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Resilience and adaptation in the project state Gusztáv Nemes, Chris High nemes@ econ.core.hu c.high @ open.ac.uk. RE-INVENTING THE RURAL BETWEEN THE SOCIAL AND THE NATURAL XXIII European Society for Rural Sociology C ongress Vaasa, Finland 17-21 August 2009. Outline .
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Resilience and adaptationinthe project stateGusztáv Nemes, Chris Highnemes@econ.core.huc.high@open.ac.uk RE-INVENTING THE RURAL BETWEEN THE SOCIAL AND THE NATURAL XXIII European Society for Rural Sociology Congress Vaasa, Finland 17-21 August 2009
Outline • The New RuralParadigm and theProject State • Whyit is notworking? • Hungarian Leader – the veterinary horse • Resilience and adaptationthroughreflexiveagency
The ‘new rural paradigm’ (OECD 2006) • A shift from subsidising declining sectors, areas, socialgroups, towards investment to develop an area’s most productive activity • Valorisation of local specificitiesresources • Decentralised administration and management • Embracemulti-level governance Bryden 2007 Paradox – whydoesnotwork?
The era of the ‘Project State’ • Counter-narrativeto Welfare State • Project state – an institutional system that has arisen to deliver the ‘New Rural Paradigm’ • Project state – reasons for failure: The nature of projectsand project management Failure of multi-levelgovernance
Tyranny of projects- projects ruling actors • Creating exclusion • Impeding co-operation, • management tools from business (logframe,SWOT, etc.) • competition • match funding • Fixed support Difficult to sustain results and dev. capacity
Multi-level governance tendtofailforlack of: genuine decentralisation (power, responsibility, capacity missing on lower levels) Partnership and real participation on every level(interest-harmonisation, animation, beliefe in the system) appropriate institutions, and communication(interest representation, development capacity, continuity) effectivesociallearning and evaluation(no improvement of developmentpolicies and institutions)
What is behindfailure/successmulti-levelgovernance? • Political culture, participative democracy; • Strength of civil society, social networks; • Existing development capacity • Approach of the centre to decentralisation; These vary greatly, BUT backward areas are likely to be weak in these too…
2007-13 LEADER HUNGARY Action research, supportedbyNorwegian Financial Mechanism: Local development policies in a Europeanproject state-a systemic analysis of institutional bricolage 2009-2011 Ex-ante evaluator of RDP LAG member Planninggroup + mentoring (variousLAGs) NAURAMA Alliance
The Hungarian LEADER Programme The veterinaryhorse
Problemsduringplanning Little time to set up LAGs; Strong incentives to make them large (Ours - 60 villages, 184 LAG members); Rural Development Training and Consultation Institute – 400 employee, BUT control NOT help No training or professional support, no financial resources for local planning (5000 working hours) Planning to strict, standard, badlydesigned – online! 4 month, with ever changing guidance Strongartificial competition betweenLAGs
Problemsduringimplementation • Politicalaimsdominate • AdministrativeProcedureAct • Lack of trust, human decisions, • Insufficientcentraladministration • Divide and conquer, etc… System shouldcollapsbutdoesn’t WHY?
Resilience and adaptation Reflexiveagency Enthusiasm, energy Capacities Creativebricolage Mediation, translation Networking Sociallearning
Reflexiveagency – therural bites back I. Fromrabishpickingtohightech • Capacities andcreativebricolage
Reflexiveagency – therural bites back II. Spontaneousco-operation Lobbying onregionallevel Sociallearning
Reflexiveagency – therural bites back III. Co-operation‘forthefun of it’ Enthusiasm and networking
Thank you for your attentionGusztáv Nemes, Chris Highnemes@econ.core.huc.high@open.ac.uk