Abstract
The efficacy of community governance structures in fostering sustainable enterprise development within African contexts remains a contested and under-researched area. Prevailing literature often treats local engagement as a monolithic concept, lacking nuanced comparative analysis across distinct regional socio-political environments. This study comparatively analyses the role and influence of local community governance mechanisms on the design, implementation, and outcomes of business initiatives in Ethiopia and West Africa. It aims to identify key determinants of effective engagement and assess their differential impact on enterprise sustainability. A multiple case study design was employed, analysing archival data and conducting semi-structured interviews with project managers, community leaders, and enterprise members from selected initiatives in both regions. A cross-regional comparative framework was developed to systematically analyse governance models, decision-making processes, and reported outcomes. A key divergence was identified: West African initiatives demonstrated stronger integration of traditional leadership structures, which correlated with higher reported levels of participant trust. In contrast, Ethiopian projects more frequently utilised formalised community committees, leading to more standardised but less flexible operational models. Approximately 70% of initiatives with embedded traditional authority reported improved conflict resolution. Community governance is not a uniform intervention; its effectiveness is contingent upon alignment with pre-existing local institutions and social capital. The formality of engagement structures significantly influences enterprise adaptability and long-term community ownership. Policymakers and development practitioners should conduct pre-intervention institutional mapping to tailor governance frameworks. Programmes should facilitate hybrid models that respectfully incorporate legitimate traditional systems within transparent, accountable project architectures. community governance, enterprise development, local engagement, comparative analysis, institutional alignment, Sub-Saharan Africa This paper provides a novel comparative framework for analysing community governance, demonstrating that the institutional 'fit' between project structures and local authority systems is a critical determinant of enterprise sustainability, a factor previously under-theorised in the literature.