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The non-governmental sector in crisis ? What can b e learned from organisational ‘failure’?

The non-governmental sector in crisis ? What can b e learned from organisational ‘failure’?. David Lewis London School of Economics & Political Science. Introduction. Wide recognition of NGO ‘success’ in services, empowerment and advocacy

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The non-governmental sector in crisis ? What can b e learned from organisational ‘failure’?

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  1. The non-governmental sector in crisis? What can be learned from organisational ‘failure’? David Lewis London School of Economics & Political Science

  2. Introduction • Wide recognition of NGO ‘success’ in services, empowerment and advocacy • Organisations such as BRAC, NijeraKori and Grameen Bank have gained global reputations – range of work • Others have run into trouble – ComillaProshika, GonoshahajjoSangstha (GSS), Samata, Proshika … • What can be learned from cases of ‘organisational failure’ in Bangladesh’s NGO sector?

  3. Longstanding issues • ‘the rapid growth and diversification of the NGO sector has also given rise to questions and concerns. These include the viability of a regulatory framework developed when the size and scope of NGOs was far more limited, the appropriate political and commercial spaces for NGO activities, trade-offs between NGO sustainability and pro-poor orientation, the impact and quality of NGO services as they have scaled up, NGO corporate governance, and the implications of different government-NGO partnerships’ (World Bank, 2006)

  4. Possible explanations • ‘Organisation-centred’ – low internal accountability • ‘State-centred’ – weak regulatory systems, politicisation • ‘Society-centred’ – pervasive clientelism • ‘External actor-centred’ – donor resource flows

  5. Distinctiveness • Bangladesh’s NGO sector as a distinctive, unique hybrid produced by histories of social and political activism, impulses of international aid, and national state formation • Socially-embedded within wider institutions, politics and economy • No ‘one size fits all’ solution can be applied bulding Bangladesh’s non-governmental sector

  6. ComillaProshika case • 1976 formation, hybrid of activism/developmentalism • 1981 split into two organisations around founders • 1980s consolidation and growth • 1989 CP serving 65,000 people in 1300 groups in east • 1990 CIDA evaluation identifies disfunctionalmanagament committee, lack of accountability, financial mismanagement and faded ‘empowerment’ agenda – staff revolt in 1992

  7. ComillaProshika case (1) • The Proshika 1981 split – ideology/factional interests • ‘One faction believed that the poor should be mobilized solely to struggle against the tyranny of landlords and other vested interests in the rural areas. The [other] faction … believed that savings, credit and other economic programmes were essential to the development process… [and] did not agree that conscientization and credit, for example, were mutually exclusive’ (Smillie and Hailey 2001, p.98)

  8. ComillaProshikacase (2) • Donor pressure for sustainability through resource mobilisation • Lack of professional organisational approach • Political adventurism – key leader became Jatiya Party candidate 1988

  9. ComillaProshika case (3) • ‘The organisation had no clear vision or mission, no real programmes apart from credit programmes (which had a poor repayment rate), no properly trained staff and no real ethic of professionalism. I didn’t have the skills or the training to manage an effective micro-credit programme …’ (interview, former senior manager) • ‘… an outstanding personality can hinder the development of leadership in an organisation. Also, when an organisation moves into uncharted areas not familiar to leaders, concentration of power may lead to irreversible losses’ (CIDA Evaluation Report, 1989)

  10. Conclusion (1) • Unhelpful to build a ‘crisis narrative’, but low public credibility of NGOs remains a problem • NGOs as complex, socially-embedded organisations – no single explanation • ‘Failure’ is both potentially positive (purs pressure on low performers) and negative (weakens reputation of the sector)

  11. Conclusion (2) • Importance for broader governance of NGO sector of NGOs being seen to operate responsibly, and subject to fair rules • But NGO governance cannot be reduced to a merely ‘technical’ matter: - Informality is essential to NGO functioning and resilience (hybridity argument) - Important to avoid building an NGO monoculture (diversity argument)

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