Research Article
Bridging Worlds: Mechanisms for Integrating Indigenous Knowledge into the Ethiopian Parliament’s Governance Functions
Mohammed Zeinu Hassen*
Issue:
Volume 10, Issue 4, August 2025
Pages:
66-78
Received:
3 July 2025
Accepted:
11 July 2025
Published:
30 July 2025
DOI:
10.11648/j.ajmse.20251004.11
Downloads:
Views:
Abstract: Indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) are deeply woven into the social fabric of Ethiopia, representing generations of accumulated wisdom in areas such as traditional governance, sustainable agriculture, herbal medicine, and cultural practices. These systems often form the basis of social order and problem-solving at the community level. However, the country’s formal legislative institutions - the bicameral Federal Parliamentary Assembly, comprising the House of Peoples’ Representatives (HoPR) and the House of the Federation (HoF), primarily operate within a framework largely inspired by Western legal and parliamentary traditions. This modern structure has not yet systematically or effectively incorporated indigenous worldviews, knowledge, or traditional governance practices into national lawmaking. This disconnect can lead to policies that are detached from local realities and undermine the legitimacy felt by citizens towards formal state institutions, as reflected in public trust surveys. This article reviews Ethiopia’s diverse indigenous knowledge systems, including prominent examples like the Oromo Gada system, and examines the current structure and legal framework of the Ethiopian Parliament concerning cultural diversity and indigenous participation. It identifies the critical institutional gaps, linguistic barriers, and trust deficits hindering the meaningful integration of indigenous knowledge into parliamentary processes and legislation. Drawing on a qualitative methodology involving a comprehensive review of existing academic literature, policy documents, constitutional and legal texts, and comparative case studies from both Ethiopian traditional systems and international examples (such as Bolivia and South Africa), the study proposes theoretical and practical mechanisms for bridging these two distinct worlds of governance. We argue that approaches grounded in legal pluralism, the establishment of dedicated consultative councils representing traditional authorities, the creation of specialized parliamentary committees focused on indigenous affairs, and reforms to ensure dedicated representation for indigenous knowledge-bearers can significantly enable the systematic inclusion of local knowledge and perspectives in national governance processes. Finally, the article outlines specific constitutional, legal, and policy reforms necessary for implementation and provides clear, actionable recommendations directed towards Ethiopian lawmakers, civil society organizations, and scholars. The overarching goal is to facilitate the formal recognition, institutionalization, and harnessing of indigenous wisdom within Ethiopia’s parliamentary framework to foster governance that is more inclusive, culturally resonant, legitimate, and effective in serving all its diverse peoples.
Abstract: Indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) are deeply woven into the social fabric of Ethiopia, representing generations of accumulated wisdom in areas such as traditional governance, sustainable agriculture, herbal medicine, and cultural practices. These systems often form the basis of social order and problem-solving at the community level. However, the ...
Show More