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International NGO Perspective on Transformative Roles in HIV, Nutrition and Food Security. World AIDS Day 2008, Irish Aid Seminar Connell Foley (Concern). Content & Focus. Givens/Assumptions Work of INGOs in these areas Civil Society and INGOs
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International NGO Perspective on Transformative Roles in HIV, Nutrition and Food Security World AIDS Day 2008, Irish Aid Seminar Connell Foley (Concern)
Content & Focus • Givens/Assumptions • Work of INGOs in these areas • Civil Society and INGOs • Role of International NGOs in HIV, Food Security and Nutrition. • Conclusions
Assumptions/Givens • The global HIV epidemic is still outpacing the global response (33 million living with HIV and AIDS; 300 m directly affected!). • Poorest disproportionally affected and most vulnerable • Vulnerability of those living with HIV and AIDS increased by lack of food and poor diet/nutrition (++ food & fuel price increases etc.) • Preventing new HIV infections is key to reversing the HIV and AIDS epidemic. • There is no cure but ARVs are effective where they can be accessed, afforded and taken properly. • There are still major historical, religious cultural and educational barriers to behaviour change and prevention. • HIV continues to decimate productive populations including those trying to fight poverty and HIV and AIDS (government services, NGOs, other institutions). • Many resources are being directed at the problem.
INGOs/Concern: Food Security and Nutrition • Food Security via: • Agricultural production and productivity • Livestock • Disaster Risk Reduction • Capacity building of services (Ag Ext; Vets etc.) • Microfinance (rural and urban) – some specific targeting • Livelihood diversification and options • Social Protection • Nutrition: • Diversification of food production and accessibility • Dietary diversification • Kitchen gardens • Behaviour change in preparation and use of foods (Positive Deviance/Hearth Model)
Models of Development Economic Growth Model • Inward investment; international markets and international trade; goods value chain Sustainability Model • Minimising vulnerability and risk; diversifying income sources and livelihoods options; environmental sustainability and positive management. • Is the dominance of the one model appropriate to all contexts?
INGOs/Concern: HIV and AIDS Interventions • Mainstreaming via: • Laying Foundations by highlighting the issue • Internal Mainstreaming – staff attitudes and behaviours • External Mainstreaming – ensuring that Food Security and Nutrition programmes include H&A susceptibility and vulnerability as part of contextual and problem analysis and that interventions reduce risk to programme participants and reduce likelihood of participants (and the programme) being negatively affected. • Programmes: • Building capacity of CSOs working on HIV issues • Linking the poorest to key services (VCT, ARVs etc.) • Trying to stop the spread of the pandemic through prevention-focused activities such as KAP and BCC strategies/activities.
Civil Society Perspective? • International NGO ≠ Civil Society • (Like NGO view of “government” – not analytical enough of the different elements) • Media is part of civil society – article in Irish Newspaper in 2008 saying that: “Africa gives nothing to the world except AIDS”… mixed reaction suggests civil society and public opinion does not have a singular perspective.
Are there special issues with HIV+ Organisations? • Historically, due to perceived ‘death-sentence’: • Strong activism (nothing to lose – ‘stand up for your rights’ • Personal volatility causing management and governance volatility?? • Higher loss of members and turnover of leadership? • Our experience alerts us to this possibility!
The Marginal Woman Farmer in Mozambique Her Needs: • Support from family, kin, community, extension agents, patrons (political)… • Inputs (seeds, tools, credit…) from private sector, CBOs, NGOs, extension agents and other government outreach workers. Her Risks, Susceptabilities and Vulnerabilities: • Who supports her to minimise these? • Women kin; close friends, church, voluntary groups • (Civil Society as voluntary group support and structured social capital but civil society also as a set of principles of ethical behaviours) Issue of how much time she has to give to care/work. Time poverty? Issue of personal agency and resilience
Key NGO Changes since 1993 • Programme Approach – larger, thematic, multi-level, multi-partner, micro-macro links… • Partnership Model – various sectors • Policy Advocacy • Linking with PRSPs, government policies and strategies • Analysis of target groups, contexts and issues becoming more systematic, professional… and complex
NGO’s Engagement with Private Sector • Concern and Valid International • Concern and Valid Nutrition • Concern and DEPFA Bank • Concern and Kerry Group • No more the ideological knee-jerk reaction though suspicions over value sharing remain. • Why not partnership with pharmaceutical companies?? (but limits…)
Concern’s Engagement with Research • Valid International • IFPRI • IDS • Centre for Global Health, TCD • INTRAC • (ODI, ICRAF, ICRISAT, CIEd…) • Importance of evidence and stronger M&E; key component of operational and action research)
Dilemmas for INGOs I • HIV is not the only issue central to poverty and vulnerability!! • Many issues to be taken into consideration – risk, vulnerability, inequality, exclusion, poor governance, environmental threats, livelihoods, water, other diseases, poor education… • Focus on holistic analysis of all key issues in a context and design interventions based on the more critical of these. • Get around question of “Who designs….” (bias!)
Dilemmas for INGOs II • Aid architecture and processes: • Sector Wide Approaches (Swaps) - • Aid effectiveness (Paris Dec) processes and implications • Vertical funds and changing funding processes… • NGOs getting sucked closer to bilateral roles • NGOs pressurised to produce evidence – sucked closer to research roles and processes • Constant dilemma between humanitarian imperative (keeping people alive; meeting basic needs) and facilitating long-term and deeper transformation of communities and societies. • Constant dilemma between outcome and process • Move to partners – if intermediaries, huge issue of sub-contracting for service delivery v. transformative/facilitating institutions…. So many layers of weak capacity… effective???
Are INGOs losing their niche? • Community understanding and development. • Building social capital and supporting local institutions (especially of the poor) and their development. • How to empower extremely poor people and help them to influence the factors which affect their lives • Learning and innovation around this niche. Reality? • On HIV, do IEC but seem to achieve little behaviour change (weak BCC). • Mainstreaming can be evaporation if not careful. • Trying to do everything creates an issue of depth and effectiveness (yet narrow effectiveness often means lack of synergy and ‘virtuous and reinforcing circles’).
INGO Role • Linking the poorest to the policies, institutions and processes for long-term change (duty-bearers; rights) • Building capacity – confidence, continuity, empowering, taking responsibility as well as demanding rights • Supporting good local governance and making sure that the poorest have a say in decisions which affect them… • Creating CIVIL SOCIETY as a key component of open, transparent societies (assumption that this supports extreme poverty elimination as well as wider goal of human development – freedom etc.) • Learning and innovation in each context and to share between contexts – ‘proof of concept’ and ‘proof of application’.
Hub Model Government Commissioning Agency (Joint Forest Management Committees) Governance & Feedback Agreement NGO Service Delivery Agency Client Participation Searching for Alternative and Effective M&E Systems
Conclusion – Aid Effectiveness How are NGOs effective? • Debate often ends up in issue of client satisfaction or “accountability to beneficiaries” – how do they judge us? • Concern’s and MANGO’s “Listen First” action research suggests that revisiting quality of participation is the key element in making the organisation more accountable to beneficiaries. • What is our ‘added value’? Surely it is that of facilitating change at community level and empowering/building capacity of extremely poor people to be able to influence decisions which affect them and to have greater control over their lives.
Composition of Civil Society: General agreement on: - Religious organisations, churches, temples, mosques • - Social clubs • - Women's groups • - Private schools and colleges • - Free press and independent media • - Consumer associations • - Labour or trade unions • - Professional associations and cooperatives • - Community-based organisations (CBOs) • - Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) Argued over: - Tribe, clan (hereditary relations) • - Business/for-profit associations/organisations • - Political parties (esp. that in a ruling government) • - Extremist "un-civil" groups such as extremist political or religious groups.