these institutions are so accountable to their members, we should begin to conceptualize how they can be used to re-constitute order from the bottom up and to complement the state structure of governance.
Shittu R. Akinola (Sat,) studied this question.