Civil Society: Empowering the Underpowered

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    Transnational Society General Lecture Review

    Name : Andhyta Firselly Utami

    Department/NPM : International Relations / 0906550373

    Resource : A lecture by Juni Thamrin about Poverty and The Role ofNon-State Agents and Civil Society on March 5th, 2011

    Civil Society: Empowering the Underpowered

    In his lecture, Juni Thamrin highlighted the importance of civil societys role in mitigating poverty,

    given its distinct characteristics and opportunities. Unlike the government (may also be referred as state)

    whose agenda is to create a prosperous nation in general, civil society organizations have concerns to the

    condition going on the grassroots. However, there are particular obstacles that become constraints of this

    organized group of people. The task that should be carried out by our international community in the future

    is, therefore, to find a solution for these problems by harmonizing and creating strong relations as well as

    cooperation between all stakeholders which also include corporations in addition to bureaucracy.

    It is crucially important to first identify what the term civil society should be described as. In his

    lecture, Juni Thamrin defined it as non-state, non-political, and non-market actor who bridges and connects

    active citizens with one another. Additionally, civil society can also be specifically depicted as non-mandate

    holders of formal power because they receive supports from the society that they try to empower.

    Among many issues that arise in state-market-civil society relations, there are several examples

    that need more attention, such as:

    1. Imbalance of power, wealth, as well as inequality of access to the main sources

    Through direct comparison between poor and elite people, we can easily infer how there exists a

    serious imbalance of advocacy ability to the government and access to resource distribution in the society.

    The objective of civil society is to mitigate this gap and make sure that poor people can also obtain sources

    that are actually allocated by the government.

    2. Discrimination and exploitation of poor people

    Being uneducated and uninformed, poor people are vulnerable to discrimination and exploitation at

    their workplace. Therefore, another effort that is made by civil society organizations is empowerment so that

    discrimination and exploitation of poor people can be discontinued once and for all.

    3. Deficit of democracy: formal democracy is not enough, need deliberate democracy

    Another theme that was brought by Juni Thamrin is the absence of established democracy where

    everybody has the access towards communicating their aspirations. However, it is still questionable upon the

    measurability of democracy. When their ideas are channeled through representatives at the House, can it be

    called as deficit democracy or not? This is a puzzling inquiry that should first be answered.

    4. The unfair mechanism of law

    Although most countries do own law as their basis of state, usually unfair mechanism of law still

    prevails. In Indonesia, this issue can almost be called as common, realizing how there are so many cases

    which reveals the bad system of law in this country. Seeing that law is very fundamental in a nation, the

    issue becomes one of civil societys central concerns.

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    5. Environmental degradation/climate change

    Although there are already many actions and agreements done by the government in responding to

    environmental degradation, the international community has not seen any significant process. Therefore, this

    case needs to be solved through other means. With its transnational property, civil society can stimulate new,

    alternative measures in ending climate change.

    6. Poverty and underdevelopmentThe classic and yet never-ending problem of poverty as well as underdevelopment have always

    been the main concern of many civil society organizations. So far, there are several measures taken by

    NGOs in order to empower and equip the society with skill in addition to direct aids whose final goal is to

    mitigate poverty and underdevelopment.

    7. Anti-war, abuse of power, human rights

    The last but most complex problem that becomes an issue tackled by civil society organizations is

    abuse of power, violation of human rights, and anti-war campaigns. NGOs find this harder than other issues

    because it needs direct confrontation with states interest and include high politics matters.

    Not only in Indonesia, these issues are also common in other countries, although the specific cases

    might differ in several ways according to their location. The question would then be: how far civil society

    can engage and contribute in giving solutions?

    In order to gain multidimensional goals of civil society in an effective way, it is very important to

    have awareness towards the social condition and stigma of the state or country where they work in. For

    example, in Indonesia there is a shift of paradigm which also impacts the means used by NGOs in attaining

    their objectives. To put it briefly, in the old paradigm, Indonesia focused on centralization, modernization,

    objectivity, as well as constant development of village and underdeveloped areas. These concepts are now

    changed into decentralization, postmodernism, intersubjectivity, as well as empowerment.Among these change of perspectives, we can find that todays government tries to give more

    chance for autonomous regions instead of centralizing the governance in the capital city. Simultaneously,

    mobilization of people is transformed into more participation of the people. Conquest and exploitation of

    people by the government is highly critiqued and slowly altered into more empowerment and preservation.

    The previous functional relationship between government-to-people is adjusted to a more flexible network

    of society. National interest comprises territorial concerns, and hence the central government needs to pay

    more attention to their regional bureaucracy. Plans on conventional economic is advanced to local self-

    reliance development policies which is aimed to sustain and not merely temporal.

    Among many things that NGOs can do, there are four strategic roles of this entity:

    y As a vehicle in building collective awareness of the citizen in terms of exercising their rights and

    assert them against the obligations of the state

    y Create local democratic mechanism emphasizing division of labor as well as the benefit

    y Means of rights advocacy at local, national, and international level

    y Provide education to achieve active citizenship

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    From this elaboration, we can infer that the focus of non-governmental organizations, or NGOs, is

    actually aimed to solve the previously stated seven issues. By being a vehicle in building the collective

    awareness or intersubjectivity, NGOs intend to commence their actions by strengthening the peoples minds

    before enhancing other areas. Simultaneously, NGOs touches the development of democracy for local

    people. While carrying out means of rights through advocacies, NGOs also provide education to achieve

    active citizenship. This is usually supported by the people itself because they perceive actions by NGOs asaltruistic without hidden political agendas.

    Additionally, NGOs general characteristics also contribute towards better acceptance from the

    people. NGOs are recognized as: (1) A number of people with clear visions and missions, (2) A non-profit,

    value-based organization with voluntary mechanism, (3) Altruism-oriented organization that handles public

    issues, (4) Directly or indirectly conduct international relations (which makes it an important actor in

    international relations study), as well as its (5) full admiration on ethics (social justice, human rights, gender

    justice). These five points construct the societys assumption towards NGOs and eventually gain supports

    from society for these NGOs.

    The development of NGOs in Indonesia cannot be separated from the dynamics of international

    economic and political situations itself. International NGOs started to develop firstly post World War (e.g.

    Plan International) and strengthened through the establishment of United Nations Charter, the Declaration of

    Human Rights, ECOSOC Resolutions, as well as numbers of summit and international agreements. Inter-

    regional cooperation such as AEPF-APF-World Social Forum also contributes towards the further progress

    by NGOs. Today, parallel summits can become an alternative mean for NGOs to gain attention from states

    and generate their own version of solutions. However, it is always important for NGOs to make sure that

    they have supports from the government itself because in the end they aregoing to need legal and fund

    supports that come from these institutions.In general, there are some ideological views and jargons that are very attached to NGOs, such as:

    Think globally, act locally; Working with people and lives shared with them (one world action);

    Empowerment and equality; Voice of the poor; Putting people first; Participatory development; and People

    to people solidarity. Hermeneutically, these statements maintain the good kid image of NGOs. Generally,

    the principles of NGOs are done through several empowering methods: Participatory techniques and

    toolkits, workshop and experiences sharing, community report card, training for trainers, consultation and

    tutorial, field visit and comparative study, social audit, and citizen chartered.

    Simultaneously, NGOs also do other supporting activities such as community organizing, non-

    formal education, educational film, engagement in strategic community events, documenting activity

    process, initiating reading room and study room for community members, and facilitating community

    discussion. In the end, civil society through NGOs intends to create a better world through their alternative

    means. As also stated previously, these NGOs are benefited because they have opportunities that are not

    present in market or state actors, but this also becomes a challenge because NGOs do not have abundant

    resources and their work is more inward looking. However, optimism should always be kept and nurtured

    because so far these NGOs have shown great progress in empowering the society.