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PraxisNote No.5
Mayan
Organisation and
Management
Felix Alvarado
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Mayan Organisation andManagement
Felix Alvaradoi
Keywords
Organisation, Indigenous Peoples, Management, Professional Development, Research Agenda
Introduction
A large proportion of Latin-Americansare not Latin, despite living with theheritage of the encounter between Spainand the Americas. Among otherchallenges, indigenous peoples in thecontinent face the need to manage theirorganisations in the context of a systembuilt by cultures very different fromtheir own. In Guatemala, Mayan
organisations have adopted anincreasingly relevant role in the nationalcontext, and have experienced somedegree of institutionalisation, along withits implications. There is at leastincipient evidence pointing to importantdifferences between Western andMayan management of indigenouspeoples organisations in Guatemala,
where around half the populationbelongs to one of 22 different ethno-
linguistic groups. Some evidencesuggests that received knowledge ofconventional management promoted bymanagement schools, and theassumptions about the constitution oforganisations in the Western world, donot necessarily offer the best solutions,and cannot be adopted uncritically byindigenous peoples bent on taking morecontrol of their own development.
Diversity as an Aspect ofManagement
Although the relevance of social andcultural diversity for both analysis andpractice in management has beenrecognised since people started studyingand prescribing management, interest inculture as a crucial dimension fororganisation and performance increased
when it was perceived as a critical factorin addressing a variety of differencesbetween Japanese and US industrialorganisations (Schein,1995). A firstaspect of this interest, which we mayterm diagnostic, seeks to typify thecultural differences betweenorganisations entering into contact witheach other, or focuses on the way in
which management is practiced indifferent cultural contexts. A secondaspect, which we may call instrumental,seeks to find ways to manage agentsfrom cultures different from themanagers. Additionally, the process ofinter- and trans-national linkage calledglobalisation is increasingly recognisedas cultural, social and political, ratherthan just economic (Reich, 1992;
Appadurai, 1996; Reinicke, 1998).
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Empirical Features ofMayan Organisations
From one study we found a variety ofdualities illustrating differences in
perception or practice between Mayanorganisations and the internationalcooperation agencies helping them1(Rodas, Alvarado and Chacln, 1998).
Among other things, Mayan subjects seeactions and results in their organisationsas part of a longer-term process than theproject linking them to any specificcooperation agency. They had a markedpreference for oral rather than writtencommunications. Additionally, percep-
tions about the time ruling theirtransactions are cyclical, rather thanlinear, making it difficult for them tomake sense of donors expectationsconcerning discrete products that comefrom clearly differentiated short-termactivities (Stewart, 1997).
Are these findings simply localpeculiarities within the organisationalcosmos, or are we facing phenomena
that may teach us something aboutmanagement, and at the same time helpus derive learning that may benefitsubjects in the Mayan population itself?Before attempting an answer necessarily tentative to thesequestions, it is useful to identify otherfeatures pointing towards differencesand similarities between management inMayan organisations and notionsreceived from more conventional
management.
Indigenous organisations have over thelast decade and a half progressively
1 In this study, among other things, a set ofmanagers from NGOs self-defined as Mayanand the officers serving them in internationalcooperation agencies were interviewed toidentify issues arising from their relationship. Aseries of issues were identified in whichimportant differences existed among the two
groups (e.g. decision-making, criteria forrecruitment, oral versus written commitmentand so on).
found spaces for political, ideologicaland strategic convergence in their effortsto vindicate themselves vis--vis a staterepresenting non-indigenous interests.
This has meant that above their ethnic
and linguistic differences Mayan leadershave had to find a lingua franca paradoxically Spanish and at the sametime use it to develop their own culturalinitiatives. The challenge has been huge,and the effort has indeed been criticisedas revisionist (Bastos and Cams, 1995)among the indigenous community itself,as well as leaving little time for theorganisations own internaldevelopment. Besides the challenges
posed by inter-cultural relations amongindigenous communities, Mayanorganisations have had to face the needto link to international cooperationagencies. In the study mentioned above,interviewees underscored the burdenthat trans-cultural communication placeson Mayan organisations, which mustdeal not just with using Spanish for day-to-day transactions, but also having toadopt and adapt to the codes of
cooperation agencies coming fromcultures that are even more remote fromtheirs than the Hispanic (Rodas,
Alvarado and Chacln, 1998).
The difficulty of grasping the scope ofthis cultural complexity is repeatedlyemphasised by external evaluations ofgovernment and cooperation agencies
working with Mayan organisations,which point to the insufficient
incorporation of a focus on ethnicdiversity in programmes, making itimpossible to address this requirementadequately (Alvarado and Barillas, 1998).
Reproducing Values
Where do the differences betweenMayan and Western organisations comefrom, and what do they tell us about thecontext in which these organisationsarise? A valuable pointer on this subject
is offered by studying educationalsystems. An analysis of the educational
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situation of the indigenous peoples inGuatemala identified educationalpractices currently maintained withinMayan communities (Zapeta et al.,1997). Three of a variety of elements for
a practical model of Mayan educationare used here. First, there is an emphasison those who occupy positions ofauthority as teachers: they are theelders either literally or figuratively
who teach the right way of doing things.Second, the preferred medium forteaching is oral: advice, explanations andcorrections in practice sustain thelearning process. Finally, education,rather than the theoretical transfer of
knowledge, is a process of learning inpractice, for workand in the context of dailylife. At the same time, the school as astate organisation is seen by the subjectsof that study as the place whereexogenous education takes place, andthrough which the state assails anddilutes their culture.
The Role of the Mayan Manager:Success and Acceptance
An important area to be studiedconcerns the actual practices engaged inby managers in Mayan organisations.
The municipality as the key agent oflocal government in Guatemalademonstrates the relationship betweenmayor, citizens and indigenousorganisations (Glvez and Camposeco,1997; Glvez, Hoffman and Mack(1998) contrast authoritarian andparticipative styles of government in
several indigenous communities,underlining the importance of historicaland cultural aspects of the localdynamics and their relationship with thenational state in understanding thesedifferences. This points to theimportance of resisting the temptationto stereotype Mayan organisations andtheir management, by assuming thatbelonging to a culture that favoursparticipation and consensus necessarily
leads to a more democratic form oforganisation and decision-making
(Rodas, Alvarado and Chacln, 1998). Italso sends a methodological warningabout the importance of treating theseas any other organisation, on the basisof the empirical features they present,
rather than based on assumed genericfeatures.
Another study illustrates the challengesinvolved in Mayan management as a nomans land. Thus, a mayor in a chortcommunity faced difficulties because, asa member of a generation that was nottaught the ancestral language, he haddifficulty communicating with oldermembers in his own community. At the
same time, urban non-indigenousinhabitants rejected him for beingindigenous and a farmer (Arvalo et al.,1997: 2831).
Practical Implications:Evaluation and Commitment
The practice of management asunderstood in the West generally impliesshowing results. A comparison in thisarea with Mayan organisations would
reveal important differences, which playan important role in communicationefforts between these organisations andtheir donors. Repeated reports in Rodas,
Alvarado and Chacln (1998) mentionthat Mayan organisations see means ofevaluation (such as the logframe) asrigid, focused on the short term andleaving little space for process results.
Whilst Mayan managers tend toappreciate the incidence of their actions,
and those of their organisations, upon abroad and unspecific agenda for cultural,social and political development, mostdonors prefer to see productscorresponding directly to the amountsof money contributed, with previouslyspecified objectives in one to three-yearcycles, at the most. Again, thisunderscores a notable differencebetween Mayan and non-Mayanorganisations concerning preferred
communication technologies. Mayanorganisations tend to prefer oral over
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written means, not just as a way tocommunicate, but also as a way to commit;in other words, verbal agreements areconsidered more credible than thoserequiring written formalisation (Rodas,
Alvarado and Chacln, 1998).
Structure and Legality
In their interaction with the state andwith the rest of society, Mayanorganisations see the need to adjust tothe existing legal and institutionalstructure. They have had toaccommodate themselves to the legalframework for non-governmentorganisations (NGOs). In this context,
although Mayan organisations arecharacterised as NGOs, some importantrestrictions and contradictions existconcerning the assumptions of that legalclassification. For example, the privilegeand dignity awarded to elders within apredominantly oral culture, and thelimited circulation of people withinclosed communities is relativelyinconsistent with a legal structurepredicated on periodic and frequent
(one to three years) exchange ofmembers sitting on an elected board ofdirectors. In one study, the majority oforganisations self-defined as Mayan fitmore with a community-basedorganisation structure than with aservice organisation structure (Alvaradoand Carrera, 1996). Finally as mentionedbefore, Mayan organisations unlike theirnon-indigenous counterparts, tend to be
participative rather than representative
organisations. Thus, while non-MayanNGOs mostly promote specific interestsand intents, Mayan organisations tend toseek the solution to social topics or issues,and to arrive at decisions through broadconsensus.
The Next Step: Buildinga Research Agenda
Both empirical evidence and what hasbeen said by multiple authors aboutmanaging cultural diversity leave little
doubt about the importance of a studyon management in Mayan organisations.However, what are the questions weshould ask and how will we use them?
The Indigenous Peoples:Subjects of Exclusion andInequity
The indigenous population inGuatemala, as in a large part of Latin
America, is subjected to a profoundinequity. More than half theGuatemalan population may beconsidered indigenous, which includesthree major ethno-linguistic groups and22 distinct ethnic groups. Ethnicity is
closely related to poverty, so that 92.6per cent of the indigenous populationlives in poverty and 81.3 per cent inextreme poverty, while in the case of thenon-indigenous population thesenumbers are 65.8 per cent and 45.2 percent, respectively (World Bank, 1995).
This translates into worse social andeconomic indicators for the indigenouspopulation. For example, the mortalityrate among children 0 to 4 years old is
directly related to the percentage ofindigenous inhabitants in each of thecountrys departments, the coverage ofhealth services is much lower among theindigenous population than otherwise(Barillas and Valladares, 1998) andeducation coverage and quality are loweramong indigenous and rural populationsthan amongst the rest of the population(De la Cruz, Girn, Zapeta and
Alvarado, 1998).
At the same time, many of the featuresof Mayan organisations that we see are areflection of ways of interpreting the
world and addressing problems thathark back to a long tradition, linked tothe need to resist and survive over 500years of domination, first colonial andthen under a nation state that wasorganised to serve the interests of adifferent, hegemonic culture. With the
return to a formally democratic regimein 1986, new spaces opened up in the
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country for the legal organisation of theindigenous population. Amid anexplosive expansion in the number ofnon-government organisations in thecountry2, new and expanded Mayan
organisations also arose, both thosedealing with the promotion and defenceof the Mayan peoples rights and thoseaddressing the conceptualization of theircultural bases (Bastos and Cams, 1995).In the same way, the state began toaccommodate in an expanded mannerthe needs for representation of theindigenous peoples. In 1996, the Accordfor a Firm and Lasting Peace was signedbetween the government and the
guerrillas, ending over thirty years ofinternal war. Among the accordscovered were one specifically addressingthe identity and rights of the indigenouspeoples and another dealing with socio-economic and agrarian issues. The firstaccord covers aspects of culturaldevelopment of indigenous peoples andtheir equitable treatment by the state,
while the second deals with the needsfor socioeconomic development
predominantly affecting the indigenouspopulation in rural areas.
However, these are still only minorachievements, for there are extendedand unacknowledged practices of racismand ethnic confrontation. In May 1999 aplebiscite was held to ratify a series ofconstitutional reforms required by thepeace accords to achieve, among otherissues, improved inclusion of cultural
diversity in the Guatemalan political andinstitutional system. All reformsproposed were rejected, mainly due tothe vote of the population in themetropolitan region and in the southand east of the country, in its majoritynon-indigenous.
2 According to the Ministry of the Interior, at
least 341 NGOs were founded in Guatemala justbetween 1986 and 1989 (Alvarado, Carrera andGirn, 1998).
Transition in MayanOrganisations: From Indictmentto Development
In the context of the war andimmediately after its resolution, Mayan
organisations were especially visible asagents seeking political redress from thestate and as entities dedicated tooversight on human rights of Mayanpeoples (Alvarado, Carrera and Girn,1998). These organisations evinced ahigh degree of political development, asthey managed to link interests andstrategies among a variety oforganisations representing diverseMayan interests in the preparation of the
Accord on the Identity and Rights of theIndigenous Peoples signed in March1995 (Bastos and Cams, 1995).
With the signing of the Peace in 1996,political functions, although stillimportant, began to take second placeon the scale of social priorities. Itbecame increasingly necessary, besidesoverseeing the implementation of thePeace Accords, to enhance the capacity
of Mayan organisations to managedevelopment projects and to switchfrom a position of confrontation withthe state to one of collaboration ininitiatives for reconstruction anddevelopment. In this context, theorganisations began to recognise theneed to strengthen their managementand administrative capacities, given thatpreparing and managing productive andsocial projects required efficiency and
effectiveness that had been a secondaryconsideration in organisations dedicatedto lobbying and oversight, with theirfocus on inter-institutional negotiationand fundraising among donorscommitted to a specific political agenda.In this their challenges equal, in purposeif not in content, those faced by theirWestern peers.
Mayan organisations have proved
increasingly sophisticated in facing thischallenge. Their political performance
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has been considerable, as they havemanaged to place an increasing numberof representatives in Congress and win alarge number of municipal elections,including that of the city of
Quetzaltenango, the second mostimportant city after the capital.
Additionally, there has been a gradualspecialisation in areas considered apriority in indigenous development:such as linguistics (Avendao, 1999);curricular development and preparationof school textbooks; distance education;agricultural training; and micro-businessdevelopment (Zapeta et al., 1997).
Conclusions: Points fora Research Agenda
There are two levels on which to pursueideas presented here. The first leveldeals with the differences between
Western and Mayan organisations.Which of these are substantivelyrelevant for practices and what do theyimply for the development and progressof the Mayan peoples? If in fact theorganisation and management of theMayan world has a specific content andpractical implications, where must weseek them? A second level addresses thelessons to be learned here for the study,design and implementation ofmanagement tools across culturaldivides in general. Among theconclusions and other questions arisingfrom addressing these issues I wouldemphasise the following:
Considering the radically differenthistory of the Guatemalan indigenouspopulation from the societies in whichdescriptions and prescriptions of bestmanagement practices arise, it isreasonable to expect an importantdivergence in values, codes andmeanings in management practice. Whatare these differences and what do theymean for the development and progressof Mayan peoples? More generally, howfar must we take into account diverse
cultural histories in understanding andprescribing management tools andpractices across cultural interfaces?Monitoring, evaluation and reportingconstitute a prime field for this
discussion: should internationalcooperation agencies adjust to localcultural systems in requiring reports andimplementing monitoring systems?Should local organisations accept theseuncritically?
What can studies of the strategiesfor relationship-building developed byindigenous mayors vis--vis non-indigenous communities, and between
indigenous NGOs and cooperationagencies, for example, bring to theunderstanding of management inmulticultural settings?
How are the various indigenousleaders each of whom belong toclearly differentiated ethno-linguisticgroups satisfying the needs for mutualcommunication, not just on politicaltopics, but also on more pedestrian
issues of resource administration andlogistics? How can entities seekingimpact on a larger scale, exceeding thatof specific ethnic identities, reconcileglobal, regional and national agendas
with inter-ethnic differences?
What is the nature of conventionalreceived knowledge applied by Mayanmanagers in their daily work? Withinsuch knowledge and strategies what
appears most useful? How were theseacquired, and how is a Mayan managertrained? In what areas are moretraditional practices maintained, and
why is that so? More generally, howmuch of such traditional knowledge canbe codified for the subjects benefit, andshould cooperation agencies attempt todo so?
Are the features of a successful andcapable manager different in Mayan (ornon-Western) and Western contexts, or
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are they simply presented differently?Furthermore, how does a non-Westernmanager obtain and ensure success? In
what measure does the rise of ageneration of young, educated Mayans
enjoying an environment of greater civicfreedom affect the more traditionalforms of delegation of authority?
What role does sponsorship andlinking to peer groups play in ensuringthe survival of new Mayan or culture-specific managers in the organisationalcontext? Is there a significantrelationship here between indigenousmanagers and non-indigenous mentors
as bridges to the wider political,economic and institutional system, stillpredominantly non-indigenous?
What are the practical implicationsof the features of Mayan/non-Mayan (orindigenous/ non-indigenous) differenceconcerning measurement andperformance? How do we deal with theneed to include long-term processmeasures that overcome the limitations
of more conventional short-termproductivity measures?
Finally, what are the implications ofthese concerns for the training ofmanagers that will lead indigenousorganisations into the third millennium?On the one hand, we must bettercharacterise such managers in thoseaspects that are nature as a part of acultural heritage and those that are
nurture acquired in practice byresolving day-to-day issues ininstitutional management. On the otherhand, we need to identify the formativeelements that, while preservingmayagement3, may also broaden themanagers role in leading organisationsthat contribute to building a moreequitable society.
3 I thank R. Valladares for this ingeniousneologism.
It is my hope that this note will awakenan interest in addressing systematically atleast some of the issues outlined here.Some of the issues I have pointed toprobably resonate with experiences in
other contexts where indigenous andnon-indigenous cultures are interfacing,
while at the same time experimenting indevelopment together. A generalconcern is to elicit responses about thesimilarities and differences between
what I present here and other contexts.At the same time, more than simplysatisfying intellectual curiosity this is aninvitation to giving us all indigenousand non-indigenous the chance to
negotiate and build a future that ispotentially different from the situationof colonialism external first, but latermore insidiously internal that stillshapes the existence of a considerablepart of humanity, not just in Latin
America, but wherever indigenouspopulations meet the overriding meansand interests of Western culture andsociety.
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