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Without capacity, there is no development . Findings from an analysis of capacity development in educational planning and management . Capacity development succeeds …. …when four levels are in harmony:. Strengthening individuals. Training needs differ strongly between and within countries
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Without capacity, there is no development Findings from an analysis of capacity development in educational planning and management
Capacity development succeeds … …when four levels are in harmony:
Strengthening individuals • Training needs differ strongly between and within countries • At central level, the key issue is not always the level of capacities, but their effective use. • At other levels, capacity gaps are more prevalent. • Even if capacities are limited, the response is not always training, because the cause is not a lack of training: turnover; de-motivation; insufficient “mobilization”. • Need for more than training: professional development
Developing organizations • The usefulness of training depends strongly on the effective functioning of the organizations. • A complex set of actions can help overcome organizational constraints. • A first step consists of developing management tools and normative frameworks: work plans; evaluation tools; detailed organizational charts; job descriptions. • This imposes strategic reflection, but their use risks to remain superficial.
Developing organizations • The need to develop a common vision and a belief that the organization can make a difference. • Existing incentives can go against organizational capacity development • No link between performance and position • Monopolization of capacities • Performance tends to improve when an organization and its staff feel accountable. • But such accountability needs to be counterbalanced by support and rewards.
The challenges to international assistance • A complex political process: reforms “may be relatively easy to achieve technically, but very tough to implement politically” (WB, 2004) • Difficult to develop “world-wide” strategies or to transfer successful strategies. • Traditional donor interventions (technical assistance) do not work well. • Traditional donor conditionalities are not adapted to complex reforms. • Evaluation methods may be inappropriate or even counterproductive.
Strategic principles • Capacity development needs internal leadership and ownership and needs to develop internal leadership and ownership. • Capacity development strategies must be context-relevant and context-specific. • Capacity development needs to be an integrated set of complementary interventions, though implementation may need to proceed in steps. • Commit to a long-term investment in capacity development, while working towards some short-term achievements • Before any outside intervention, assess its impact on national capacities at individual, organizational and institutional levels.
Strategic principles in fragile states • Fragile states face similar capacity challenges but more severely so. The following principles, of general relevance, are particularly important in fragile contexts (thanks to Lynne). • Prioritize capacity development even though the way forward is not clear. • Build trust and good inter-personal relationships. • Produce a capacity development plan (even if it is a small one). • Give people the tools that they need to do their jobs.
Recommendations for specific strategies? • The need to work on both supply of capacities and demand for capacities: Promoting social demand for better performance. • Move from training needs assessment to analysis of organizational functioning. • A need to combine organizational tools, professional development, the development of a common vision and demand for accountability. • Adapt training offer to the context. • A need to strengthen national training and research institutions in planning and management.
Some remaining dilemmas • What level to prioritize: the individual, the unit, the ministry, the government…? • With which actors to work? • Political – technical sphere • Working with state actors or with civil society • Short-term service delivery – long-term development priorities • Top-down versus bottom-up support