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Harnessing Indigenous Knowledge for Development

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Title: Harnessing Indigenous Knowledge for Development


1
Harnessing Indigenous Knowledge for Development
  • Presentation to UNCTAD
  • Conference on Traditional Knowledge November 1,
    2000
  • Nicolas Gorjestani
  • Chief Knowledge Learning Officer
  • Africa Region, The World Bank

2
Overview
  • Development case for IK
  • World Banks IK Program
  • The way forward

3
Knowledge is experience, everything else is
information
4
IK Affects Peoples Lives
  • Herbal medicine is an excellent example of IK
    that has affected lives around the globe...

but there is much more to it !
5
What IK Achieved in Mozambique
Case of post-conflict resettlement
  • Traditional authorities and local administration

  • managed 500,000 land transactions and
  • settled 5 million refugees and displaced
    persons in two years
  • Used only local knowledge and capacity
  • no external assistance from government, donors or
    NGOs
  • no conflicts over land and rights
  • Impact small holders re-launch agricultural
    growth

How long would it have taken management
consultants?

6
What IK Achieved in Senegal
Case of women of Malicounda
  • Adult education course by TOSTAN
  • apply literacy to solve a community problem
  • learn about the consequences of circumcision on
    the health of girls
  • abolish the practice after sharing experiences
    within the community
  • Exchange experiences with other communities
  • involve male spiritual leaders
  • obtain presidential approval for the Oath of
    Malicounda
  • Impact
  • More than 16 communities abolish the practice
    within 18 months
  • Senegal officially abolishes practice in December
    1998

How many development projects build on such
social capital ?
7
What IK Achieved in Burkina Faso
Case of local language literacy centers
  • Literacy in local languages
  • 15,000 learners in Gulmancema language (41
    women)
  • 4,000 literacy centers vs 3,000 formal schools
    using French
  • 52 of successful literacy center students were
    women
  • Impact
  • 50 of 72,000 literacy center students declared
    literate
  • newly literate women used local language to
    develop accounting, management systems to run
    cooperative

Do indicators of literacy capture such outcomes?
8
What IK Achieved in Nigeria
Case of natural refrigeration system
  • Local inventor developed an electricity-free
    cooling system
  • Application pot-in-pot technology using local
    materials in Jigawa State
  • space between two earthenware pots is filled with
    sand and watered
  • allows perishable foods to stay fresh for three
    weeks to a month
  • costs less than 50 cents used in 3/4 rural
    families in Jigawa
  • Impact
  • Farmers avoid having to sell their produce
    immediately
  • Diseases caused by rotting food are reduced
  • Women earn income from selling fruits, vegetables
    from their homes
  • Girls previously sent to sell food before it
    spoiled can now go to school
  • Jobs created in pottery-making factories
  • Lesson simple technology adapted to local
    setting creates impact

9
In the Development Process...
Indigenous knowledge could help to increase
  • efficiency
  • IK is cost effective
  • IK uses appropriate technology
  • effectiveness
  • IK is locally managed
  • IK reaches the poor
  • sustainability
  • IK provides for mutual adaptation learning
  • IK empowers local communities

10
In the Development Process...
Indigenous knowledge could also contribute to
  • raising agricultural production
  • Indigenous soil conservation technology (Burkina
    Faso)
  • increasing value of education systems
  • Local language instruction improves literacy
    skills (Mali)
  • improving quality of health care
  • Traditional Birth Attendants help reduce maternal
    mortality (Uganda)
  • good governance
  • Local institutions lead post-conflict land
    re-allocation (Mozambique)

11
Role of Development Partners
12
Empowerment
Communities shape own development agenda by
actively participating in development dialogue
determining research agendas enhancing good
governance integrating indigenous knowledge in d
evelopment
13
Enablement
Helping local practitioners and communities
to exchange knowledge of local practices bu
ild traditional knowledge networks
engage authorities, researchers experts
dialogue with development partners
leverage traditional modern knowledge
14
Empowerment through Enablement
Building on traditional knowledge systems
exchange engage connect Helping communitie
s learn
  • learn
  • hear
  • listen
  • Learning from communities


15
Genesis of IK Program
  • Global Knowledge Conference 1997
  • vision of truly global knowledge partnership
  • will be realized only when the poor
    participate
  • as both users and contributors of knowledge
  • Client Feed Back Surveys
  • 40 percent knowledge adaptation gap
  • look for what works in communities
  • Partnerships (bilateral international
    organizations , NGOs, CBOs)

16
What we have done to date...
  • IK practices data base (200 cases)
  • IK Notes publication (26 in print Internet)
  • IK Report A Framework for Action
  • Multi-lingual Website www.worldbank.org/afr/ik/d
    efault.htm
  • Enhanced capacity of IK centers in 8 countries
  • Capacity building to develop National IK
    Strategies (Uganda)
  • Integrating IK into Bank-supported projects
  • Knowledge Packs
  • IK Topic on Global Development Gateway

17
IK in Bank-supported Projects
  • Agricultural Research Training Project II
    (Uganda)
  • Lake Malawi Environment (Malawi, Mozambique,
    Tanzania)
  • Conservation and Sustainable Use of Medicinal
    Plants (Ethiopia)
  • Northern Savana Biodiversity Conservation
    (Ghana)
  • Management of Forests and Adjacent Lands
    (Benin)
  • Micro-watershed Environment Management Program
    (Nigeria)
  • Education Community School Program (Mali)
  • HIV/AIDS Multi-sector Project (Cameroon)

18
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21
The Way Forward
Need partnerships to help
Develop National Strategies on Utilization o
f IK Enhance capacity of national regional IK
networks Promote community-to-community excha
nges Identify innovative mechanisms to protect
IK
22
Balanced Flow of Knowledge
Networks
Local Global
23
Building networks of IK practitioners
Farmers
Healers
Engage Exchange Learn Influence

Hunters
24
Leveraging Knowledge Networks
WHO/ World Bank Specialists
Researchers
Ministry of Health
PHC providers
Traditional Healers
Doctors
Pharmacists
Health Care CBOs/ NGOs
Botanists
25
Successful Leveraging
Successful Adaptation
  • Uganda RESCUER project in Iganga District
  • PHCs partner with traditional birth attendants
  • link attendants to health units thru
    walkie-talkies
  • attendants serve as referral points
  • more women receive health services
  • Impact maternal deaths declined by 50 in 3
    years

Lesson leveraging modern traditional knowledge
systems can help to increase development impact
26
Protection of IK Some Principles
  • Not all IK are patentable or subject to IPRs
  • Documentation in written records a key to
    protection of IK
  • Look for innovative forms of protection such as
    MTAs
  • Emerging examples of fair equitable benefit
    sharing (Cameroon)
  • Regional agreements are potentially a cost
    effective form of protection (1996 Andean Pact
    allows prior informed consent)
  • Community-to-community exchanges a possible
    platform

27
Concluding Remarks
IK is a critical factor in sustainable
development Empowerment enablement of local c
ommunities is a key to integrating IK into the
development process Helping promote networks o
f traditional practitioners community-to-communi
ty exchanges is a way to better disseminate good
practices in IK Innovative mechanisms are need
ed to protect IK A regional approach is likely t
o be most cost effective World Bank is looking
forward to partnerships to help advance this
agenda
28
Harnessing Indigenous Knowledge for Development

Thank you
www.worldbank.org/html/afr/ik/index.htm
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