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Naved Chowdhury Overseas Development Institute, London

Policy Analysis, Engagement and Advocacy A workshop for Transparency International Bangladesh 12-14 February 2007 Dhaka , Bangladesh. Naved Chowdhury Overseas Development Institute, London. Overseas Development Institute. Britain’s leading development Think Tank £8m, 60 researchers

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Naved Chowdhury Overseas Development Institute, London

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  1. Policy Analysis, Engagement and AdvocacyA workshop for Transparency International Bangladesh12-14 February 2007Dhaka , Bangladesh Naved Chowdhury Overseas Development Institute, London

  2. Overseas Development Institute • Britain’s leading development Think Tank • £8m, 60 researchers • Research / Advice / Public Debate • Rural / Humanitarian / Poverty & Aid / Economics (HIV, Human rights, Water) • DFID, Parliament, WB, EC • Civil Society For more information see: www.odi.org.uk

  3. RAPID Programme • Research • Advisory work • Policy change projects • Workshops and seminars • Civil Society Programme www.odi.org.uk/rapid

  4. Workshop Objectives • Share experiences about CSO-policy context in different countries; • Learn about the latest worldwide research and practice in this area; • Share experiences about approaches to influence policy and what works; • Start to develop strategies to improve policy impact.

  5. Outline of the Workshop Day 1 • General Introductions Day 2 • Tools, Strategy and Knowledge management Day 3 • Field trip

  6. Any questions about the plan?

  7. Self Introductions 2 minutes! • Name • Area of Work • What do you want to get out of this workshop?

  8. Plenary discussion: • What are the main opportunities and challenges • Regarding CSO-policy links in Bangladesh? (in general) • Affecting the policy impact of your work?

  9. Civil Society Partnerships Programme Aim: Strengthened role of southern CSOs in development policy processes Outcomes: • CSOs better understanding evidence-policy process • Capacity to support CSOs established • Improved information for CSOs • Global collaboration http://www.odi.org.uk/cspp/

  10. CSOs and Pro-poor Policy Influence • Complementing state in providing services • Innovators in service delivery • Advocates with and for the poor • Identifying problems & solutions • Extending our understanding • Providing information • Training and capacity building

  11. Key factors for CSO influence (Malawi) Opposing • Lack of capacity • Lack of local ownership • Translating data into evidence • Lack of data • Donor influence • Crises • Political factors • Supporting • Evidence of the value of CSO involvement • Governments becoming more interested in CSOs • CSOs are gaining confidence • Strength of networks • The media • Political factors

  12. Definitions • Research: “any systematic effort to increase the stock of knowledge” • Evidence: the result/output of the research process • Policy:a “purposive course of action followed by an actor or set of actors” • Agendas / policy horizons • Official statements documents • Patterns of spending • Implementation processes • Activities on the ground

  13. Identify the problem Commission research Analyse the results Choose the best option Establish the policy Implement the policy The linear logical policy model… Evaluate the results

  14. Generic Policy Processes

  15. in reality… • “The whole life of policy is a chaos of purposes and accidents. It is not at all a matter of the rational implementation of the so-called decisions through selected strategies.” 1 • “Most policy research on African agriculture is irrelevant to agricultural and overall economic policy in Africa.” 2 • “CSOs often have very little to bring to the policy table.” 3 • “CSOs, researchers and policymakers seem to live in parallel universes.” 4 1– Clay & Schaffer (1984) 2 – Omamo (2003) 3 – CSPP Consultations 4 – ODI-AFREPREN Workshop

  16. Industry CSOs Scientists Agenda setting Problem definition & analysis Policy tools Selection Implementation Enforcement Policy evaluation Government Media Public Source: Yael Parag

  17. Linear model Too close for comfort, Edwards Impact & Effectiveness, Fowler ‘Context, evidence, links’, RAPID Policy narratives, Roe CSO legitimacy, L. David Brown Links and Learning, Gaventa ‘Room for manoeuvre’, Clay & Schaffer ‘Street level bureaucrats’, Lipsky Policy as experiments, Rondinelli Policy Streams & Windows, Kingdon Disjointed incrementalism, Lindquist Tipping point model, Gladwell Mercenaries, missionaries and revolutionaries, Malena ‘Non-Western?’, Lewis Global Civil Society, Salamon, Kaldor Types of Engagement, Coston Linear model of communication, Shannon ‘Space’ for thought & action, Howell Simple and surprising stories, Communication Theory Provide solutions, Marketing Theory I Find the right packaging, Marketing II Global Civil Society?, Keane Global Legitimacy, van Rooy Epistemic communities, Haas Policy entrepreneurs, Najam Advocacy coalitions, Keck & Sikkink Negotiation through networks, Sabattier Social capital, Coleman Accountability, OneWorld Trust Communication for social change, Rockefeller Foundation Wheels and webs, Chapman & Fisher X CSOs and Policy: Existing theory www.odi.org.uk/rapid/lessons/theory

  18. Civil Society, Edwards • Types of Engagment, Coston • Legitimacy, L. David Brown / van Rooy • ‘Street level bureaucrats’, Lipsky • Global Civil Society, Keane / Kaldor / Salamon • Policy streams and policy windows, Kingdon • Disjointed Incrementalism, Lindblom • Social Epidemics, Gladwell Existing theory – a short list

  19. Any questions?

  20. Policy life is complex. What issues matter? The RAPID Framework

  21. A word of warning… • The world is complex • We do not aim to make it simple • Only to find recognisable patternrs or beacons • Which might guide your actions • There is NO blueprint. NO linear, logical, rational, proper, method. • Most of the time it is up to you.

  22. … A word of warning • You will probably never find out what goes on within the policy process • And not have all the evidence you need • You need to be confident to act even in a context of uncertainty • And be systematic and scientific (context, strategy, action, record, learn) but flexible and original

  23. The political context – political and economic structures and processes, culture, institutional pressures, incremental vs radical change etc. The links between policy and research communities – networks, relationships, power, competing discourses, trust, knowledge etc. The evidence – credibility, the degree it challenges received wisdom, research approaches and methodology, simplicity of the message, how it is packaged etc The Analytical Framework External Influences Socio-economic and cultural influences, donor policies etc

  24. And allows useful comparisons 1. Ideal model e.g. ?? 2. Islands model e.g. multilaterals Contexts Contexts Links Knowledge Links Knowledge 3. Technocratic model e.g. donors 4. Ivory Tower model e.g. Research institutes Contexts Contexts Links Knowledge Knowledge Links

  25. Political Context: Key Areas • The macro political context (democracy, governance, media freedom; academic freedom) • The sector / issue process (Policy uptake = demand – contestation) [NB Demand: political and societal. Power.] • How policymakers think (narratives & policy streams) • Policy implementation and practice (bureaucracies, incentives, street level, room for manoeuvre, participatory approaches) • Decisive moments in the policy process (policy processes, votes, policy windows and crises) • Context is crucial, but you can maximize your chances

  26. Evidence: Relevance and credibility • Key factor – did it provide a solution to a problem? • Relevance: • Topical relevance – What to do? • Operational usefulness – How to do it? : • Credibility: • Research approach • Of researcher > of evidence itself • Strenuous advocacy efforts are often needed • Communication

  27. Links: Coalitions and Networks • Feedback processes often prominent in successful cases. • Trust & legitimacy • Networks: • Epistemic communities • Policy networks • Advocacy coalitions • The role of individuals: connectors, mavens and salesmen

  28. External Influence • Big “incentives” can spur evidence-based policy – e.g. PRSP processes. • And some interesting examples of donors trying new things re. supporting research • But, we really don’t know whether and how donors can best promote use of evidence in policymaking (credibility vs backlash)

  29. LUNCH

  30. Key-note Speakers • On the needs and pressures of policymaking • On producing relevant and credible research • Questions?

  31. Plenary discussion: • How can we change what we do to be more useful for policymakers?

  32. Individually, think about 3 things you (as an individual) and 3 things your organisation can do different (5 minutes) • Then in groups identify the 5 most important things you and an organisation can do different (30 minutes) • Feed-back to plenary (25 minutes)

  33. Skills of (pro-poor) policy entrepreneurs Networkers Storytellers Fixers Engineers

  34. Rank responses • Add scores • Don’t worry about specifics Policy Entrepreneurship Questionnaire

  35. End DAY 1

  36. DAY 2 • Results of the Policy entrepreneurship questionnaire • Tools • Identifying the problem and assessing the context

  37. Kenya CSO Policy Entrepreneurs Carroll, T 38 31 45 46 Lothike, F 36 23 39 52 Nyaga, M 36 32 40 43 Lenachuru, C 30 32 39 46 Jelle, A 46 29 39 34 Kisangau 34 33 44 39 Mohamud, M 30 30 41 49 Githuka, P 40 36 32 43 Nganga, T 28 33 35 44 Kaimui, M 38 32 34 44 Gituthu, J 25 32 39 45 Virginia 40 33 38 40 Onyango, S 32 34 36 48 Average 35 32 39 44 >44 = Low <30 = High <23 = V. High

  38. Comments • Tendency to prefer “storytelling” and “networking”. • Several people dislike “fixing” and “engineering” is close by. • One of you has a strong preference: “networking”

  39. Developing a strategy

  40. To Maximize Chances You need to: • better understand how policy is made and options for policy entrepreneurship; • use evidence more effectively in influencing policy-making processes; • build stronger connections with other stakeholders; • actively participate in policy networks • communicate better.

  41. Who? How? Audience What? Message Promotion The overall framework • Identify the problem • Understand the context • Identify the audience(s) • Develop a SMART Strategy • Identify the message(s) • Resources – staff, time, partners & $$ • Promotion – tools & activities • Monitor, learn, adapt

  42. Identifying the problem • First win the fight over the problem • Then fight for the solution • Therefore the first thing we are going to do is think about the problem: • What is the problem? • Why is it important that we address this problem?

  43. The political context – political and economic structures and processes, culture, institutional pressures, incremental vs radical change etc. The links between policy and research communities – networks, relationships, power, competing discourses, trust, knowledge etc. The evidence – credibility, the degree it challenges received wisdom, research approaches and methodology, simplicity of the message, how it is packaged etc An Analytical Framework External Influences Socio-economic and cultural influences, donor policies etc

  44. External Influences A Practical Framework political context Politics and Policymaking Campaigning, Lobbying Policy analysis, & research Media, Advocacy, Networking Scientific information exchange & validation Research, learning & thinking evidence links

  45. Using the framework • The external environment: Who are the key actors? What is their agenda? How do they influence the political context? • The political context: Is there political interest in change? Is there room for manoeuvre? How do they perceive the problem? • The evidence: Is it there? Is it relevant? Is it practically useful? Are the concepts familiar or new? Does it need re-packaging? • Links: Who are the key individuals? Are there existing networks to use? How best to transfer the information? The media? Campaigns?

  46. Using the Framework

  47. Group Work Use the RAPID Framework to analyse the key factors likely to affect the policy influence of your work (remember you will present each other’s work)

  48. To do: • Go over all factors (pick the most relevant questions) • Answer: • How friendly is the policy context? • Do you have access to the right evidence? • Are there clear and strong links between evidence and policy? • How influential are the external forces?

  49. Feedback and DiscussionGroups (a few key points):What is the issue?What factors matter?Is the evidence credible?Others:Are the same issues important? Do you find the evidence credible?What is the present policy agenda?

  50. What CSOs need to do • Work with them – seek commissions • Strategic opportunism – prepare for known events + resources for others • Get to know the policymakers. • Identify friends and foes. • Prepare for policy opportunities. • Look out for policy windows. • Who are the policymakers? • Is there demand for ideas? • What is the policy process? • Establish credibility • Provide practical solutions • Establish legitimacy. • Present clear options • Use familiar narratives. • Build a reputation • Action-research • Pilot projects to generate legitimacy • Good communication • What is the current theory? • What are the narratives? • How divergent is it? • Build partnerships. • Identify key networkers, mavens and salesmen. • Use informal contacts • Get to know the others • Work through existing networks. • Build coalitions. • Build new policy networks. • Who are the stakeholders? • What networks exist? • Who are the connectors, mavens and salesmen?

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