Mafunisa, M. J.Sethu, M. J.Ndamase, Risenga Richard2026-06-302026-06-302026-05-19Ndamase, R.R. 2026. Proposing Strategic Model Aligning Monitoring and Evaluation with Integrated Development Planning Implementation: A Case of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality. . .https://univendspace.univen.ac.za/handle/11602/3306Ph. D. in Public AdministrationDepartment of Public and Development AdministrationIn 1996, the Integrated Development Plan (IDP) was introduced in the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 and Local Government: Municipal Structures Act 117 of 1998 as an innovative approach for controlling and coordinating development in South Africa's local government system. The IDP is a legislative planning tool essential to post-apartheid progressive local governance, as it ensures that municipal planning is strategic, participatory, and sensitive to community needs. The lack of strong feedback mechanisms necessary for efficient service delivery means that IDP implementation remains fragmented and inadequate, despite its solid legislative foundation. In addition, many municipalities find it difficult to integrate their monitoring and evaluation (M&E) programmes with IDP processes, which results in poor accountability, restricted data utilisation, and insufficient performance monitoring. Monitoring and evaluation systems are essential for filling this gap. This study aims to propose a strategic model that would align M&E with the King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality's (KSDLM) implementation of the IDP. Purposively selected officials participated in semi-structured interviews to collect data, which were then thematically analysed using a qualitative research methodology. The findings show that, despite KSDLM's implementation of mechanisms – such as the IDP Steering Committee, the Promun information system, the performance management system with scorecards, annual and quarterly evaluations, and participatory forums – their efficacy is still constrained by interference from politicians, institutional capacity gaps, inaccurate information, and inadequate operational integration. Even with their theoretical alignment with national frameworks, these processes are still viewed as compliance exercises rather than tools for responsibility, learning, and adaptation. The study concludes that until the municipality establishes a specialised M&E unit, enhances data infrastructure, and fosters a culture of evidence-based decision-making, strong policy and governance frameworks will remain primarily theoretical. To improve coherence across the planning, monitoring, and evaluation cycles, this study proposes a strategic alignment model. This model enables municipalities to identify inefficiencies, assess progress, and reallocate resources to priority areas through adaptive management. The following are some of the recommendations emerging from the study: (i) policy changes to legalise the integration of IDP-M&E cycles and institutionalise M&E units within municipalities; (ii) operational investments in digital transformation, capacity building, and predictive analytics; (iii) adoption of learning-oriented M&E frameworks based on the Theory of Change and Balanced Scorecard; and (iv) increased stakeholder participation that links leadership performance to measurable results and community validation. To enhance real-time learning and developmental governance, future research should explore mixed-methods designs, comparative and longitudinal studies, and the integration of artificial intelligence, big data analytics, and Fourth Industrial Revolution capabilities into municipal management and evaluation systems.1 online resource (xxi,353 leaves): color illustrations, color mapsenUniversity of VendaIntegrated Development PlanningUCTDMonitoring and EvaluationPerformance Management SystemStrategic Alignment ModelProposing Strategic Model Aligning Monitoring and Evaluation with Integrated Development Planning Implementation: A Case of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local MunicipalityThesisNdamase RR. Proposing Strategic Model Aligning Monitoring and Evaluation with Integrated Development Planning Implementation: A Case of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality. []. , 2026 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from:Ndamase, R. R. (2026). <i>Proposing Strategic Model Aligning Monitoring and Evaluation with Integrated Development Planning Implementation: A Case of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality</i>. (). . Retrieved fromNdamase, Risenga Richard. <i>"Proposing Strategic Model Aligning Monitoring and Evaluation with Integrated Development Planning Implementation: A Case of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality."</i> ., , 2026.TY - Thesis AU - Ndamase, Risenga Richard AB - In 1996, the Integrated Development Plan (IDP) was introduced in the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 and Local Government: Municipal Structures Act 117 of 1998 as an innovative approach for controlling and coordinating development in South Africa's local government system. The IDP is a legislative planning tool essential to post-apartheid progressive local governance, as it ensures that municipal planning is strategic, participatory, and sensitive to community needs. The lack of strong feedback mechanisms necessary for efficient service delivery means that IDP implementation remains fragmented and inadequate, despite its solid legislative foundation. In addition, many municipalities find it difficult to integrate their monitoring and evaluation (M&E) programmes with IDP processes, which results in poor accountability, restricted data utilisation, and insufficient performance monitoring. Monitoring and evaluation systems are essential for filling this gap. This study aims to propose a strategic model that would align M&E with the King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality's (KSDLM) implementation of the IDP. Purposively selected officials participated in semi-structured interviews to collect data, which were then thematically analysed using a qualitative research methodology. The findings show that, despite KSDLM's implementation of mechanisms – such as the IDP Steering Committee, the Promun information system, the performance management system with scorecards, annual and quarterly evaluations, and participatory forums – their efficacy is still constrained by interference from politicians, institutional capacity gaps, inaccurate information, and inadequate operational integration. Even with their theoretical alignment with national frameworks, these processes are still viewed as compliance exercises rather than tools for responsibility, learning, and adaptation. The study concludes that until the municipality establishes a specialised M&E unit, enhances data infrastructure, and fosters a culture of evidence-based decision-making, strong policy and governance frameworks will remain primarily theoretical. To improve coherence across the planning, monitoring, and evaluation cycles, this study proposes a strategic alignment model. This model enables municipalities to identify inefficiencies, assess progress, and reallocate resources to priority areas through adaptive management. The following are some of the recommendations emerging from the study: (i) policy changes to legalise the integration of IDP-M&E cycles and institutionalise M&E units within municipalities; (ii) operational investments in digital transformation, capacity building, and predictive analytics; (iii) adoption of learning-oriented M&E frameworks based on the Theory of Change and Balanced Scorecard; and (iv) increased stakeholder participation that links leadership performance to measurable results and community validation. To enhance real-time learning and developmental governance, future research should explore mixed-methods designs, comparative and longitudinal studies, and the integration of artificial intelligence, big data analytics, and Fourth Industrial Revolution capabilities into municipal management and evaluation systems. DA - 2026-05-19 DB - ResearchSpace DP - Univen KW - Integrated Development Planning KW - Monitoring and Evaluation KW - Performance Management System KW - Strategic Alignment Model LK - https://univendspace.univen.ac.za PY - 2026 T1 - Proposing Strategic Model Aligning Monitoring and Evaluation with Integrated Development Planning Implementation: A Case of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality TI - Proposing Strategic Model Aligning Monitoring and Evaluation with Integrated Development Planning Implementation: A Case of King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality UR - ER -