Project vs. Programmatic Aid: What role for civil society with the growing governmentalisation of aid? Rosalind Eyben ODI Workshop Southern Voices for.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CSO/NGO Consultations Report to IATI Signatories, Partner Countries and Steering Committee Paris, 4 July 2011.
Advertisements

MDG based national development strategies and plans in Africa: the role of the Integrated Package of Services Presentation by BDP/BRSP at RBA Workshop.
CIDAs Aid Effectiveness Agenda October Canadian aid program CIDA is the lead agency for development assistance The International Assistance Envelope.
1 Module 4: Partners demand and ownership Towards more effective Capacity Development.
ENGAGING STRATEGICALLY WITH NON-STATE ACTORS IN NEW AID MODALITIES 7th July 2011 DEVCO-Europeaid – D2 civil Society.
EuropeAid ENGAGING STRATEGICALLY WITH NON-STATE ACTORS IN NEW AID MODALITIES SESSION 1 Why this Focus on Non-State Actors in Budget Support and SPSPs?
Towards a new leading paradigm of effective aid ? Alina Rocha Menocal, ODI Presentation prepared for the Southern Voices Workshop ODI, London, November.
Is conditionality dead? Ownership, good governance and new aspects of conditionality Priyanthi Fernando Centre for Poverty Analysis, Colombo ODI Workshop.
Why Mutual Accountability? Aid effectiveness requires country ownership, including in donor coordination Contradictions: (a) power imbalance, (b) broken.
Role of CSOs in monitoring Policies and Progress on MDGs.
The Danish Civil Society Strategy – reflecting past experience while embracing new approaches? 16 June 2009 Lars Udsholt.
Eastern and Southern Africa Challenges and Opportunities for Rural Development Sector-wide Approaches:
Monitoring and Evaluation in the CSO Sector in Ghana
INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR CONSERVATION OF NATURE. 2 Implemented in 12 countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East, through IUCN regional.
FUTURE ROLE OF INGO IN CAMBODIA
Commonwealth Local Government Forum Freeport, Bahamas, May 13, 2009 Tim Kehoe Local Government and Aid Effectiveness.
1 Legal Empowerment of the Poor: An Action Agenda for the World Bank Ana Palacio April 19, 2006.
Irish Aid’s Civil Society Policy and Development Effectiveness.
Global Poverty Action Fund Community Partnership Window Funding Seminar January 2014 Global Poverty Action Fund Community Partnership Window Funding Seminar.
Power, relations and theories of change in development Rosalind Eyben Navigating Complexity May
1 Katherine Sierra Vice President, Sustainable Development Network The World Bank April 14, 2008 Proposed Climate Investment Funds (CIFs) Recap.
“Look, Listen & Learn” Promoting the use of CSOs evidence in policies for food security By Lindiwe Majele Sibanda
Budget support and managing for results Presentation by Bodo Ellmers Action for Global Health Roundtable Madrid, 7 June 2010.
Public Financial Management Architecture in Central Asia: International Reform Advice and Domestic Reform Practice: Case of Tajikistan Ismoil Khujamkulov.
© IDEAS IDEAS-RELAC Joint Conference Bogotá, Colombia May 2007 Development evaluation: meeting the challenges of learning, ownership, accountability and.
Bond.org.uk The Bond Effectiveness Programme: developing a sector wide framework for assessing and demonstrating effectiveness July 2011.
Measuring Effectiveness, Melbourne, Sept Measuring effectiveness a network perspective…
Up Close and Personal – an Introduction. Objectives An understanding of the role of Children England in the context of the Family Strategic Partnership.
Capacity Building for Better Agricultural Statistics Misha Belkindas and Graham Eele Development Data Group, World Bank.
TEMP I First course: Education and Development in the Context of Globalization Jan 01-Feb26 Day 4, Theme 4: Education actors - Multilateral education.
CSO Engagement in Governance and the MDG Framework Geoffrey D. Prewitt Poverty Reduction and Civil Society Advisor CoP Event Bishkek - November, 2006.
Module 2: Concepts and Principles Supporting change through Capacity Development.
Guidance for AONB Partnership Members Welsh Member Training January 26/
1 Donor coordination and effectiveness of aid to agriculture Effectiveness in Aid to Agriculture Czech action to strengthen food security Glopolis / FoRS.
Department for International Development Participatory Rights Assessment Methodologies (PRAMs)
Examples of practice & Principles to guide us Slide 1 IFAD SL Workshops Examples of practice & principles.
1 Croatia: Project Partnership for social inclusion September 16, Progress P rogram m of Europ ean U ni on
SECTOR POLICY SUPPORT PROGRAMMES A new methodology for delivery of EC development assistance. 1.
Coherence in Global Policy Making for Sustainable Economic Development and Poverty Reduction Michele Ruiters, PhD Institute for Global Dialogue (IGD)
RAPID Outcome Mapping Approach Simon Hearn, ODI 16 April 2010 Bern, Switzerland.
Global Partnership on Disability and Development What is the GPDD? Presentation to JICA Group Training Course HIV/AIDS Section Judith Heumann, Lead Consultant,
The shift to programs in the LAC region. What is a program? A program is a coherent set of initiatives by CARE and our allies that involves a long-term.
Development and Cooperation EU Structured Dialogue with Civil Society and Local Authorities Angelo Baglio Head of Unit D2 "Civil Society and Local Authorities"
T he Istanbul Principles and the International Framework Geneva, Switzerland June 2013.
Changing Development Paradigm Sofia Svarfvar Advisory Group on Development Policy and Practice.
Douglas Bourn Development Education Research Centre, IOE.
Evaluation of EC aid delivery through Civil society organisations Major findings and concerns relating to EC-NGO funding relationship and questions to.
Land Governance and Security of Tenure in Developing Countries White paper of the French Development cooperation LAND POLICIES AND MDGS IN RESPONSE TO.
International Development on Aid Effectiveness Presenter Said Muhammed Jama Aid Coordination Expert Ministry of National Planning and Development.
Regional humanitarian networks ALNAP Biannual Meeting Madrid, 3 rd June.
Aid Transparency: Better Data, Better Aid Simon Parrish, Development Initiatives & IATI Yerevan, 4 October 2009.
AfCoP and the AAA Reflections on future engagement By Richard Ssewakiryanga
Political economy of decentralisation processes in Africa Neo Simutanyi Centre for Policy Dialogue, Zambia EU Regional Seminar on Decentralisation & Local.
Partnership Definition and Principles The imprecise nature of the word "partnership" has created confusion in CARE and other organizations. “Partnering.
Southern Africa CSO Consultation on Trade and HIV/AIDs: Road to Hong Kong.
EuropeAid ENGAGING NON-STATE ACTORS IN NEW AID MODALITIES Structured dialogue 1.
Experiences and Prospects of International Development Agencies New Zealand Agency for International Development NZAID July 2006.
Social Analysis Workshop on Country Analytical Work June 19, 2001 Anis Ahmad Dani World Bank, Social Development Department.
Promoting Mutual Accountability in Aid Relationships Paolo de Renzio Overseas Development Institute.
Slide 1 Civil Society Policy and Practice in Donor Agencies GSDRC study commissioned by DFID, February 2010 Size and position for cover image Lone Sorensen,
A donor’s perspective in Aid for Trade Roles, Realities & Shared Responsibilities Elena Immambocus International Trade Department DFID.
DFID Climate Change Implementation Strategy NGO Consultation INTRODUCTIONDFID AND CLIMATE CHANGE.
By Dr. Talat AnwarAdvisor Centre for Policy Studies, CIIT, Islamabad Centre for Policy Studies, CIIT, Islamabad
Sustainable WASH Systems The Global Environment Officers State of the Art Workshop 2016.
GIZ Professional Forum on ‘The Political Economy of Health and Social Protection’ 2011 Making development co-operation work better by using political.
Power and its consequences for international aid
The SWA Collaborative Behaviors
The Pathfinder is building on the take part network (the learning framework) funded by the Department for Communities and Local Government and managed.
Civil Society Facility and Media Programme Call for proposals: EuropeAid/162473/DH/ACT/Multi Webinar no. 3: Preparing effective Concept Note.
Workshop on Territorial Approaches to Local Development
Presentation transcript:

Project vs. Programmatic Aid: What role for civil society with the growing governmentalisation of aid? Rosalind Eyben ODI Workshop Southern Voices for Change in the International Aid System

Is aid more than delivering money ? MDGs

Different approaches to international aid Managerial Financial Political economy Post development Relational - citizenship International relations

The world of aid Donor country civil society & INGOs Donor government Multilateral agencies Citizen Local civil society Citizen Recipient government

What are we talking about? A systemic or structural approach? The ODI background paper considers architecture, procedures and rules A systemic approach privileges meanings and relationships in which an explicit recognition of power is central Is the noted lack of Southern civil society involvement in the aid effectiveness discussions an outcome of the paradigm already being constructed?

Issues that shape this debate Power and relations in international aid; The connections and feedback loops between purposive efforts to change society and how history happens; Concepts of policy making: as a piece of paper that gets implemented or as a never continuously re-negotiated process; Can a government and its international donors deliver change?

My re-phrasing of the question Is this a question of which aid instruments privilege civil society involvement ? Or how do we deliberate to understand and design aid for supporting processes of inclusive citizenship?

I hide the project because the programme manager would be worried because there are no measurable results and nothing happens beyond the local Why are changes in a policy matrix more significant than a change in the life of a community? Voices from DFID

Investing in relationships as much as outcomes Understand the specific context, Identify and invest in relationships with individuals, organisations and networks seeking progressive change; Provide the human resources to create, support and strengthen alliances, bringing ideas as well as money. Be aware that there is no necessary correlation between the amount of money provided and the magnitude of the impact. Respond to the historical landscape of power within which the aid relationship is placed;

Making a difference through relationships Aid agencies can make a difference not only through formal interventions related to objectives but through the relationships and influence they have on others, the values they represent and spread and how the worth of their intervention is judged by others

Investing in relationships Understanding the context Donor people and money Positive change for poor people Relationships Matter

Aid instruments: people and money Thus, support to the design and implementation of a national poverty reduction strategy, in addition to general budget support it would involve considerable staff resources supported by small financial investments in facilitating relationships and supporting those working for change within the country as a whole.

Small scale and relatively low cost interventions Designed with local partners (in or outside government) on the basis of a problem diagnosis that may be dissimilar from that of actors in other parts of the system. It means donors playing a role in encouraging rather than suppressing alternative perspectives - being prepared to recognise that harmonised diagnostic assessments, as proposed by the Paris Declaration, may be counter-productive to securing the desired impact.

Embracing diversity 'Donor complementarity' would thus imply not simply providing aid to different sectors or with different aid instruments in support of an agreed diagnosis, but readiness to support variously positioned local actors whose diagnosis of the problem may be different. Contestation and (non-violent) conflict is an important means to pro-poor change

Valuing the relationship as much as the outcome But this is more than a choice of a particular instrument to meet a particular end. For such an approach to work means valuing how and with whom you work as well as the goal you are seeking to achieve. It also requires experimentation and double loop learning.

Aid is not a catalyst Seeing aid as a catalyst implies the donor is capable of intervening without being affected and influenced by the patterns of relationships of which its organisation and staff are part and that are promoting or blocking pro-poor change in the recipient country. Being ready to being open, rather than resisting being influenced by local actors encourages a donor agency to examine more closely with whom it chooses to relate and which networks of relationships to support