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Participatory Development. http://www.mekonginstitute.org/. What is participation?.

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  1. Participatory Development http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  2. What is participation? 􀂉 the action of partaking, having or forming part of the substance, quality, or nature of something or person 􀂉 the fact or condition of sharing in common (with others, or with each other); association as partners, partnership, fellowship; profit-sharing 􀂉 the active involvement of members of a community or organization in decisions which affect their lives and work Oxford Dictionary http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  3. 􀂉 process of equitable and active involvement of all stakeholders in the formulation of development policies and strategies and in the analysis, planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of development activities 􀂉 organized effort within institutions and organizations to increase stakeholder access and control over resources and related decision-making that contributes to sustainable livelihoods FAO http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  4. In development projects…. 􀂄 With regard to rural development…participation includes people’s involvement in decision-makingprocesses, in implementing programs, their sharing in the benefitsof development programs and their involvement in efforts to evaluatesuch programs (Cohen and Uphoff 1977) 􀂄 Community participation is an active processby which beneficiary or client groups influencethe direction and execution of a development projectwith a view of enhancing their well-being in terms of income, personal growth, self-reliance or other values they cherish (Paul 1987). http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  5. Levels of Participation(UNDP/CSOPP) • Passive Participation - beneficiaries basically • welcome the project proposals and support them • but are generally cautious (and even suspicious) in • relation to project management • Increasing involvement -beneficiaries begin to • develop more trust in the project and more contact • with its activities and staff; they may also begin to • take on some responsibilities http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  6. Active Participation -beneficiaries play the role of active partners in the project's implementation and development and assume increasing responsibilities • Ownership/Empowerment - beneficiaries are both willing and able to sustain and further develop the initiatives begun by the project http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  7. What is participatory development? 􀂄 “Participatory development is a process, which involves citizens actively and in all decisions that influence their lives.“ (BMZ 2002) 􀂄 Participatory development stands forpartnership which is built upon the basis of dialogue among the various actors, during which the agenda is jointly set, and local views and indigenous knowledge are deliberately sought and respected. This implies negotiationrather than the dominance of an externally set project agenda. Thus people become actors instead of being beneficiaries(OECD 1994). http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  8. Whichever definition we use, the process of PD is fundamentally aboutpower …. The less powerful must struggle for increased control over their lives! http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  9. Why Participatory Development? • Failure of past development programs to improve the quality of lives of the people the programs were basically designed for! http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  10. Previous Development Approaches vs. Participatory Development • Expert knowledge vs. local knowledge • Top-down vs. bottom-up • Recipients of development treated as passive or conservative vs. treated as the center, active and seeing situation from their point of view http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  11. Negative views on PD 􀂄 Participation costs time and money 􀂄 No guaranteed impact upon the end- product 􀂄 Losing time for “talking” 􀂄 Destabilization of social organization 􀂄 Danger of shifting the burden to the poor http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  12. Important Outcome of PD The most important outcome of participatory development is the presence of local people in decision-making, project design and implementation as well as evaluation. The people come through the process with newly acquired skills and a sense of being in control.” (pride, commitment and ownership) White, S. edit., 2003, Participatory Video http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  13. In the end, we can say that… Consultation and participation of stakeholders in the development process boosts the effectiveness of development programs in reducing poverty. http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  14. Thank You http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

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