Rwanda CSOs - Workshop Presentation_Final

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Mapping of the civil society and project identification of a support program to the civil society in Rwanda PRELIMINARY FINDING DISCUSSION WITH CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS Kigali, 14 th of November 2013

description

civil society in Rwanda, synthetic presentation of the results of the mapping study carried out in 2014. The study has been looking at CSOs dynamics and at CSOs engagement in governance mechanisms, in a country that is at the same time considered an example of "good governance" and a semi-authoritarian regime. A main issue is the fact that existing mechanisms make interests and "conflicts" invisible.

Transcript of Rwanda CSOs - Workshop Presentation_Final

Page 1: Rwanda CSOs - Workshop Presentation_Final

Mapping of the civil society and project identification of a support

program to the civil society in Rwanda

PRELIMINARY FINDING DISCUSSION WITH CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS

Kigali, 14th of November 2013

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Part 1: Theoretical methodological framework

Part 2: Preliminary findings

Part 3: Concluding remarks

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Theoretical and Methodological Framework

Part 1

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The main categories used in the mapping

An operational concept of CSOs;

A tiered vision of CSOs;

Dynamic view of CSOs structures and processes;

An operational concept of governance;

An operational concept of capacities.

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A graphic representation of CSO tiers

Networks Federations

NGO NGOAssociationAssociation

Local grouping

Grass root org. Local

grouping

Second levelorganisations

Formally constitutedNGOs (direct supportor accompanyinggrass rootsorganisations); etc.

Third level org.

Third level org.

Coordinations

Third levelOrg.

cooperativesGrass root

org.Church

cooperatives

Third level organisations

Networks, federations, coordination, associations of churches ...

Church

First levelorganisations

Local associations,grass rootsorganisations;churches andconfessionalmovements; etc.

Capacity building

organisations /training institutions

Fourth level organisations:

platforms, forums, etc

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Main methodological features

Participatory approach;

Integration between quantitative and qualitative information;

Integration between information on “factual elements”;

Capitalization of existing knowledge;

Adoption of non statistical methods to foster the representation of differences in the considered universe.

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Geographical scope

The mapping considered the whole territory of Rwanda;

Activities have been carried out in Kigali as well as in the 5 Provinces: Rusizi and Rubavu (West) Huye (South) Nyagatare (East) Musanze (North)

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Information sources and consultation/data gathering tools

Sources Tools

Documentary sources

1st level CSOs Organisation Fiche Focus group meetings

2nd level CSOs Structured questionnaire

Focus group meetingsIn-depth interviews

3rd level CSOs Analysis greed In –depth interviews

INGOs In-depth interviews Group meetings

Local authorities In-depth interviews

Government bodies In depth interviews

Donors In depth interviews Group meetings

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The consulted actors

NGOs CBOs INGOs LAs Gov. bodies

Donors

Rusizi 8 12 3

Huye 11 9 1

Nyagatare 5 8

Musanze 11 13 2

Rubavu 12 18 2

Kigali 10 4 7 3 4

Total 47 64 7 8 3 4

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Preliminary Findings

Part 2

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The stakes for CSOs in Rwanda making decentralisation work;

fostering social cohesion from below;

supporting innovation processes;

strengthening communication and trust among citizens and public authorities;

facilitating access to information and services in peripheral areas and contributing to social inclusion.

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The challenges for CSOs

(re) defining role and position in a changing environment;

avoiding the prevalence of service delivery and reducing dependency from external agendas;

recognition as an autonomous actor;

representation and cohesion within Civil Society;

building the capacity to interact with government and LA and strengthening the capacities for engaging in governance;

recognising and including emerging actors, particularly at grassroots / strengthening the linkage with constituencies.

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Spaces for CSOs engagement in governance and policy dialogue

Consultation activities launched by government: law/policy formulation, sector working groups, informal consultation;

Engagement in decentralisation processes: JADF , District/Sector Development Plan, Budget setting and their monitoring and evaluation;

The dissemination of information on rights and public policies;

The exercise of “Voice” functions: collection of complaints, “suggestion boxes”, HR monitoring;

Improving service delivery: Scorecards; Committees for service management;

Improving public policies: support to land reform process UPR a space to be opened.

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The differentiated analysis of CSOs

The four levels:

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First level organisations

a diffused and multi-faced phenomenon (cooperatives, parents club, church related groups, micro-finance local schemes, students clubs, etc.);

the lack of recognition as actors;

The risk of a role limit to economic activities;

dependency and lack of a capacities;

“de facto” engagement in the governance of common goods at local level;

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a large number of organisations but a small number of “strong organisations”;

emergence and decline of “opportunistic NGOs”; lack of recognition as actors; lack of autonomy, dependency and formal structures that

often are under “owners-fathers”; weak linkages with local communities and local actors

(and use of CBOs as beneficiaries rather then recognising them as actors);

shortage of capacities to engage in governance functions; the tendency to stay into a “comfortable space” and to

work isolately and in isolation from other NSAs; high staff turnover and loss of capacities.

Second level organisations

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the appearance of very structured CS: many networks and umbrella, mainly at national level but few active member organisations;

unclear functions: representation or project implementation;

lack of autonomy and dependency; the lack of capacity to be a “place for communication” constituencies are seen as “beneficiaries”; emerging conflicts and lack of trust; variable capacities for project implementation but

shortage of capacities to engage in governance; the tendency to stay into “comfortable spaces”.

Third level organisations

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Fourth level organisations:

one only platform, but with mixed constituency (and often conflicting interests) and an unclear function: representation or project implementation

no voice, no influence, little capacities;

despite local antennas, lack of capacity to foster “bottom – up” communication;

a (not efficient) megaphone for government policies and a (not efficient) mechanism to foster dialogue and consultation.

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Available support to CSOs

Prevalence of grant and project approach; Few International NGOs supporting capacities

and development of national NGOs and CBOs; An approach to “support” that tends to limit

autonomy and to generate dependency; Lack of local capacity building structures and

lack of engagement of other NSAs for supporting CSOs;

Lack of support (including mutual support) for managing divergent interests between CSOs and public authorities.

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Concluding remarks

Part 3

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A need emerges for supporting CSOs in facing challenges concerning their engagement in governance. Renouncing to support them will imply both the lost of their contributions and the emerging of a drift process.

Supporting CSOs in facing these challenges would require an effort of both donors and government to:a) Recognise CSOs as and actor as a partner;b) Recognise that CSOs are diversified, and recognise informal groups; c) Open spaces for civil society to re-define its roles, functions and

structures; d) Support institutional capacity building and organisations’ development; e) Reinforce the capacity of public authorities at national and local level to

partner with CSOs;f) Strengthening/enlarging existing partnership and dialogue spaces,

recognising that a governance space exists that is not overlapping with the space of political institutions;

g) Reinforce civil society out of Kigali and new emerging actors (youth, innovative entrepreneurs, etc.)

h) Reinforce the linkages and interaction among NSAs, including at international level.