1 / 8

April 18 th , 2011 Governance and role of NGOs/INGOs

April 18 th , 2011 Governance and role of NGOs/INGOs. Stephanie de Chassy Oxfam GB Social Policy & Governance Programme Policy Team. Observations from experience.

haig
Télécharger la présentation

April 18 th , 2011 Governance and role of NGOs/INGOs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. April 18th, 2011Governance and role of NGOs/INGOs Stephanie de Chassy Oxfam GB Social Policy & Governance Programme Policy Team

  2. Observations from experience... • Mid size ‘capacity building’ NGOs often started by focusing on demand side (R4D, PTF, Global Partners...) – now starting to explore integration with supply side • Support grassroots NGOs: grants, technical assistance • Work on specific issues: corruption, democracy building, social accountability • Across regions but struggle to ensure scale, develop strong local coalitions and find legitimate CSOs • Global think tank and policy advocacy entities tend to be very specialised (Global Financial Integrity, Global Integrity, IBP...) • Lobbying and networking, research and indexes • Difficult to attract funding and get public attention • Not always able to connect with large INGOs

  3. Local NGOs • Starting with specific programmatic focus: livelihood, education, humanitarian • Then added research and advocacy based on ground reality & conduct analysis (budget...) • Attempt to build relationships with local government and MPs • Struggle with connecting local to national and influencing central government • Limited ability to reach out to international institutions and donors

  4. Accountability & Transparency • Awareness about rights now accompanied by social accountability approaches and tools • Example of RTI ‘movement’ in India demonstrating power of popular movement on transparency and accountability • Political champions enabled progressive Act and commitment to implement (unlike Nepal, Bangladesh) • Together with social audit/CSC potential to balance power relations

  5. NGOs accountability • Credibility and legitimacy towards people and donors • Financial transparency • Social impact demonstration • Norms and standards recognised and supported by donors and governments

  6. Oxfam ‘Right to be Heard’ • Introduced as part of Rights Based Approach in early 2000 as ‘stand alone’ • Focus on political voice, active citizens, inclusion • Power analysis as fundamental first step • Attitudes and beliefs change critical to power shift • Create and maintain ‘enabling’ environment for poor people to raise voice and participate/influence public policy • ‘Women at the heart of everything we do’ – gender lens • Flagship programme: ‘Raising Her Voice’ • Constant analysis of local context and power plays • Ensuring laws and regulations are passed and implemented (ex VAW law in Bangladesh – action plan) • Working in coalition – national level feeding evidence to global advocacy • Document, learn, share – South South exchange and solidarity

  7. Current focus • Inequality as multi-dimensional issue • Root causes analysis (power) • Access to essential services and accountability • Emerging urban poverty and youth vulnerability • Solutions: taxation – redistribution – aid quality • Private sector responsibilities (land, environment) • Fragile states • Agile approach: local communities and ‘soft’ programming • Importance of building civil society

  8. Challenges in INGOs • Organisational silos limiting thematic linkages and local-national-global programme & advocacy work • Working in fragile states means stretching comfort zones and working with invisible forms of power • Working with Social Movements requires flexibility and risk taking (political engagement) • Forming Alliances and connecting with think tanks and research & advocacy institutions not always prioritized • Working with IFIs and influencing donors • M&E, knowledge management often challenging

More Related