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Decentralized Development and NGOs

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... SCALING UP Five Types of NGO Scaling Up Additive Strategy (increase in size) Multiplicative Strategy ... HODSON: NGO GROWTH Problems with NGO growth Workers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Decentralized Development and NGOs


1
Decentralized Development and NGOs
  • Peace Medie
  • Brandon Boylan
  • Monica Jacobo

2
Golden Oldies
  • Kasfir, Designs and Dilemmas An Overview, In
    Local Government and the Third World (Mawhood
    ed.)
  • Mawhood, Decentralization The Concept and the
    Practice, In Local Government in the Third World
    (Mawhood ed.)
  • John Armstrong, The European Administrative Elite

3
Designs and Dilemmas An Overview Nelson Kasfir
  • 1) Why did African states lose such a
    decentralization?
  • Colonial legacy on traditional social practices
  • Fundamental poverty
  • Central government needed for economic growth
  • Fear to criticism/opposition
  • 2) What are the chances of success of more recent
    proposals?
  • For most countries, new decentralization
    arrangement will fail because of discontinuities
    between institutions, deepening poverty, current
    beliefs about the necessity of vertical control,
    and threats perceived by those in power.

4
Mawhood-Decentralization The Concept and the
Practice
  • Pure decentralization is rarely implemented
  • Instead, most countries practice deconcentration
  • A decentralized body should have
  • Its own body
  • Separate legal existence
  • Authority to allocate substantial resources
  • A range of different functions
  • Representation of the people

5
Mawhood-Decentralization The Concept and the
Practice
  • Countries could combine two tiers of management
  • Purpose of central-local relations
  • Political control
  • Economic regulation
  • Minimum standards of welfare
  • Administrative efficiency

6
Armstrong Europe and Decentralization
  • Focus on relationship between prefects and
    prefectures
  • France
  • -prefects primary responsibility was to
    suppress opposition
  • -prefects controlled police
  • Russia
  • -prefects dominated police
  • -prefects influenced engineering corps
    (infrastructure)
  • -prefects did not control tax system

7
Armstrong Europe and Decentralization
  • Prussia
  • -collegiality among prefects led to exclusion of
    others with different training
  • -group decision-making, thus, was slow and
    efficient
  • -too legalistic, without focus on policy
    potential
  • Britain
  • -central system promoted system of grants
    instead of direct control
  • -inspection, not direction
  • -local districts had more control over tax
    collection, but not allocation

8
Literary Map
9
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10
Synthesis
11
Martinussen Decentralization and Development
  • Four types of decentralization
  • Deconcentration
  • Delegation
  • Devolution
  • Privatization
  • Decentralization has been used to promote
    efficiency and effectiveness but local
    governments are not always capable
  • Central and local government and NGOs should work
    together to fill gaps

12
Martinussen Decentralization and Development
  • Society and state centered concepts of economic
    development.
  • Myrdals concept of the soft state which assumes
    that state is the primary engine of growth.
  • Critiqued by market and participation theories
  • Ethnic identities can be politicized and can
    affect development planning and distribution of
    resources.

13
Staudt NGOs
  • Peoples participation can enhance development
    planning and practice
  • Bottom-up mobilization is most effective
  • The role of NGOs along with their funding sources
    have e

14
Clark, Turner and Hulme
  • Are NGOs decentralization necessary for
    development?
  • NGOs are not a panacea for poverty reduction.
    They have comparative advantages but cannot be a
    substitute for state provision of social services
    (TH).
  • Decentralization in developing countries has not
    made government interventions more effective in
    promoting development (TH).
  • Given the world crisis, NGOs have a critical role
    to play. Their opportunity to influence the
    development process has never been greater.
    However, this new role demands an evolution from
    their starting point. The challenge is to move
    from a tactical to a strategic approach (Clark).

15
Edwards Hulme Scaling Up
  • Five Types of NGO Scaling Up
  • Additive Strategy (increase in size)
  • Multiplicative Strategy (encourage others to
    expand)
  • Explosive Strategy (Adapting large-scale projects
    to local circumstances)
  • Associational Strategy (Interconnectedness)
  • Self-Spreading and Self-Improving Strategy
    (advocating good practice)

16
Hodson NGO Growth
  • Problems with NGO growth
  • Workers suspicion of hierarchy
  • Participatory decision-making
  • Factors that affect NGO growth
  • Voluntary and involuntary changes, resistance to
    growth, compromised solution, training,
    leadership, decision-making processes
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