Governance is not a synonym for government. At Saha Sachib level, governance means how authority, institutions, resources and citizens interact to create public value under accountability.

Core Definitions

Governance

Standard definition: The system of values, institutions and processes through which public authority is exercised and public resources are managed.

Exam meaning: राज्य शक्ति, स्रोत, संस्था र नागरिक सम्बन्धबाट public value कसरी बन्ने भन्ने system।

Good Governance

Standard definition: Governance that is participatory, accountable, transparent, responsive, inclusive, effective and based on rule of law.

Exam meaning: नागरिकमुखी, पारदर्शी, उत्तरदायी, कानूनसम्मत र परिणाममुखी शासन।

Public Value

Standard definition: Collective value created by public action, including service quality, trust, equity, security and development outcomes.

Exam meaning: सरकारी action बाट समाजले पाउने साझा मूल्य: सेवा, भरोसा, न्याय, सुरक्षा र विकास।

Conceptual Depth

Governance can be studied through three layers: normative layer, institutional layer and performance layer. Normative layer asks what values the state should follow. Institutional layer asks who has authority and accountability. Performance layer asks whether public action actually improves citizen outcomes.

Core Dimensions

Dimensions are analytical lenses for evaluating governance quality.

  • Political dimension: representation, participation, legitimacy and political accountability.
  • Administrative dimension: rule-based bureaucracy, service delivery, coordination and professionalism.
  • Economic dimension: resource allocation, fiscal discipline, regulation and development management.
  • Legal dimension: rule of law, rights protection, due process and independent justice.
  • Social dimension: inclusion, equity, trust, cohesion and civic engagement.
  • Technological dimension: digital governance, data, transparency, cyber resilience and service innovation.

Features of Effective Governance

Features describe how governance should behave in practice.

Feature Meaning Senior-Level Test
Accountability Answerability and consequences Can citizens/institutions question power?
Transparency Accessible information Can decisions be inspected?
Responsiveness Timely action Does the state react to real needs?
Inclusiveness No group left out Are vulnerable groups served?
Effectiveness Goal achievement Are outcomes improving?
Legality Rule-bound power Are decisions lawful and fair?

Governance Indicators

Indicators convert abstract values into measurable evidence.

  • Input indicators: budget, staffing, legal framework, institutional capacity.
  • Process indicators: consultation, procurement compliance, grievance handling, disclosure.
  • Output indicators: services delivered, decisions made, infrastructure completed.
  • Outcome indicators: citizen satisfaction, poverty reduction, trust, security, learning, health.
  • Integrity indicators: corruption perception, audit observations, complaints, conflict of interest controls.

Analytical Framework

  • Value: Which governance value is at stake?
  • Institution: Which institution owns the mandate?
  • Instrument: Which law, policy, budget, digital system or partnership is used?
  • Capacity: Does the institution have people, money, authority and information?
  • Accountability: Who monitors, audits, questions and corrects failure?
  • Outcome: What changes for citizens?

Nepal-Specific Application

  • Nepal’s federal constitution creates multi-level governance but also increases coordination complexity.
  • Local governments are closest to citizens, yet capacity and accountability vary widely.
  • Public trust depends on service delivery, corruption control, disaster response and fairness.
  • Digital systems can improve transparency but require data quality, inclusion and cybersecurity.
  • Governance reform must connect law, institution, budget, HR, technology and citizen oversight.
Governance Lens Question To Ask Example in Nepal
Legitimacy Is authority accepted? Elections, consultation, public trust
Capacity Can the state deliver? Staffing, systems, budget execution
Accountability Can power be checked? Audit, parliamentary oversight, RTI
Equity Who benefits or is excluded? Remote areas, women, Dalit, disability
Resilience Can it handle shocks? Earthquake, pandemic, flood, cyber incidents

Exam Point

  • Do not write only UN-style principles; connect principles with institutions and indicators.
  • Use input-process-output-outcome chain for mature answers.
  • Governance failure is often a coordination, capacity and accountability failure together.
  • Conclusion should propose measurable reform.

25-Mark Answer Structure

  • Define governance and good governance.
  • Explain dimensions and features.
  • Present indicators or measurement logic.
  • Apply to Nepal’s federal/service-delivery context.
  • Analyze gaps and propose reform priorities.
  • Conclude with public value and citizen trust.

Model Argument

Good governance in Nepal requires moving from rule-compliance alone to outcome accountability. Laws and structures are necessary, but citizens judge governance by accessible services, fair treatment, timely grievance handling and visible integrity.

Diagrams and Tables To Practice

  • Governance triangle: State, market, civil society.
  • Input-process-output-outcome chain.
  • Accountability loop: decision, disclosure, audit, correction.
  • Federal governance flow: federal, provincial, local, citizen.

Common Mistakes

  • Equating governance with government only.
  • Listing features without indicators.
  • No Nepal-specific application.
  • Ignoring institutional capacity and accountability mechanisms.

Revision Questions

  • What are the dimensions of governance?
  • How can good governance be measured?
  • Why is public value important?
  • How does federalism change governance indicators?

Summary

  • Governance is multi-actor and value-based.
  • Indicators make governance measurable.
  • Federal Nepal needs coordination, capacity and accountability.
  • Expert answers should link principle, institution and citizen outcome.