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Already “of” the community

September 6, 2011 in Main by Jennifer Lentfer

We’ve all seen many participation typologies over the years. But with the one below, which I created when examining local partners’ final reports in 2009, I was trying to describe some simple categories of approaches to working with communities that local non-governmental organizations utilize. It was also meant to capture that fine line that can exist between a community-based organization (CBO) and a community, especially within the most nascent groups, whose immediate and localized responses to vulnerability are based on collective leadership.

Low-wealth individuals and communities systemically mobilize resources (though often labeled “informally”) through a system of self-help and mutual assistance, which Wilkinson-Maposa and Fowler (2009) have coined as “horizontal philanthropy” or “philanthropy of community”. It is very important for development practitioners to recognize that emerging CBOs can be born of this system, rather than just from external interventions, and to ensure that our support builds upon these systems, rather than bypassing or even thwarting them.

But this is no easy task. As I advocate for donors and international NGOs to deepen their understanding of organizational development within the context of grassroots organizations, perhaps these categories of approaches to working communities could be useful, especially to supply the nuance to “local” called for recently over at Tales from the Hood. Rather than differentiating local groups based on their size or reach, donors must also, and perhaps more importantly, determine how local groups go about creating and maintaining relationships with those they serve. I believe that setting up mechanisms to make this a more central part of our dialogue with local organizations is a key aspect of enhancing development partnerships.

Where do your local partners operate on this continuum? (Click here to view the full graphic if on how-matters.org’s main page.) Do they demonstrate the centrality of ownership and empowerment within their approach, their planning and problem-solving processes? Are they focused on responding to immediate needs and service delivery, or are they mobilizing and expressing the compassion, free will, and voice of their constituents? And perhaps more importantly, how can you tell? (For some thoughts on this, see my previous post, Spotting Community Ownership.)

As donors or as development practitioners, we have a choice in terms of where we will put our resources–our time, our energy, and our will. CBOs are not created equal, and what’s more, nor are all communities created equal. Yet I believe that one of our main goals is to uphold and/or transform local partner organizations’ relationship to their constituency, to be more empowering and more responsive to communities’ expressed needs and priorities.

So what do you think? Do you recognize these categories? What does “already ‘of’ the community” mean to you? And where on the continuum will you place your investments?

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This post originally appeared at: http://www.how-matters.org/2011/09/05/already-of-the-community/

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BrandOutLoud: Own Branding Makes Local NGOs Less Dependent

August 23, 2011 in Main by Jennifer Lentfer

Last week I had the pleasure of talking with Judith Madigan, Co-founder and Director of BrandOutLoud, who reached out following my recent post, “Do CBOs have an image problem?

BrandOutLoud works with aid organizations, local and international, to transform the pity-laden us/them paradigm used in many communications strategies to one that portrays the strengths and power of the people themselves.

We talked about how local NGOs often rely heavily on funding from international NGOs and how the government cutbacks announced in the Netherlands [and elsewhere] give cause for more careful thought about how international NGOs and philanthropies with less money can continue supporting local partners. BrandOutLoud suggests a new approach—empowering local organizations through branding and marketing. Learn more and watch their video here.

Team members of BrandOutLoud working on site with local NGO, Cambodian Development Mission for Disability.

Participation: Reality or the Promised Land? A View from South Sudan

August 12, 2011 in Main by Jennifer Lentfer

In response to an earlier post on how-matters.org, “Sorry but it’s not YOUR project,” a reader offered the following guest post. Andebo Pax Pascal shares his experience as an aid worker in Africa’s newest country.

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My friend Tom is working for “Aid Agency X”, which has prided itself in working ‘with’ and not ‘for’ the people, a sign that it is ready to involve the community in its development projects. However, recent decisions about one of its projects became a true test for its policy of participation.

Agency X requested only a few community leaders, as representatives of the community, to sign a contract for the work to start. The few signatories did, however, offer suggestions to make some adjustments on the building to cater for a possible increase in the numbers of patients in the future. These suggestions were rejected.

In constructing the community health unit, Agency X refused to use the local inputs that the community could provide. The justification? It would be difficult in accounting to the donors.

During the handover ceremony of the health unit, Agency X’s managing director expounded on the various projects and activities the organization has implemented. He went on to emphasize the need for the community to learn to be self-reliant. The community was asked to sustain all the activities the organization had been conducting in the area since the agency would be closing its activities in the space of a year.

Unfortunately, this seems to be a typical case of a ‘poor’ community’s experience in doing development with the support of aid and development agencies. Upon hearing this story, I reflected on the concept of participation in community development as one of the pillars of implementing development projects. These are a few of my thoughts.

“Community Members Listen to Red Cross Volunteers,” Sumba Lorie, South Sudan, 4 July 2011. Photo courtesy of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (Flickr account).

Peoples’ participation in development initiatives agreeably carries with it positive connotations and concern for the real beneficiaries of development—the ‘poor.’ The concept of participation varies widely in application and definition, but the inference to ‘having a share in’ or ‘taking part in’ means participation is a practice, as well as an end in itself. It influences decisions that affect people’s lives and is an avenue of empowering the people. Participation implies two broad issues very important in development projects: (1) ownership and (2) who benefits from the project.

Participation is a development anthem whose lyrics are not patriotically respected by the professionals of development. Even though the concept has been popularized, we continue to see development practitioners telling people what has happened or is going to happen; asking questions without sharing findings; consulting people without necessarily taking their views on board; providing material incentives; and/or mobilizing people only for implementation purposes. Most projects still manipulate beneficiaries to accept outsiders’ wishes. Information is shared through one-way communication and consultations are made without serious commitment to local views.

Development practitioners must consider if a project is a development tool for the professional implementers, or for the beneficiaries. Projects should be identified, designed or formulated, and implemented in a participatory approach. This addresses the question of the sustainability of project gains. Beneficiaries should be engaged in the project right from the start in a spirit of partnership so that projects can deal with the ‘felt needs’ of the community.

Development practitioners should also consider whether they are ‘bringing development’ to a place where it has been nonexistent or whether they are supporting a desirable situation in which local efforts are already being made. Development projects can be initiated by professionals and community members acting together in partnership. However, the local people are not part of the problem, that is, poor and needy. Instead development practitioners must acknowledge that local people have a vision to change an existing undesirable situation for the better, but only lack some of the means to achieve that vision. Development practitioners can contribute to attaining that vision but in order to transform the policy of participation into real practice, a change in ideas, attitudes and practices of development practitioners is required. Meaningful participation will also require change in the methods, procedures and institutional structures of development aid agencies.

More interactive levels of participation: people doing joint analysis leading to plans; formation and utilization of local institutions and strengthening them to make and control local decisions; and generating ideas on how to maintain structures and practices, can all do a lot of good in development projects. Participation should involve self-mobilization in the community: community-initiated and shared decisions; agency-initiated activities with full community involvement at every stage; and consultation and transparent information-sharing. Local people should retain control over how resources are generated and used, and how results and successes can be sustained.

Local people may or may not have the capacity for strategic planning. However, judging from the accumulated knowledge they have and their resilience in living in their environment, people know a lot. Development professionals must tap into that knowledge to succeed in development efforts.

Will this not erode the power of the ‘expert’ professionals? This question seems to be the main obstacle in practicing genuine participation.

Are we there yet? Full participation in development practice still remains the Promised Land. And in my opinion, we have many more steps to get there.

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For further reflection, the following ideas from Feuerstein (1986) can help you assess the practice of participation in your organization:

1.       When you only listen to the local opinions and then take the information away to analyze yourself – you are ‘studying the specimen’.

2.       When you are sharing only part of the analyzed information with some of the stakeholders – you are ‘refusing to share results openly’.

3.       When you hire an external facilitator to guide a participatory process –you are ‘locking up the expertise’.

4.       When the project team sits down with the target group (to discuss plans, activities and the intended results) – they are talking about ‘partnership in development’.

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Andebo Pax Pascal is from Arua, northwestern Uganda and is currently working with the Jesuit Refugee Service in Nimule, South Sudan, where they are implementing education programmes. He can be reached at: paxande@yahoo.co.uk.

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This post originally appeared at: http://www.how-matters.org/2011/08/12/participation-reality-or-promised-land/

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RCTs: A band-aid on a deeper issue?

May 24, 2011 in Main by Jennifer Lentfer

I finished the book weeks ago. When I closed Dean Karlan and Jacob Appel’s “More Than Good Intentions: How a New Economics Is Helping to Solve Global Poverty,” I had many notes and reactions jotted down but they hadn’t yet gelled. Something just didn’t sit quite right with me and I was having trouble articulating it.

Of course that’s related to intuition and inspiration, which can’t be measured…but I digress.

After my Friday “tweet debate” with @poverty_action and after reading many other bloggers’ reactions to the book (see related post), I realized that Karlan and Appel have heard and refuted it all by now. As seasoned and skilled randomistas, they have ready responses in support of incorporating randomized control trials (RCTs) into more aid projects.

And this is not something I’m necessarily against. In a development discourse that is still ruled by economic academics, I respect Innovations for Poverty Action’s work, which attempts to bridge this knowledge base with aid practitioners’ experience. In fact, Karlan, Appel and I agree on many aspects of their main arguments. We all agree that aid can be more effective and that well-formed questions and well-executed, applied research can offer many relevant clues about this. We all want to see deeper thinking behind the doing.

Where I think we differ is on some fundamental beliefs about what prevents this and what ails the aid industry overall. Is it a lack of information about “what works”? Or is it a lack of respect for local initiatives and understanding about complex power dynamics that impede authentic relationships among development partners? And if it’s the latter, are RCTs just a band-aid on a deeper issue?

I am, like many others, worried about the implications of donors moving towards making RCTs yet another conditionality of aid, more food to satisfy their seemingly insatiable appetite for evidence. (See my related post providing “how matters” advice for donors on RCTs.) As someone working within the extensive web of local organizations and grassroots movements in the developing world, this is especially troubling for nascent, non-“formal” and under-resourced organizations that are already marginalized from the aid system.

Whether RCTs gain momentum as just the latest fad in aid, or whether they become a part of accepted practice, I am also afraid that now “unsubstantiated claims” such as the example below, which I recently read in a report, will now be considered invalid (and un-fundable), rather than be probed for clearer understanding and viewed as a opportunity for learning.

Example of a statement of long-term impact of a program: “Most notable is the increase in the enrollment rates of girls in school in areas where Org X was focused on girls education. In the District of X, enrollment of girls went from 43% to 46% of total enrollment from 2002-3 to 2008-9. The overall graduation rate from primary schools in District X grew from 45 percent in 2002-3 to 79 percent in 2008-9.

Anyone reading this can ask the obvious questions related to the comparison and attribution. Of course there may be many factors in these increases, but this report was on a grant that was less than US$20,000, a relatively small amount when you consider the scale of most development projects. Let’s always consider what is the appropriate cost and complexity needed for measurement, especially given the size and scope of the program.

Proportional expectations for the applicability of RCTs, as well as the potential consequences of poorly-done RCTs for those who are being studied are also important, especially when people are in the process of organizing at the local level. Rather than an afterthought, let’s talk simultaneously about how local partner organizations become drivers of the use of RCTs, rather than just being consulted or included in them. As a commenter on Owen Barder’s blog shared, “Great tools, we economists undoubtedly do have. In studying development issues, they are often used unhelpfully due to hubris and a shocking level of comfort with ignorance about the phenomenon being studied.”

Despite behavioral economists’ so-called acceptance of the rationality of the poor’s decision-making, I find phrases like “the bizarre thing was that Oti didn’t seem to mind wasting his own time,” “he might have spent his last twenty rupees on [flower garlands],” “people showed they had both the will and desire to save,” “people were learning” (as if these were a surprise) and the most striking, “were [the research subjects] just thickheaded?” contained in the book’s anecdotes to reveal subtle, underlying, and perhaps unexamined judgment, if not contempt, to which I am admittedly very sensitive.

If an assumption is operating that poor people don’t know what’s good for them, then the flip side of this assumption is that someone else must. As Tom Murphy comments on Bottom Up Thinking, “In development, can’t we say that the batch of behavioral economists are exercising some amount of paternalism? They are using ‘nudges’ to encourage behaviors but that inherently comes from a place of knowing.” In my career in the aid sector, I’ve learned the hard way to become comfortable with stepping away from the role of “expert.” In fact, much of my work is focused on encouraging aid workers, donors, and international do-gooders to do the same.

Sixty years of development aid hasn’t reduced poverty using existing methods, yes. But sixty years of development aid that has squashed local initiatives by not giving the due attention to how that aid (and the accompanying monitoring, surveys, etc.) makes people feel, is, I believe, perhaps one of our biggest challenges in making aid more effective. The prevalent, yet not often exposed negative attitudes, behaviors and perceptions towards local people and organizations in the aid world is something that has been under-reported, insufficiently documented, and poorly-studied. Consider—How would programs change if an equal amount of curiosity and energy that we spend in conducting RCTs were invested in well-facilitated listening exercises in which we had to learn about people’s experiences of being on the receiving side of aid?

Let’s not forget our Sen. Freedom, power and poverty are inexorably intertwined and the mechanics of economic transformation just a part of development. In all of the discussions of RCTs and their usefulness, the reality of power relationships within the aid system and the lack of humility that continues to plague us is not something we can escape.

Undoubtedly, soundly-interpreted data provides important new perspectives for us all. There remains, however, quite a lot we cannot know.

And I, for one, am okay with that.

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This post originally appeared at: http://www.how-matters.org/2011/05/24/rcts-band-aid-on-deeper-issue/

See also related how-matters.org posts, RCTs: Much to be said and RCTs: “how matters” advice for donors.

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Would YOU fund this organization?

February 25, 2011 in Main by Jennifer Lentfer

A few years ago, when I was working with a foundation that gives grants to organizations working with children and families affected by AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa, I received a report from a Zimbabwean grantee, which you can read for yourself on how-matters.org. In determining whether to give them a second small grant, aside from the original proposal and financial report, this was all I had to go on. They had not received a site visit from our organization and one was not soon anticipated.

I ask readers to ponder only one question as you peruse the brief report—would you fund them again?

Let me know why or why not in the comments section or by tweeting @intldogooder #wouldyoufund. A synopsis of the foundation’s funding guidelines for renewal grants is included in the post.

Anti-spoiler alert! You won’t find out whether I decided to fund them or not until my next post on how-matters.org.

Coming out of the closet

January 25, 2011 in Main by Jennifer Lentfer

Poetry is a medium that helps me make meaning of my experiences, my thoughts and feelings, which is something we are called to do continuously as development practitioners. It’s a tool I often privately call upon when faced with the inevitable doubts, and triumphs, and heartaches of this work.

Inspired by Dennis Whittle’s recent post on Poetry and Development, emboldened by Saundra Schimmelpfennig sharing of her poem, and encouraged by @akhilak @zenpeacekeeper, and @rkrystalli on Twitter today, it is time for me to finally come out of the closet.

For the first time here, I’m sharing a small selection of my unpublished poems that may hopefully ring familiar in other aid workers’ souls too.

I am a poet, now loud and proud. Here goes nothing…

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The Vortex
We are called
to look within
and dance with uncertainty.
For what we thought we know,
no longer holds.
Or does it?
It’s time to ask again,
Even if the answers don’t
change.
Rather than collide,
two forces mingle and exchange.
Waters indistinguishable
and yet one.

Ode to Samsonite (or, A long goodbye, travel companion)
Since returning from Africa,
you have sat on my porch.
Neither can I bring you inside,
nor send you away…

Read this and more poems at: http://www.how-matters.org/2011/01/24/coming-out-of-the-closet/

Small is Beautiful…Grants, That Is (Part 1)

January 13, 2011 in Civil Society, Green Grants Fund by Jennifer Lentfer

Larger-scale support of local initiatives, grassroots leadership and small, often “informal” movements is a key reform needed in the international development aid sector. I shared this view in a post entitled, “What’s missing from the DIY aid debate? Overlooking the Capacity of Local Organizations” and in a virtual discussion on aid effectiveness from a gender perspective sponsored by UN-WOMEN at the end of last year. This is the first of two posts to attempt to answer the important follow-up questions posed by fellow blogger, Dave Algoso, “So what’s that look like? And who, if anyone, has done this well?”

Indeed, there is a growing number of development donors willing to offer and build alternatives to business as usual in the international development and philanthropic sectors by directly supporting local organizations and movements by creating broad guidelines, focus areas, and selection criteria to respond to what local stakeholders view as important. When grassroots groups are the setters of priorities, the controllers of resources, and thus the drivers of development, donors can help build local sovereignty through small grants programs…

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USIP: RT @shimelfarb: fresh off the press — Huff Post piece on Media and International conflict. Reactions? http://huff.to/hbGgfp

January 9, 2011 in United States Institute Of Peace by Rights Writer

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SPACES: scholarships for post graduate studies in Germany

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gatesfoundation: New blog post on research to help more women & infants survive childbirth: http://bit.ly/gwPIKt

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‘Standing on Shaky Ground’ report finds Americans deeply affected by economic tremors

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Michelle Singletary of The Washington Post on the Foundation’s new report ‘Standing on Shaky Ground: Americans’ Experiences with Economic Insecurity’.
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Honduras: Prosecute Post-Coup Abuses

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U.K. Improves Infrastructure and Road Building in Afghanistan

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Crowning Joy

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The Loveday Effect

December 8, 2010 in Videos by hima

Can one random act of kindness change the world? You betcha. Things are beginning to heat up! Within 12 hours of this post there was already a facebook group started and several offers to help out. The facebook link: Check it out if you want to see who’s doing what! www.new.facebook.com What else is about to happen? Post a video and let me know your story :) Honours for this video: #4 – Featured – Australia #9 – Most Discussed (This Month) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #58 – Most Responded (Today) – Australia #1 – Most Responded (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #84 – Most Responded (This Week) – Australia #1 – Most Responded (This Week) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #8 – Most Responded (This Month) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #39 – Most Responded (All Time) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #5 – Most Viewed (This Month) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #4 – Top Favorited (This Month) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #83 – Top Favorited (All Time) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia #10 – Top Rated (This Month) – Nonprofits & Activism – Australia

Graffiti #19 – POS – AVERS sketch RIP Lee Matasi was a skateboarder and artist from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He was well-loved for his easy-going personality and passion for life. He made numerous friends in his daily life and travels, particularly in Vancouver, Ottawa, Montreal, and France. Lee was the victim of a fatal shooting on December 3rd, 2005. #45 – Most Discussed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism #81 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Germany #21 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Canada #57 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Ireland #96 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Israel #71 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism #64 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Netherlands #81 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Poland #42 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Czech Republic #70 – Most Viewed (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism – Sweden #82 – Top Favorited (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism #81 – Top Rated (Today) – Nonprofits & Activism
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USAID: A nice post from @ONECampaign about USAID’s recent microbicide meeting. http://goo.gl/Dpcvr #HIV #WorldAids

December 2, 2010 in USAID by Ritu

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