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ED/EFA/2006/11 2004 Original: English Education for All Collective consultation of NGOs (CCNGO/EFA) ‘Changing the rules of the game’: Building capacity for policy engagement and Asian-South Pacific CSOs in education A discussion paper ASPBAE Asian South Pacific Bureau for Adult Education ‘Changing the rules of the game’: Building capacity for policy engagement and Asian-South Pacific CSOs in education A discussion paper Prepared for the International Seminar on Capacity-Building on Civil Society Involvement in EFA Policy Process organised by the UNESCO Collective Consultation of NGOs on EFA Beirut, Lebanon, 7-8 December 2004 Ma. Persevera T. Razon Table of contents Table of contents / 2 List of acronyms / 3 List of boxes, tables, and figures / 3 1. Introduction / 4 2. The capacity conundrum / 6 3. Civil society in a changing world: The challenge of governance / 11 • Policy partnership as governance / 14 • Socialising-Civil Society / 19 • Aggregating-Political Society / 19 • Executive-Government / 20 • Managerial-Bureaucracy / 21 • Adjudicatory-Judicial system / 22 • Double challenge / 22 4. Changing the rules of the game: CSOs and the civil-political continuum / 23 • Shifting the frame: From state-market to civil-political society / 23 • Politics and deep structures / 27 • CSOs and the civil-political continuum / 31 5. Concluding notes / 33 Bibliography / 35 Changing the rules of the game * 2 Acronyms ADB ASPBAE CCNGO/EFA CEDAW CONFINTEA V CSO DAC e-discussion E-Net EFA IFCB IT MDG NGO OECD PGRI PNG RWS SAHE UN UNDP UNESCO WB Asian Development Bank Asian South Pacific Bureau of Adult Education Collective Consultation of NGOs on EFA Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women Fifth International Conference on Adult Education civil society organisation Development Assistance Committee electronic discussion Education Network Education for All International Forum on Capacity-Building information technology Millennium Development Goals non-government organisation Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Papua New Guinea Real World Strategies Programme Society for the Advancement of Education United Nations United Nations Development Programme United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation World Bank Box Box 1. Contemporary views on governance / 13 Tables Table 1. Table 2. Table 3. Table 4. The functional dimensions of governance and their institutional arenas / 15 Real World Strategies Programme: Current CSO capacities and capacities for development / 16 Capacity-Building to Track Progress on Commitments to Girls and Women’s Literacy and Education: Current CSO capacities and capacities for development / 17 ASPBAE’S Pacific Education Advocacy Programme: Current CSO capacities and capacities for development / 18 Figures Figure 1. Figure 2. Figure 3. State and market-centred development models / 24 Civil society-centred model of development / 25 Four generations of CSO strategy / 27 Changing the rules of the game * 3 1. Introduction This paper explores notions of capacity by Asian-South Pacific CSOs in education within the context of the challenge posed by the Dakar conference—that CSOs not only participate in education as service providers, innovators, critics and advocates, but as partners in policy1. CSO conceptions about what constitutes capacity for policy engagement on EFA are drawn from planning documents, workshop proceedings and activity reports related to three on-going capacity-building programmes of Asian-South Pacific CSOs. These are the Real World Strategies Programme2, the Programme for Capacity-Building to Track Progress on Policy Commitments to Girls and Women’s Literacy and Education3, and the Pacific Education Advocacy Programme4. CSO participants to these programmes come from 12 countries in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the South Pacific5. The study reveals that CSOs’s conception of what constitutes policy partnership is much broader than the functional definitions of policy-making and administration. CSO efforts to build capacity for policy engagement also encompass developing capabilities for the various dimensions and institutional arenas of governance. Thus, for Asian-South Pacific CSOs policy partnership means governance. This suggests that notions of capacity cannot be de-linked from the very concepts and agendas for which capacity is developed, and from the socio-historical and institutional contexts in which definitions of capacity emerge. This point is argued in Section Two, beginning with a brief survey of the on-going mainstream debates and re-thinking on the nature of capacity and the strategies employed by mainstream developers to enhance capacity in the developing world. 1 The improvements made on this version of the paper would not have been possible without the substantive and editorial comments and inputs of Maria Lourdes Almazan-Khan. The author also acknowledges the inputs sent by ASPBAE members during the e-discussion on CSO capacity-building for EFA policy engagement held between 15 to 30 November. These inputs can be found at the UNESCO web forum at http://portal.unesco.org/education/forum. 2 Global Campaign for Education(GCE) partnered with the African Network Campaign on Education for All (ANCEFA) and the Asia Pacific Bureau on Adult Education (ASPBAE) to conduct a capacity-building initiative titled ‘the Real World Strategies’ programme. This is a partnership between the three regional and international networks for education advocacy and 20 of their member countries to assist civil society groups to design, agree, implement and monitor a well-informed, targeted and timelimited strategy for achieving specific and measurable changes in national education policy and financing. Its premise is that better-focused advocacy work will have a greater impact on government actions, which in turn will help to accelerate progress towards the Education for All goals. This is supported by the Dutch government. 3 The ASPBAE Programme for Capacity-Building to Track Progress on Policy Commitments to Girls and Women’s Literacy and Education is directed at building local capacities among national coalitions, women’s groups, support organizations. The focus of the programme is to enable CSOs to employ simple analytical and participatory frameworks and tools to bolster effective policy advocacy strategies to lobby local governments for education policy reform with enhanced sensitivity to gender issues, e.g., snapshot surveys for evaluating gender-sensitivity of curricula and classroom pedagogy, quality parameters for women's literacy etc. The aim of this programme is to ensure that concrete reform/interventions (e.g. distribution of free textbooks, building toilets in schools and women's literacy centres, recruitment of more female teachers, enforcement of a national law for education for girls/ women, etc.) are achieved in the local context through the strategic process of enabling CSO to engage with their governments with the support of verifiable data. This programme is supported by the Institute for International Cooperation of the German Adult Education Association (IIZ/DVV), Sir Dorabhji Tata Trust in India, the UNESCO Institute for Education and UNESCO Paris. 4 The CSO Capacity Building programme for Education Advocacy in the South Pacific covering Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and Samoa is supported by New Zealand Aid. 5 These countries are Bangladesh, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, The Philippines, Tonga, and Vanuatu. Changing the rules of the game * 4 Section Three examines the various conceptions on capacity articulated by CSOs in the abovementioned programmes. Both existing capacities and those identified by CSOs for development are analysed within a schema deconstructed into the five functional dimensions and institutional arenas of governance. The investigation shows that capacity-building efforts of CSOs are not only directed at developing capabilities to participate in formulating and administering policy, which addresses the question, ‘who gets what, when and how’, but more importantly, about ‘changing the rules of the game’—that is, defining ‘who makes the rules, when and how’. Section Four explores some of the key capacities that CSOs will need to enhance to effectively participate in governance. These include capability to shift the framing of development and to transform and build strong political and deep structural linkages between society and state. It argues that CSO capacity for policy engagement involves not only the strengthening of civil society organisations, but also the core institutions in political society. Consquently, a crucial capacity for CSOs is the ability to negotiate through and sufficiently coordinate citizen action across the civil-political continuum. Section Five contains the concluding notes, which summarise the main points surveyed in the paper and their implications on capacity-building programmes for CSOs. Changing the rules of the game * 5 2. The capacity conundrum Capacity, or the lack of it, has been a conundrum for many developers. Billions of dollars have been poured into technical cooperation programmes aimed at developing capacity for development of developing countries. Yet ‘capacity development has remained an elusive goal’, as pointed out by Mark Malloch Brown, administrator of the United Nations Development Programme, the lead UN agency for the thematic area of capacity-development (2001)6. To illustrate: Spending for technical cooperation programmes in 1999 alone amounted to US$ 14 billion, according to the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The figure could go as high as US$ 24 billion if personnel and training costs are factored into the accounting (Fukuda-Parr et al 2001a). In Asia, technical assistance grants to developing member countries by the Asian Development Bank grew from US$ 59 million in 1988 to US$ 163 million in 1998 (ADB 1999). Total technical cooperation in Far East Asia, according to the DAC, was some US$ 2 billion in 1990; it rose to about US$ 2.3 billion in 1995, and decreased to US$ 2.1 billion in 1999. In South and Central Asia, for the same period, total technical cooperation had been steady at around US$ 1.3 billion (Fukuda-Parr et al 2001a). From 1989 to 1999, the percentage of technical cooperation funding in official development assistance for least developed countries was steady at 21-22 percent; for lower middle-income countries it was 25-26 percent (ibid.)7. No such disaggregation of funds for the civil society sector, however, could be accessed as of this writing. But if we are to take a broad view of aid funding to civil society and nongovernment organisations as a form of capacity resource, the amount would be some US$ 2 billion annually (OECD 2003, cited in WB 2004). Yet, as Fukuda-Parr et al note, these amounts have only generated, by far, ‘positive microimprovements, but not the kind of macro-impacts that build and sustain national capacity for development’ (2001a). The almost ubiquitous presence of the term ‘capacity-building’8 in the institutional literature of development agencies and organisations, and the frequency in which it is invoked, often in a variety of senses and sometimes with nary or very little qualification, must have earned it a 6 These last two sentences may suggest that perhaps part of the conundrum lies in the paucity of terms or new metaphors in the language of development itself, but that is not the subject of this essay. 7 While total aid to developing countries has declined following the end of the Cold War, the combined commitments made by donors at the Conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey, Mexico in March 2002 are expected to reverse the downward trend and raise aid levels by up to 25 percent (Malloch Brown 2002; Browne 2002). 8 The UNDP and the OECD use the term, capacity-development; the World Bank, capacity-enhancement. The International Forum on Capacity-Building (IFCB) points out that the term ‘building’ might have assumed ‘a distorted connotation, implying that something from scratch has to be initiated’. In this paper all three terms are used interchangeably, and all carry the sense—augmenting existing capacities—as clarified by Rajesh Tandon and Kaustuv Kanti Bandyopadhyay for IFCB in Capacity Building of Southern NGOs: Lessons from International Forum on Capacity Building (n.d.) published by IFCB, New Delhi. Changing the rules of the game * 6 place by now among those distinguished terms in the development lexicon (e.g., participation, empowerment, sustainability), otherwise known as development buzzwords. Although it might also be said that ‘fuzzy’ could be substituted for ‘buzz’, owing to the ambiguous nature and the variety of meanings these words in vogue could be ascribed with. ‘Amoeba-like’ was how Gustavo Esteva, for example, described the term ‘development’ (1992). Gilbert Rist, likewise, argues that it is the ambiguity of the term ‘sustainable development’ to which its ‘success’ can be owed (1997). But as with words, and active vocabularies, in general, the meanings and the senses in which they are used change as their contexts shift, as demonstrated by the British literary theorist and cultural critic, Raymond Williams, in his socio-historical study of ‘keywords’—those central concepts we use to describe, interpret, and understand the contemporary world (1983)9. Williams also points out that, apart from context, the meanings of keywords vary according to their interconnections and interactions with other words. They exhibit pliancy in the form of a range of ‘variations’, ‘extensions’ and ‘transfers’ as they move through ‘networks of usage’, or as they interact with other words. ‘The problems of [a keyword’s] meanings’, Williams observes, ‘are inextricably bound up with the problems it was being used to discuss’ (ibid.). In the case of the term ‘capacity’, which can be defined simply as the ability to do a particular thing10, it can be said that the relational character of the term is intrinsic to it, where basic references (i.e., whose ability, and ability to do what) must be established, at the very least, if the concept is to begin to have any meaning or value. And, following Williams, it is when the relationships and ‘interactions’ between key concepts, ‘capacity’ and ‘development’, for example, are scrutinised that some solutions to the conundrum begin to emerge. In UNDP’s project to rethink its capacity-development strategies11, the failure of most capacity-building efforts in the South is now being understood as a result of a flawed conception of development, wherein the latter is seen as ‘displacement’ rather than as ‘transformation’ (Fukuda-Parr et al 2001a). ‘(T)he assumption that developing countries with weak capacities should simply be able to start again from someone else’s blueprint flies in the face of history. For these countries too, the most natural process is development as transformation. This means fostering home-grown processes, building on the wealth of local knowledge and capacities, and expanding these to achieve whatever goals and aspirations the country sets itself’ (ibid.). Non-industrial societies too, the authors write, have highly developed and complex skills but may have less of the formal institutions that characterise modern post-industrial societies. Capacity, in the new thinking, involves the integration of two parallel knowledge and production systems—‘indigenous’ and ‘modern’—that are deemed to exist in developing 9 Raymond Williams explored 155 such words (e.g., bureaucracy, community, culture, democracy, educated, jargon, ordinary, reform, society) in his book, Keywords: A vocabulary of culture and society (1983), revised edition, published by Oxford University Press, New York. 10 In Cambridge Dictionary of International English (1995) published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 11 The research project is called ‘Reforming Technical Cooperation for Capacity Development’, and is supported by the Government of the Netherlands. The project’s outputs are contained in three volumes authored by the following: Fukuda-Parr, Lopes and Malik, 2001b; Browne, 2002b; and, Lopes and Theisohn, 2003 (full references can be found in the bibliography). See the UNDP webpage, www.undp.org./capacity. Changing the rules of the game * 7 countries. Furthermore, past (and current) capacity-building efforts are now seen as having focussed on the individual and institutional realms, neglecting the societal dimension and the importance of building social capacity, wherein social capital—the ‘institutions and networks that hold societies together and set the terms of [their] relationships’—is regarded as a core element12. Finally, it has also been recognised that the ‘asymmetric relationship’ between donors and recipients, where donors ‘ultimately control’ the capacity-building process even while paying lip-service to ‘equal partnership’, is the other major obstacle to building sustainable capacities in the South (ibid.). The thinking is not new. Alternative conceptions of development and critiques of the dominant model, especially concerning the latter’s ethnocentrism and elision of the issue of unequal relations of power, have been posited by a number of Southern voices and social scientists ever since ‘development of the Third World’ emerged as a central agenda of the international community following the Second World War13. But the shift in the discourse is significant for, at least, two reasons, especially when viewed from a Southern and civil society perspective. For one, the shift helps clear up the conceptual field of the accumulated debris of myths that have accompanied a unilinear and Western-centric view of history and social transformation, debarring ways towards a wider understanding of the variety of social change processes occurring in different societies as these are shaped by distinct socio-cultural contexts and histories. Many of these myths (e.g., primacy of economic growth, trade liberalisation, privatisation)14 have often been uncritically embraced by Southern governments and their ruling elites, and continue to inform their visions and strategies for national development, with not a few producing disastrous social outcomes. Dislodging the authority of this universalist discourse allows competing and marginalised discourses to engage the former in a level playing field, so to speak, and frees up ‘official development’ spaces, where genuine dialogue between discourses can take place and broader, historically-grounded visions of development can emerge. 12 The popular conception of social capital is often attributed to the work of Robert D. Putnam, who refers to it as ‘social networks and the associated norms of reciprocity’ (2000). See also Putnam, 1993. John Harriss (2001), among others, however, has criticised Putnam’s analysis for eliding the crucial role of the state in the ‘rise and fall’ of ‘stocks of social capital’ in societies, and for failing to show how trust in social networks become aggregated at the societal level. Social capital, for Harriss, are those ‘resources which are inherent in certain social relationships’. What these ‘resources’ are could be gleaned from the definition offered by Norman Uphoff (2000), cited in Mani (n.d.), ‘an accumulation of various types of social, psychological, cultural, cognitive, institutional, and related assets that increase the amount or probability of mutually beneficial cooperative behaviour’. The first known use of the term (1916) was associated with ideas of ‘good will, fellowship, sympathy, and social intercourse among the individuals and families who make up a social unit’ (Putnam 2000). 13 Some of the critiques and alternative notions are captured in post-colonial and social science literature. See, among others, Dudley Seers, 1963, for a critique on the universal claim to validity of dominant economics; Frantz Fanon, 1967 and 1986, on liberating third world and black consciousness from colonial thinking; Polly Hill, 1986, for a critique of development economics; R. Guha and G.C. Spivak, 1988, for subaltern perspectives; Tariq Banuri, 1990, for a critique of development theories from a cultural perspective; N. Long and A. Long, 1992, for an actor-oriented perspective of development; John Friedmann, 1992, on alternative development; Mark Hobart, 1993, for a critique of dominant forms of knowledge in development; Arturo Escobar, 1995, on the mainstream development discourse and how it ‘created’ the Third World; K. Gardner and D. Lewis, 1996, on the post-modern challenge to development thought and practice; Gilbert Rist, 1997, on a history of development thought; A. Arce and N. Long, 2000, on ‘multiple/alternative modernities’. Full references are listed in the bibliography. 14 ‘Myth’ is used here in the sense of ‘false belief or account’ (Williams 1983), particularly, of Western-based models as sure formulas to ‘development’. Changing the rules of the game * 8 For another, the foregrounding of the ‘social’ expands developers’ perspectives on how to identify, analyse and understand a society’s problems, which, consequently, can widen the social imaginary from whence solutions can be created, sought and found15. And while it is true that mainstream approaches to development have progressively incorporated the social dimension into their perspectives in the last three decades (i.e., from pure growth models to basic needs to poverty reduction to sustainable human and a rights-based approach to development), it is also true that old habits die hard. Alan Rew, in his survey of social development practice in the 1980s, for example, argues that economistic and engineering perspectives continue to dominate the field (1997). Institutionalisation and use of critical social reflection proved to be difficult, and social analyses often end up as mere annexes to project documents. Although he admits that it is far easier to integrate social planning methods in the decade of the 1990s, he also points out that ‘reforms in favour of social action and “participation” should not be overstated’ since the changes are happening at the level of methods and techniques rather than at a more fundamental level of critical examination of key approaches and strategies (ibid.) Lyla Mehta arrives at a similar assessment in her analysis of the World Bank, particularly, its shift in focus from transfer of capital to ‘knowledge for development’, and its thrust to transform itself into a ‘knowledge bank’ (2001)16. According to her, while social science perspectives have become institutionalised at the level of projects and policies, ‘no general social policy defining goals such as equity and social justice exists’ (ibid., citing Francis and Jacobs). Social analysis in projects or sector work is not formally mandated except when these involve indigenous peoples or forced displacement, leading her to conclude that ‘no systematic institutionalisation of [social] issues’ has occurred in the Bank, and that its conception of knowledge is still predominantly informed by the economics perspective (ibid.). While indeed the UNDP study gives cause for optimism for the impetus it could bring towards the production of official yet more inclusionary spaces, where genuine dialogue can take place between Southern governments and their citizens, and between the North and the South, studies such as those of Rew and Mehta also suggest the importance of continued vigilance. Fukuda-Parr et al themselves warn that perhaps the ‘biggest obstacle… lies in the human mind itself, which can be imprisoned in old assumptions and practices’17. Breaking out of this ‘interpretive grid’ that has become embedded in many development institutions requires the continuous interrogation of the knowledge being produced about the developing world by development agents—from within and between the North and South, 15 The idea of the social imaginary can be described as a kind of social vision within which a people understand their world and their place in it, and within which they find meaning to act and create goals to transform their world as collective agents. The idea was elaborated by Cornelius Castoriadis in his book, The imaginary institution of society (1987), published by MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. Building from Castoriadis’s notion, the Center for Transcultural Studies, a Chicago-based non-profit research network, is engaged in developing the concept of ‘new imaginaries’, taking into account the world-changing events that have occurred in the last two decades. See Gaonkar, 2002. 16 The idea of a knowledge bank was launched in October 1996 during the World Bank’s annual meeting. See World Bank, 1998, for a description of the Bank’s knowledge agenda. 17 One indication of the enormity of the challenge in transforming the current orthodoxies in development thought and practice is the way the World Bank, for example, is translating the new thinking on capacity by ‘unbundling it within a framework of demandand supply-side factors'. See Govinda G.Nair, ‘Nurturing capacity in developing countries: From consensus to practice’, Capacity Enhancement Briefs (2003), November, World Bank Institute. Changing the rules of the game * 9 mainstream and non-mainstream alike. And such scrutiny must encompass the sites of knowledge production themselves, whether these are institutional or ad hoc in nature, deliberative or consultative, individual or collective. For, as argued above, notions of capacity cannot be de-linked from the related concepts and agendas for change for which capacity is being built as well as from the socio-historical and institutional contexts in which readings and conceptions of capacity emerge. Furthermore, the overwhelming social evidence—that dominant knowledge-based policies and strategies for development have worked only for a few, and often at the expense of a large swathe of humanity and the natural environment—while can no longer be ignored, continues to be framed within technicalised and often, de-historicised and de-politicised discourses that are attached with ‘warmlypersuasive’18 slogans such as ‘participation’, ‘empowerment’, ‘sustainable development’, ‘citizenship’, and, indeed, ‘capacity-development’. Facts, as Raymond Apthorpe has argued, ‘never speak for themselves, they are bespoken and spoken for’ (1986, emphasis in the original)19. Thus, it is important to create new environments, where critical interrogations of the ‘old’ yet still dominant assumptions can take place and flourish. And this means, at least, three things: Sustained engagement by donors and official developers with contending visions; creation of new spaces and opening up the old ones to these engagements20; and, active support for the independent articulation, systematisation, and elaboration of these alternative social visions by those with whom these have been traditionally associated with and who have long carried these visions—civil society and social movements. It is within this matrix of on-going shifts in the discourses of capacity-building—at the interface of the emergent, dominant, and residual concepts-in-formation and in-tension—that this discussion must be located, that is, if civil society organisations (CSOs) are to be significant interlocutors in this crucial debate. An awareness of such positioning is important for, at least, two reasons. One, the policy terrain for which CSOs are striving to build capabilities to engage in is itself fraught with the ‘old’ assumptions. Understanding CSO notions of capacity for policy partnership must necessarily involve the interrogation of what ‘policy partnership’ means and what it constitutes in specific contexts. Two, civil society organisations themselves are not immune from the influence of dominant development thinking. CSOs, therefore, must not only build their capability to navigate and advance their perspectives through this complex matrix of shifting and contending discursive formations, but also enhance their reflexivity, that is, the capacity to constantly put themselves into the frame and reflect upon their own actions. 18 Raymond Williams, 1983 19 Arturo Escobar (1995) proceeds from this argument of how the ‘Third World’ is a regime of representation created by the Western discourse of development, backed by the ‘authority’ of Western knowledge and by powerful Western-based development institutions. See also, among others, Robert Chambers, 1997; Emma Crewe and Elizabeth Harrison, 1998; Jonathan Crush, 1995; James Ferguson, 1994; Naila Kabeer, 1994; Michael G. Marmot, 2004; Stacy Leigh Pigg, 1992; R.D. Grillo and R.L. Stirrat, 1997; Wolfgang Sachs, 1992. 20 It can be said that the International Forum on Capacity-Building is one such space. It was formed in 1998 and is supported by Northern NGOs, bilateral and multilateral development agencies. The IFCB describes itself as ‘a multistakeholder forum in which Southern NGOs engage Northern NGOs and donors in debate and innovation, which shape conceptual approaches, policies and practices for future capacity-building interventions’ (Tandon and Bandyopadhyay n.d.) Changing the rules of the game * 10 3. Civil society in a changing world: The challenge of governance The 2000 World Education Forum held in Dakar, Senegal has put forward the challenge of an educational policy process that substantially involves civil society organisations as partners in policy (UNESCO 2000; Matsuura 2001). CSOs have actively taken up the challenge with ‘an increasing number of organizations [shifting] their focus from service provision to advocate and policy partner’ (Schnuttgen and Khan 2004). This international official acknowledgement of CSOs’s important role in education policy can be attributed not only to the growing recognition of the wide-ranging contributions of civil society organisations to Education for All (EFA) in the Jomtien decade of the 1990s (CCNGO/EFA 2000), but also to the major shifts in the discourses of development and how development is to be governed in the South. Governance is not just about government. This was one of the realisations reached by the United Nations (UN) system in the 1990s as the ‘associational revolution’21 erupted in the global public sphere and began to encroach into the economic and social policy realms, spaces that were once the exclusive preserve of governments (Emmerij et al 2001). The growth of non-government and civil society organisations from the 1980s was rapid and widespread; the activities and objectives they pursue wide-ranging—from grassroots self-help socio-economic projects to promotion of human rights and social justice; from protesting environmental degradation in their localities to lobbying multilateral development agencies in global forums and summits; from establishing local alternative trading systems to building transnational solidarity and networks that could mobilise hundreds of thousands to block the implementation of inequitable international trade agreements; and, so on22. As Isagani Serrano writes, citizens, acting collectively, ‘can do more than just help themselves: they can also resist and bring their power to bear on the state and even bring down unaccountable governments’ (1994). The central role played by citizens in the shaping, making, and unmaking of states has partly influenced the inter-governmental system of the UN to adopt a wider definition of governance in the 1990s23. Where, in the 1950s and 1960s, the concept was associated with nation- and state-building and national development, as former colonies gained independence and the new nationals began to take on the reins of government, a shift in thinking occurred in the 1970s and 1980s. Good governance began to be conceived in opposition to state-dominated economic and social development. The impetus for the shift came from several fronts. First, there was growing a reaction to the excesses of the ‘overly powerful, centralized, and rent-seeking states’ that ruled many of the Third World nations during that period. Second, the neoliberal paradigm of international development, also known as the Washington Consensus, was introduced and became widely adopted in the 1980s. The new consensus promoted a swing from state-led to market-oriented 21 From Lester M. Salamon, ‘The global associational revolution: The rise of third sector on the world scene’ (1993), Occasional Paper 15, Institute for Policy Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. 22 Various accounts of the phenomenal rise of CSOs and NGOs can be found in a growing body of literature on civil society. See, for example, David Korten, 1990; Lester Salamon, 1993; Gerard Clarke, 1998; CIVICUS, 1994; John Clark, 1991. 23 The historical evolution of the governance concept described in this section is mainly drawn from the work of Louis Emmerij, Richard Jolly and Thomas G. Weiss, Ahead of the curve? UN ideas and global challenges (2001), published by Indiana University Press, Bloomington and Indianapolis. Changing the rules of the game * 11 policies, and emphasised trade liberalisation, economic deregulation, and privatisation. Third, a new political landscape emerged after the end of the Cold War following the wave of democratisation that swept a number of Third World nations and the former Soviet Union. Fourth, the phenomenal growth of non-state actors and their public actions have had a significant impact on the framing of public policy debates at the local, national and global levels. ‘Good governance’, in the 1980s, was largely associated with the idea of the ‘roll back of the state’, and a bias for market-led development and procedural democracy. But the concept took on a broader perspective in the 1990s when the UN reinvigorated its campaign for a rightsbased approach to development, and emphasised the need for state legitimacy instead of state retreat. Thus, good governance is no longer understood today as ‘less government’ but as ‘appropriate government’. Most contemporary views of governance suggest that the state is no longer regarded as the sole agent exercising authority over a country’s development (see Box 1). Instead, emphasis is placed on the ‘relational’ and ‘processual’ nature of the concept, where the exercise of authority is seen as necessarily involving ‘interactions’ between government and civil society, and that this relationship should assume certain features or characteristics such as transparency, accountability, and participation. While the broadening of the concept does seem to recognise the reality of the new interdependencies between various political actors brought forth by a changing world, many of the definitions remain ambiguous as to what exactly constitutes governance, and how and when one can say it is happening or has been achieved. When, for example, Asian-Pacific education CSOs participate in country EFA processes, as they try to do, in fulfilment of their role as ‘partners’ in education policy development, yet, are confined to the narrow and token spaces of technical and consultative committee work (Razon 2003), does this constitute ‘governance’? Or take the case of the Philippines, for instance, where the accountability system through regular elections is in place, and citizens perform their duty by casting their votes, but are nevertheless limited in their options on who to vote for because the system is biased in favour of the oligarchy and the rich and famous, not the poor but meritorious; can it be said then that ‘governance’ is happening?24 A clarification of the concepts of governance and policy-making is important if it is to guide practice. 24 For various articles on this issue, see the website, Fil-Global Fellows: Thoughts and debates on Philippine and global social transformations, particularly, the webpages on the May 2004 elections (www.fil-globalfellows.net/2004electionsdebate.htm; www.fil-globalfellows.net/postmortems.htm). Changing the rules of the game * 12 Box 1. Contemporary views on governance UNDP, 1997: ‘Governance is viewed as the exercise of economic, political and administrative authority to manage a country’s affairs at all levels. It comprises mechanisms, processes and institutions through which citizens and groups articulate their interests, exercise their legal rights, meet their obligations and mediate their differences. Kofi Annan, 2000: ‘Better governance means greater participation, coupled with accountability’. World Bank, 1994: ‘Governance is defined as the manner in which power is exercised in the management of a country’s economic and social resources. The Bank identifies three aspects of governance: 1) the form of political regime; 2) the process by which authority is exercised in the management of a country’s economic and social resources for development; and, 3) the capacity of governments to design, formulate, and implement policies and discharge functions’. OECD, 1995: ‘The concept of governance denotes the use of political authority and exercise of control in a society in relation to the management of its resources for social and economic development. This broad definition encompasses the role of public authorities in establishing the environment in which economic operators function and in determining the distribution of benefits as well as the nature of the relationship between the ruler and the ruled’. Commission on Global Governance, 1995: ‘Governance is the sum of the many ways individuals and institutions, public and private, manage their common affairs…. At the global level, governance has been viewed primarily as intergovernmental relationships, but it must now be understood as also involving non-governmental organizations (NGOs), citizens’ movements, multinational corporations, and the global capital market’. International Institute of Administrative Sciences, 1996: ‘Governance refers to the process whereby elements in society wield power and authority, and influence and enact policies and decisions concerning public life, and economic and social development. Governance is a broader notion than government. Governance involves interaction between these formal institutions and those of civil society’. Institute of Development Studies, Civil Society and Governance Programme, 1999*: ‘Governance refers to the sum of interactions between civil society and government. Good governance means a broad array of practices which maximize the common/public good. More specifically, this term refers to the following things, within civil society and especially within governments: transparency, effectiveness, openness, responsiveness, and accountability; the rule of law, and the acceptance of diversity and pluralism’. World Governance Survey, United Nations University, 2001**: ‘Governance refers to the formation and stewardship of the formal and informal rules that regulate the public realm, the arena in which state as well as economic and societal actors interact to make decisions’. Source: Emmerij et al 2001 * From Manor et al 1999 ** From Hyden and Court 2001 Changing the rules of the game * 13 Hyden and Court (2001), for example, criticise the definitions of governance used by international development agencies, i.e., UNDP and the World Bank, on two counts. First, by being a ‘catch-all’ concept, it fails to make distinctions, specifically, between governance, policy-making, and administration. In UNDP’s definition, governance encompasses all aspects: economic, political, and administrative. Thus, for UNDP, governance encompasses all sectors. Second, the definitions dilute the political character of governance failing, therefore, to distinguish it from the economy, for example.25 Much of the problem in the current conceptions of governance lies in the conflation of the ‘constitutive’ and ‘distributive’ aspects of politics, according to Hyden and Court (2001). Policy-making and administration are concerned with the allocation and management of a society’s resources. Governance, on the other hand, is about the rules that govern the processes and institutions of decision-making over these resources. And this means the set of rules that guide the relationships and interactions between state, market, and civil society in making, shaping and implementing public policy (see Box 1 for the World Governance Survey definition, page 13). Hyden and Court make a useful analogy in this regard: Governance is to policy-making and administration as a road is to a car. ‘The nature of riding in it depends on the quality of the road on which it travels’ (ibid.). For civil society organisations, sorting out these basic issues is important if CSOs are to systematically locate the kinds of capacities they are developing and if they are to craft the appropriate strategies to become potent policy agents. Policy partnership as governance Asian South Pacific education CSOs involved in the various capability-building programmes mentioned in the introductory section have outlined a wide range of capacities they are striving to enhance. Using the framework developed by Hyden and Court (2001) for the World Governance Survey (see Table 1), the capacities identified by CSOs have been organised according to the various dimensions of governance (Tables 2, 3, and 4). These dimensions encompass the following: 1) socialising; 2) aggregating; 3) executive; 4) managerial; 5) regulatory; 6) adjudicatory. It must be noted that the listing is not exhaustive, but it can be said to be representative of the range of capacities Asian-South Pacific education CSOs possess and are working to develop in their on-going capacity-building programmes26. Even just a cursory examination of these range of capabilities already reveals that education CSOs are not merely developing capacities for engagement in the terrain of policy, but in the other dimensions of governance as well. This suggests that CSOs’s conception of what constitutes policy partnership is much broader than the functional definitions of policy-making and administration. For Asian-South Pacific CSOs policy partnership means governance. 25 Hyden and Court note that the official mandate of the World Bank prevents it from dealing with political issues, and that it often takes ‘refuge in the concept of “governance” or “institutions” when referring to things political’ (2001). 26 Some of the notes in this and the succeeding sections draw upon the issues, concerns and insights shared by ASPBAE members during the electronic discussion from 15 to 30 November 2004 at the UNESCO web forum. See forum, CSO capacitybuilding for policy engagement on EFA, at http://portal.unesco.org/education/forum. Changing the rules of the game * 14 Table 1. The functional dimensions of governance and their institutional arenas Functional dimension Institutional arena Description Socialising Civil society The ways citizens raise, become aware of, and interested in public issues; participate in public affairs; and, become a voice in policy deliberations Aggregating Political society The ways issues are combined into policy by political institutions. It refers to the ways a political system is organised in order to facilitate and control the making of public policy. It deals with aggregation of ideas and interests into specific policy proposals, and with the tackling of public demands by specific political institutions. Executive Government Policy-making and the ways policies are made by government institutions. Managerial Bureaucracy Policy implementation and and how the policy implementation machinery is organised; the ways policies are administered and implemented by public servants. Regulatory Economic society How state and market interact to promote development Adjudicatory Judicial system The setting for resolution of disputes and conflicts Source: Hyden and Court 2001 Changing the rules of the game * 15 Table 2. Real World Strategies Programme*: Current CSO capacities and capacities for development Functional dimension and institutional arena Socialising—Civil society Aggregating—Political society Executive—Government Managerial—Bureaucracy Adjudicatory—Judicial system Current capacities Working Group for Global Action Week 2004 (India, Pakistan) * public awareness campaign National Coalition for Education, Action for Ability Development and Inclusion, and India Alliance for Child Rights (India) * CSO national network for alternative education (Indonesia) * Coalition on Education (Solomon Islands) * CSOs well-organised along human rights concerns (Nepal, Indonesia) * Two education networks in Indonesia Commonwealth Education Fund (India, Pakistan) CSOs wide provision of education services (Pakistan, India) * decentralised government Capacities for development Transform 1.8 million PGRI from a professional organisation to an independent union (Indonesia) * strengthening local partnerships and international solidarity (Philippines) * Social capital between and among education and other CSOs (Nepal, Pakistan) Network and coalition with teachers’ unions and other education stakeholders (India, Pakistan) * organisational strengthening of coalition (Solomon Islands) * Coalition of CSOs (PNG, Pakistan) * campaign planning and lobbying (Sol. Is., PNG, Pakistan) * Strengthen local capacity to lobby local governments * CSO participation in national policy (Nepal) Policy formulation (see next column) * national action plan (Philippines) * strategic planning (Pakistan) * social capital (Nepal) * harmonising donor strategies (Pakistan) * EFAMDG integration Budget tracking and resource use among national, state and district-level organisations (India) * EFA national action plan implementation (Indonesia) * policy research and planning * data collection * policy tracking and analysis * alternative database on education and financing gaps & education department performance monitoring (Philippines) Negotiation and conflict resolution (Nepal) Thematic areas EFA commitments * Illiteracy * drop out of girls Children missing out on education Literacy * access * gender disparity * education quality * education relevance * high drop out rate * disproportionate budget allocation * insufficient priority and resources for achieving significant reform/ education financing * corruption * overseas aid dependency * alternative learning systems * regional disparities * early childhood development * migrant workers and IT Literacy * access * gender disparity * education quality * high drop out rate * disproportionate budget allocation * Asian-South Pacific countries with education CSOs participating: India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, The Philippines Sources: ASPBAE 2004a; 2004b; 2004c; 2004d; 2004e; 2004f; 2004g; Razon 2004 Changing the rules of the game * 16 Table 3. Capacity-Building to Track Progress on Policy Commitments to Girls and Women’s Literacy and Education*: Current CSO capacities and capacities for development Functional dimension and institutional arena Current capacities Capacities for development Thematic areas Socialising—Civil society CSO training * information dissemination * networking Knowledge of EFA and Dakar declaration * public education on EFA Education on EFA policy commitments Aggregating—Political society Three networks for EFA advocacy (Philippines) * vibrant panchayats (India) * strong national coalition (Bangladesh) * Coalition of education CSOs for EFA (Indonesia, South Pacific, India) * stronger links and coordination between networks within and across countries in the region * linking education with other movements * localisation of advocacy framework * stronger CSO accountability process * stronger social movements Executive—Government Shadow reports for CONFINTEA V review and CEDAW (South Pacific) * critique on currents trends in Indian women’s literacy, education and gender concerns in education * decentralised grants to NGOs (India) * Education Watch (Bangladesh) * co-chair of EFA commission & member of technical groups (Philippines) * Nepal CSOs core members of national action plan group * Spaces for policy engagement at local levels; access to government grants to NGOs (India, Bangladesh) Funding for CSOs and local government bodies * holistic approach/integration of CEDAW, EFA and MDG (South Pacific) * de-virtualisation of spaces for CSO participation in education policy (South Pacific, India) * reforming market-driven and instrumentalist vision of women’s education * issues of trust and transparency, no clear EFA policy, appointed representatives, political discrimination (Nepal) * policy formulation * gender sensitisation * clarifying definitions and concepts, e.g. literacy * Link between gender and literacy and continuing education * impact of fiscal and monetary policies on women and men * curriculum quality * teacher quality Managerial—Bureaucracy Continuing education centres at village to district levels (India) * decentralised government Personnel * policy research and planning * statistics and budget analysis of education from a gender lens * alternative baseline data * micro-macro integration * political economic analysis * systematic monitoring and review of government compliance (Indonesia) Link between gender and literacy and continuing education * impact of fiscal and monetary policies on women and men * curriculum quality * teacher quality * Asian-South Pacific countries with education CSOs participating: Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, The Philippines, Vanuatu Sources: ASPBAE 2003; Libang 2003 Changing the rules of the game * 17 Table 4. ASPBAE’S Pacific Education Advocacy Programme*: Current CSO capacities and capacities for development Functional dimension and institutional arena Current capacities Capacities for development Thematic areas Socialising—Civil society Education of CSOs on various policy issues * information dissemination * critical literacy awareness building * public education and information on issues through publications, radio and various media Various education policy issues (see below) Aggregating—Political society Representation of CSO policy positions to education officials, donors, other education groups Coalition of education CSOs * CSO participation in national policy- making See below Executive—Government Identification and analysis of policy gaps and weaknesses in various thematic areas * formulation of broad alternatives * dialogue and consultation with EFA national coordinators and education officials * Participatory policy formulation * developing a civil society critique of education policy and clearer alternative * funding * mechanisms for consultation and dialogue with government Relevant education for Pacific Islanders that promotes village life, values, and social cohesion * access * literacy * adult education * non-formal education * education research * education finance * foreign aid conditionalities * unemployment Managerial—Bureaucracy Identification of gaps and weaknesses in implementation and implementing strategies * project officers in PNG, Vanuatu and Samoa * Policy research and planning on specific issues * coordination * Teacher training, recruitment and accountability * curriculum quality * relevant education for push-outs * childhood education * community-organised education * Pacific-based pedagogies * * Countries with education CSOs participating: Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Vanuatu Source: Lovegrove 2003 The regulatory dimension was not included in the above three tables only because no relevant item was found in the programme documents from which the listing was drawn. Civil society overlaps with economic society in various ways, as will be briefly described in the next section, although no extensive discussion will be made on this aspect in the paper27. A deeper investigation of CSO capacity in the regulatory dimension-economic society arena, along with others, could constitute part of CSOs’s own research agenda for them to better understand their distinct role in governance as a whole. An explanation of the contents in the three tables is given below. However, where the item’s listing is self-explanatory, no further clarification will be made. 27 Privatisation of education was identified by E-Net for Justice in Indonesia as a key factor in widening the gap between current reality and the achievement of the country’s EFA targets (e-mail communication from Aquino W. Hayunta during the ASPBAE ediscussion on CSO capacity-building for policy engagement on EFA, 15-30 November 2004 posted at the UNESCO web forum at http://portal.unesco.org/ education/forum). The Consensus Centre in Mongolia also raised issues of social security, welfare and employment conditions of NGO workers, which impact on their capacity (e-mail communication from Mrs. Enkhtuya posted at the UNESCO web forum). Changing the rules of the game * 18 Socialising-Civil Society This, of course, is the natural functional dimension-institutional arena where CSOs operate. Here, education CSOs have been performing various types of work such as public education and information on EFA and other education policy issues using various media; education and training of other CSOs on the same; and, forming associations, networks, and partnerships between and among citizen organisations at different levels. The latter is the main resource of civil society that allows them participate in public affairs through, for example, school boards, education councils and committees, development projects, local and national consultative bodies and forums, and so on. In the Girls and Women’s Tracking Programme (Table 3), it was identified that some of the CSOs lack familiarity with the EFA commitments and the Dakar declaration, something which other CSOs are able to respond to. The other ‘capacity’ lack that needs to be met is public awareness on EFA. This item has been placed under ‘capacities for development’ since the citizenry is the base constituency of CSOs, and, therefore, low public consciousness on EFA contracts this base. CSOs, including those in education, have been known for their innovative capacity to develop new and different campaign forms to generate public support and get the attention of governments. Such capacity must be sustained and enhanced. However, there are other factors, which are more determinant, that transform ‘low-profile’ policy domains to ‘high-profiles’ ones (Magadia 2003). A discussion of these is made in the succeeding section. The item on ‘social capital’ under the Real World Strategies Programme (Table 2) might need some explaining. The concern of both Nepal and Pakistan CSOs is the formation of a national coalition of CSOs for EFA advocacy. However, in the case of Nepal, trust and confidence among the different civil society groups: teachers unions, child labour movements, human rights activists and NGOs need to be built and nurtured since these are the organisations interested in establishing an education coalition. There are differing political perspectives that need to be bridged, varied approaches and emphasis in work (some are campaign/politicaloriented, others more involved in service delivery) that require negotiation in defining joint and coordinated action. In the case of Pakistan, there is very little history of collaboration among education CSOs on policy advocacy. Among the reasons for these are the strong service-orientation of most CSOs and the failure of past coalition-building efforts, which had been mainly donor-driven. There is a need to develop a common agenda around which CSOs can come together, apart from building trust and confidence and overcoming past experience at failed coalition-formation28. Aggregating-Political Society The existing CSO coalitions and networks are listed under ‘current capacities’ since these constitute the institutional resources with which citizens aggregate citizen interests and 28 The RWS recce report on Pakistan (Razon 2004) identified other important factors (ethnic issues, historical development of CSOs in Pakistan, nature of state-CSO relations, etc.) that play into the dynamics of CSO relations and their motivations for forming a coalition. This require a separate discussion in itself and can only be noted here. Changing the rules of the game * 19 translate them into policy for advocacy. The panchayats29 in India are also included here since these are forums for citizens to articulate their interests, debate issues, and develop common policy positions. The Pacific Education Advocacy Programme (Table 4) has documented some of its efforts at representation of common CSO positions with government and international agencies, as indicated in Table 4. Directly related to the function of aggregation and representation is that of accountability, which was one of the points raised during a workshop of the Girls and Women’s Programme (Table 3), although in this case, the concern revolved around how the CSO representatives will take the work of the workshop further. This item has been listed under ‘capacities for development’, and calls for more reflection and elaboration on the part of CSOs, as they assume greater responsibilities in representing the education interests of a wider section of the citizenry and in carrying out tasks on their behalf. Another important, if not fundamental, challenge to capacity-building for education CSOs was also raised in discussions within the Girls and Women’s Programme—that is, linking education with other social movements. Indeed, a crucial component of political capacity is the breadth and depth of interests in society that CSOs are able to represent in policy spaces. Ongoing efforts are being pursued by Asian-South Pacific education CSOs on this aspect through the Real World Strategies Programme. The current endeavours to build and strengthen coalitions not only encompass CSOs within the education sector (e.g., education CSOs, teachers’s unions, student and parent associations, etc.) at various levels but also human rights organisations, women’s groups, and migrant workers. The spaces for civil society participation in policy is also in this realm, particularly, those dealing with the legislature30. CSOs in different countries have varying access to these spaces, as the tables show. Executive-Government It can be said that the Dakar challenge of bringing in CSOs as policy partners refers to their having a greater presence in this dimension-arena. But while the executive-government realm is the most visible site of policy-making and can be said to constitute its ‘hub’, it is precisely the recognition that policy is shaped in myriad ways by various actors and factors31 operating in the different realms of governance that conceptions of the latter have changed. Grouped in this dimension-arena are those CSO capacities that directly relate to the following: 1) conception of the over-all development framework, and the accompanying goals and strategies that inform the formulation of objectives and sectoral policies; 2) policy formulation; 3) financing and resources; 4) spaces for civil society participation in policy. 29 In India, Panchayats are constitutionally mandated elected councils which function as bodies of local self-governance in a three-tiered formation based on the sub-structure of a village council. According to the 73rd constitutional amendment one-third of the elected posts in the different layers of the panchayat bodies will be reserved for women candidates thereby automatically provisioning a million women in postions of local leadership. 30 In the Philippines, for instance, social sector-based parties are allotted a number of seats under the party-list system. 31 See, among others, A. Arce, M. Villareal and P. de Vries, 1994; K. Brock, A. Cornwall and J. Gaventa, 2001; Andrea Cornwall, 2002; T. Holmes and I. Scoones, 2000; E. Lipuma and S.K. Meltzoff, 1997; Norman Long, 1989; R. McGee and A. Norton, 2000; M.P. Razon, 2003. Changing the rules of the game * 20 Although uneven across the region and within countries, CSO capacities in this dimensionarena include the capability to critique mainstream frameworks and strategies, and formulate broad and specific policy alternatives. CSOs too have varying access to official policy spaces and to different forms of funding. A commonly identified capacity for development by CSOs is the combined set of research, technical, and financing resources required so that CSOs can elaborate their alternative vision and strategies; this alongside the need to acquire adequate knowledge and information of mainstream policies so that more comprehensive critiquing of the latter can be undertaken32. To address these, sharing and exchange of information, experiences, and lessons between CSOs in the region is happening but needs to be intensified and expanded. Documentation and systematisation of the wealth of knowledge gained by CSOs from practice, which is one of their principal resources, need more attention and support. Development of this systematised body of knowledge from which CSOs can regularly draw (from different sites), reflect on (through cross- and in-country workshops and seminars), and enhance (with better documentation) is critical if CSOs are to enhance their capacity not only in the executivegovernment realm, but in the other dimensions as well. Strengthening current linkages between Asian Pacific CSOs was identified as important in achieving this objective33. The range of themes in which CSOs strive to build their capacity encompasses broad and specific policy areas. Capacities exist in the region34 and within countries, but these have to be fully harnessed, better organised and coordinated for CSOs to effectively meet the challenge of policy-making and governance. Thus, strong national coalitions, a stronger regional network, well-run secretariats and improved coordinating systems are important elements of capacity. It must be emphasised that unlike governments, which have their bureaucracies and the taxpayers’s money to draw from in order to perform their governance functions, CSOs mostly depend on their combined efforts, resources, organisations. Managerial-Bureaucracy Being the dimension-arena relating to the implementation of policy, this is the realm in which CSOs are most in contact with and often engage the state, especially in the light of widespread efforts at government decentralisation in the region. It is no wonder that many of the capacities for development identified by CSOs fall within this realm—policy research, budget analysis, budget tracking and resource use, data collection and alternative database, micro-macro integration, gender analysis, monitoring and development of alternative indicators—that are aimed at responding to specific gaps in policy implementation, e.g., curriculum quality, teacher quality, relevant education for push-outs, pedagogies, and so on. But as pointed out 32 The issue of language was raised by the Indian Adult Education Association during the ASPBAE e-discussion. Most of the policy documents are in the English language, which makes it difficult for regional CSOs to comprehend and comment on them. There is a need to translate policy documents into regional languages for local CSOs to adequately participate in their critique and enhancement (e-mail communication from Prof. SY Shah posted at the UNESCO web forum). 33 SAHE in Pakistan, citing its own experience, has pointed out the importance and mutual benefits of linkages between CSOs and academic/research institutions in producing policy-relevant research that is both informed by ground perspectives and academic rigour (e-mail communication by Abbas Rashid posted at the UNESCO web forum) 34 The ASPBAE network, for example, is wide and diverse, involving community groups, NGOs, universities, research centres and institutes, women’s organisations, trade unions, indigenous peoples, government agencies, media and other civil society institutions. Changing the rules of the game * 21 earlier, capacities exist among Asian-South Pacific CSOs. Many of them have had long experiences in implementation of development and education projects and programmes. And some CSOs have established their own research centres or units that have begun to systematically analyse and synthesise their own experiences as well as their partners; these apart from the universities that abound in the Asia-Pacific. The Education Watch initiative of the Campaign of Popular Education (CAMPE) in Bangladesh is a prime example of this: it is a joint research/policy tracking exercise of the main education NGOs in Bangladesh which challenges official education statistics and their interpretation. The challenge lies in how to better harness, organise, and coordinate these capacities so that CSOs can tap them whenever needed. Adjudicatory-Judicial system Only Nepal identified the need to build capacity for negotiation and dispute resolution. This area needs further study, and insights from the experiences at alternative dispute resolution in Papua New Guinea and Melanesia might be useful. Double challenge This mapping of the range of capacities that exists and is being developed by Asian-South Pacific CSOs participating in the three capacity-building programmes reveals that they are performing and are striving to perform various governance functions, not just in the arena of policy. The above survey also shows that civil society organisations are cognizant of the double challenge they face: that for them to ably participate in the formal policy arena they must likewise ensure that the rules that shape policy processes and their development outcomes are in place and are set right. For, indeed, while civil society may have the capacity to participate in the ‘new’ spaces for shaping education policy such as EFA forums, their capacities remain circumscribed by the old rules that pervade these spaces35. Enhancing CSO capacity for policy engagement, therefore, means not only developing capabilities to participate in decisions about ‘who gets what, when, and how’36, but, more importantly, about building capacity to transform prevailing structures of governance—that is, capacity to ‘change the rules of the game’37. 35 Ma. Persevera T. Razon, Civil society and spaces for participation in country EFA processes. Lessons from Asia and the South Pacific (2003), published by the Asian South Pacific Bureau of Adult Education, Mumbai. India. 36 Attributed to Harold Laswell (Hyden and Court 2001). 37 Hyden and Court 2001 Changing the rules of the game * 22 4. Changing the rules of the game: CSOs and the civil-political continuum It has been argued in the previous sections that dominant forms of knowledge have tended to privilege state- and market-centred models, discourses which have yet to be disembedded from mainstream development institutions and frameworks on which current development practice is largely founded. A widespread re-framing of development, of the general understanding of the process of transformation is therefore fundamental if the dominant structures of governance are to be changed. A critical challenge for CSOs then is the elaboration of civil society-centred models of development that comprehensively interrogate the ‘authority’ of state- and market-centred models, and visibilise civil society’s own distinct and crucial role in governance of development, in particular, and social change processes as a whole. The human development framework being developed by the UN since the beginning of the decade of the 1990s can be said to constitute a broad intellectual framework for a civil societybased model of development. For in this framework, the starting and end points is the human being, who acts as a citizen or as a political being in conjunction with other citizens in order to realise the goal of development they themselves define. Although a read-through of the literature would seem to indicate instead the triadic model of state-market-civil society, the implicit principle that coheres the scheme’s key elements, that is, development objective (concept of development), process, theory and strategy, is often located at the nexus of the social and political—the realm of civil society. Additionally, when viewed from the perspective of the short history of international development (i.e., from the 1950s to the present) and against the array of dominantly state- and market-oriented models that have been adopted by mainstream developers to explain and guide development practice and its outcomes in the last five decades, the above model is distinct because of the significant role it assigns to civil society. It puts ‘citizen at the centre’, to borrow from Tandon and Naidoo, or as ‘first among equals’ (1999). Shifting the frame: From state-market to civil-political society There is no dearth of alternative conceptions of development and critiques of dominant models, especially coming from the South, the academe, and the non-mainstream development community, as has been pointed out in Section Two. One of the few elaborated ones is John Friedmann’s model of alternative development, which this paper draws on to illustrate how a shift in the development frame might look like (Martinussen 1997). Figures 1 and 2 below contain a graphic representation of the four overlapping domains of social practice: 1) the state (seat of formal political authority); 2) civil society (the realm of voluntary association and associational autonomy); 3) corporate economy (the sphere of commercialised production, consumption and exchange); and, 4) political society (the realm of governance). Each domain consists of a core of institutions that shape the behaviour within that particular sphere38. In the case of the state, these are the government (including the bureaucracy and the legislature), the military and judicial institutions. In the case of civil society, these are the 38 Unless noted otherwise, the description of Friedmann’s model is mainly drawn from John Martinussen, Society, state and market: A guide to competing theories of development (1997), published by Zed, London and New York. Changing the rules of the game * 23 autonomous associations voluntarily created by citizens to collectively address common problems, pursue common interests and goals39. For the corporate economy it is the corporation and the market; and, for political society it is autonomous political organisations and social movements. The vertical line is the axis that connects the state and corporate economy; the horizontal line links civil society and political society. In state- and market-based models (figure 1), the vertical line is strongly drawn to indicate that the core institutions in these domains dominate and set the agenda and process of development in the developing world. The civil societybased model (figure 2), on the other hand, places strong emphasis on the horizontal axis too to indicate that civil society assumes an equal, if not primary, position in setting the development process and agenda—implying a fundamental shift in ‘who make the rules of the game’. Figure 1. State- and market-centred development models State Legislature Religious organisations Political society Civil society Interest organisations Informal economic activities Corporate economy 39 This is one of the modifications I have made on Friedmann’s model, which identifies the household as the core institution of civil society. The above definition of what constitutes civil society is drawn from Tandon and Naidoo, 1999. Changing the rules of the game * 24 Figure 2. Civil society-centred model of development State Representation Participation Political society Civil society Interest organisations Informal economic activities Corporate economy Another modification to Friedmann’s model made in this paper concerns the links between state and civil society, and state and political community. In the original model (figure 1), religious and other cultural institutions, for example, combine state and civil society; the legislature, state and political society. In figure 2 the compass of linkages between state and civil society is widened through the general label of ‘participation’ to take into account the various spaces in which citizens relate with the state and vice-versa, including participation in state development programmes, e.g. project committees, user-service groups, consultative bodies, etc. For state and political society the linkage is simply labelled as ‘representation’ to account for the other forms of representative bodies, apart from the legislature, that might exist combining the state and the political community (the EFA forum, for example, could be one such body). The modification is made based on some of the insights from development and political science studies40, some of which are discussed below. 40 Among these are the following: Olle Tornquist, Popular development and democracy: Case studies with rural dimensions in the Philippines Indonesia and Kerala (2002), published by UNRISD (United Nations Research Institute for Social Development); Peter Evans, ‘Development as institutional change: The pitfalls of monocropping and the potentials of deliberation’, Studies in Comparative International Development (2004); M. Moore and J. Putzel, ‘Thinking strategically about politics and poverty’, IDS Working Paper 101 (1999), published by Institute of Development Studies, Brighton, Sussex; P. Houtzager and J. Pattenden, ‘Finding the shape of the mountain: When the “poor” set the national agenda’ (1999), paper prepared for the Workshop on Political Systems and Poverty Alleviation, Castle Donnington, UK; P. Houtzager and M. Kurtz, ‘The institutional roots of popular mobilization: State transformation and rural politics in Brazil and Chile, 1960-1995’, Comparative Studies of Society and History (2000); and, Patrick Heller, ‘Moving the state: The politics of democratic decentralization in Kerala, South Africa, and Porto Alegre’, Politics and Society (2001); Jose Magadia, State-society dynamics: Policy-making in a restored democracy (2003), published by Ateneo de Manila University Press, Quezon City, Philippines; N. Hossain, R. Subrahmanian and Naila Kabeer, ‘The politics of expansion in Bangladesh’, IDS Working Paper 167 (2002), published by the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton. Changing the rules of the game * 25 As an attempt at a general description of the relationships and linkages of actors and institutions between the different spheres, the model can be applied at different levels whether village, city, nation, even globe. The ‘size and shape’ of each sphere, and the extent and nature of the linkages between domains will expectedly vary, depending on the nature, history, and behaviour of institutions, actors, processes operating within each sphere and in their spaces of interface, as well as the set of formal and informal rules, institutions and frameworks that govern their relationships and interactions. CSOs would have to conduct their own ‘mapping’ exercises to find out how the socio-political picture looks like, for example, in education policy in their own areas. Whether this alternative framework can be further elaborated and can attain wider explanatory power, a good part of the task would have to be taken up by social researchers, theoreticians, and civil society’s ‘organic intellectuals’41. But the challenge of ensuring that such civil society-based models are systematically developed and continuously supported must be assumed by CSOs themselves, that is, if CSOs are to cogently explain the transformations and the new imperatives of interdependency, which they themselves have, to a significant extent, engendered. Part of this challenge is forging stronger links with the actors operating in the political realmsocial and political movementswhich have generated and continue to generate a wealth of experience and alternative discourses grounded in direct political struggles. The nature of this intellectual project, with the magnitude of its requirements and ramifications, cannot but be shared and be a joint undertaking by CSOs and social movements precisely because their struggles and the central domains of their social practice are closely interwoven. The task is formidable and, to some, too ideal. But the empirical evidence is mounting42 and is being analysed in different kinds of learning environments: from the sites of civil society and social movements practice to sub-national and national offices, from CSO research units to development studies centres and social science departments in universities, from independent policy think-tanks to bilateral and multilateral development agencies research and planning divisions. CSOs would have to take a more active and leading role in producing their own synthesis of these studies. CSOs in education, by their very location, are natural candidates to take lead roles in spearheading and coordinating such task, and appear ready to do so. During the 2003 meeting of the Collective Consultation of NGOs on EFA (CCNGOs/EFA), ‘discussions on radical views around education and development, which challenge mainstream concepts and world views’ took place (Schnuttgen and Khan 2004). An ‘avant-garde’ of groups and individuals are ‘inspiring the emergence of a multicultural network on learning societies’ that ‘generate 41 From the Italian Marxist, Antonio Gramsci, who argued that critical to the reproduction, transformation, and functioning of regimes of power (and, therefore, regimes of knowledge and representation) are certain conceptions of reality. Intellectuals play a vital role in the dissemination and reproduction of particular conceptions of the world. For a rising class to establish hegemony or counter-hegemony, it should be able to develop its own ‘organic’ intellectuals, or those intellectuals that are part of the process of hegemony production. In Kate Crehan, Gramsci, Culture and Anthropology (2002), published by University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles. 42 The United Nations University’s World Governance Survey has arrived at the conclusion that civil society is the ‘driving force’ for improving governance. The survey covered 16 developing countries (including Pakistan, The Philippines, Indonesia and India) and is the ‘first attempt at making sense of the governance concept in an empirical and “real world” context’ (Hyden, Court and Mease 2003). Changing the rules of the game * 26 alternative worldviews, lifestyles and discourse’ (ibid.). These efforts must be sustained and the results widely-disseminated for other CSOs to review, debate on, critique, and enhance. Similar efforts are being pursued in the Asia-Pacific. Participant CSOs of the Pacific Education Advocacy Programme are looking to re-orient education that is aligned with indigenous Pacific Islanders’s visions and unique histories (Lovegrove 2003). E-Net Philippines has likewise been pushing for the recognition of alternative learning systems and a new vision for curriculum reform (Schnuttgen and Khan 2004). A number of CSOs in Pakistan have emphasised as well the imperative of theoretically-informed research that can help them formulate broad visions around which education CSOs could coalesce (Razon 2004). The Real World Strategies Programme could serve as a centre for coordinating and synthesising these efforts at the country and regional levels. Politics and deep structures Political and deep structural linkages are some of the major pathways by which rules, agendas and policies get changed or reformed. Understanding the peculiar state-society linkages (civil and political) that exist at the local, sub-national and national levels is important in determining the kinds of capacities CSOs will need in order to effectively engage in these arenas, reform policies, transform agendas, and effect shifts in the terms of governance. Due to space and time constraints the paper can only offer some insights from a number of the political analyses of state-society (civil and political) relations on how crucial politics and deep structures are in changing the rules of the game. ‘Politics, essentially, is about people coming together to decide on what should be held in common by all citizens (not just by members of various associations) and how this could be governed jointly’ (Tornquist 2000). The nature of the political system, therefore, directly bears upon the kind and quality of policy spaces through which citizens are able to participate in governance (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999). In the modified model (figure 2), political linkages have been labelled as ‘representation’ and constitute those institutions and arenas of interface between state and political society such as legislature, party-system, lobby groups, and social movements. Deep structural linkages refer to ‘the gamut of productive, social, and regulatory functions of the state that help define the boundaries between public and private, including the systems of labor relations, social welfare, and land tenure’ (Houtzager and Kurtz 2000). These deep linkages are a source of resources to competing social actors, help shape their interests, provide points of access to the state, and have significant politicising effect on issues (ibid.; Houtzager and Pattenden 1999; Magadia 2003). In the modified model (figure 2), structural linkages have been labelled as ‘participation’ and refer to those institutions (e.g., social development programmes, projects and their accompanying bureaucracies or implementing structures, local development committees, multi-sectoral councils and school boards) that connect the state and civil society. The Philippine experience in establishing an institutional framework for governance of EFA offers some important insights on how the ‘shape of the mountain’ or political system, and the Changing the rules of the game * 27 nature of political and deep linkages structure the political opportunities and constraints as well as bear upon the capacity of civil society organisations to effect shifts in education policy and governance (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999). The incorporation of the Jomtien Declaration of Education for All into the Philippine Plan of Action under then-president Corazon Aquino in June 1991 must be seen in the context of a poorly-institutionalised state whose authority was being violently contested by a rebellious faction in the Philippine military, by communist insurgents, and Muslim separatist groups. A multi-party system had been established following the ‘people power revolution’ in 1986 that ousted the dictatorial regime of Ferdinand Marcos. But the system remained fragmented, weakly institutionalised, personalistic and clientelistic. It therefore had very little mobilising capacity that could be relied upon by Aquino to help stem the direct political-military threats plaguing her presidency; this, apart from the fact that leading members of certain political parties were known to support the military rebels. In contrast, the Philippine NGO sector was highly organised. It constituted a core of the broad anti-dictatorship movement on which Aquino rode to power. Thus, the decision to establish the National Committee for EFA (NCEFA) to serve as the ‘grand alliance’ of all stakeholders in the education sector, with CSOs playing leading roles (Raya and Mabunga 2003), could be seen in the context of Aquino’s need to expand its base of power for its own political survival43. Constituting the NCEFA established a new structural linkage between state and civil society on the area of education; it also created a potential political linkage, that is, if the grand alliance of all stakeholders could indeed be realised44. The Aquino government’s initiative to institutionalise a broad partnership on EFA proved to be short-lived, however, when the NCEFA was not convened again after 1993 under the presidency of Fidel Ramos, former defense secretary of Aquino45. Instead the Social Development Committee (SDC) under the country’s economic and development planning authority was designated as the national EFA planning and monitoring body. The education department was tasked to convene four technical working groups on EFA concerns through which civil society participation in the EFA planning process could be channelled. The scrapping of the national EFA committee closed a potential avenue for shared governance of EFA by civil society organisations and other non-state stakeholders. The structural linkage between state and society on the area of education afforded by NCEFA had been tenuous from its inception because of a combination of several factors. 43 This is not to suggest that the Aquino government’s move to constitute a broad partnership on EFA occurred on purely Machiavellian terms. Socially-oriented and reform-minded elements had been recruited by Aquino into its cabinet, although some of these have been pushed out or marginalised in the later years of her presidency owing to the various kinds of pressure exerted by the more numerous but conservative elements in her administration. Furthermore, education has always been highly valued in Philippine society. The point here is to show that the specific nature of the political system and the particular configuration of key political actors during that period were critical in creating and structuring the opportunities and constraints, including the capacities to seize or to overcome them, for effecting certain kind of transformations in the realm of education governance (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999). 44 Ideally, the scope of encompassment of EFA should include all sectors and all social groups since educationfrom early childhood to adult and lifelong learningaffects all social groups and classes and, therefore, should be of interest to political parties and organisations competing for their votes, support, and patronage. 45 In Razon (2003), adapted from Raya and Mabunga (2003). Changing the rules of the game * 28 One, the structural linkage had been created to largely serve narrow political purposes, i.e., the survival of a section of the elite, the Aquino regime. The relatively peaceful and ‘democratic’ transfer of power following the election of Fidel Ramos, a former general, had effectively neutralised the immediate political threat from military rebels46. Thus, the original impetus for expanding state constituency in the broader society in as many fronts as possible, including education, no longer existed. Ramos, during his term, also succeeded in relatively stabilising and strengthening segments of the Philippine state (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999). Second, EFA remained a ‘low-profile policy domain’ (Magadia 2003)47. A policy domain can either become high-profile or low-profile depending on how threatening the issues raised by the actors in the domain are to the dominant power structure (ibid.). EFA’s lack of political significance among key policy actors partly explains the ease by which the Ramos administration dismissed NCEFA and confined the management of EFA within the government’s economic planning body. Third, there was really no cohesive coalition or movement for EFA that could sensitise the public and policy-makers on the issue and keep it in the national policy agenda. While many Philippine NGOs are highly organised and skilled, their capacity to be effective policy actors significantly depends on their links with mass organisations and social movements. Without a direct, politically-conscious and mobilisable constituency for EFA, the civil society organisations and NGOs that participated in the NCEFA project remained marginal political actors. In comparison, the NGO-brokered coalition around agrarian reform, the Congress for People’s Agrarian Reform or CPAR, was hugely successful in exercising a sensitising and procedural influence on agrarian reform policy (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999) precisely because of the existence of strong peasant organisations, networks and federations48. Fourth, the lack of cohesive constituency and strong movement to back a broad partnership on EFA made EFA less attractive (and less threatening) to politicians; again, unlike the agrarian reform issue. This could partly explain EFA’s inability to draw in sufficient allies (or oppositors) and enough political interest from the elite or from other non-state but influential actors (e.g., the Catholic Church) outside of the NGO sector. In comparison, the structural linkage around agrarian reform established by the Marcos regime, combined with the historically-specific mix of other determinant factors during the democratic transition in the mid-1980s (e.g., a poorly institutionalised and highly contested state, a weak multi-party system, and a strong NGO-civil society sector) had been crucial in 46 Ramos also begun peace talks with communist rebels and forged a peace agreement with the Moro National Liberation Front, the dominant organisation within the Philippine Muslim separatist movement. 47 Magadia, citing Dyuvendak and Kriese et al, defines policy domains as policy or issue areas and their corresponding state structures and processes (1999). Based on this definition policy domains can be said to be conceptually similar to the notion of structural linkages described by Houtzager and Pattenden (1999) and Houtzager and Kurtz (2000). 48 A combination of other factors was also at work in the agrarian reform case, as pointed out in the study by Houtzager and Pattenden (1999). The structural linkage around agrarian reform, i.e., the land reform programme and its corresponding bureaucracy, had already been established during the Marcos government. Marcos himself kept the issue of land reform high on the national agenda through his persistent reference to it as one of the showcases of democracy under his administration. This structural linkage served as an important axis around which peasant groups mobilised to push for agrarian reform when Corazon Aquino assumed power. Changing the rules of the game * 29 keeping agrarian reform on top of the national agenda, reforming agrarian reform law49, and paving the way for civil society’s recognition as a legitimate political actor, including limited institutionalisation of CSO participation in agrarian reform implementation (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999). The criticality of political linkages is also highlighted in the Philippine agrarian reform case. The weak institutionalisation of a multi-party system and the poor quality of political parties, which are mainly personalistic and clientelistic, had a significant impact on the programmatic content of agrarian reform policy. Inspite CSOs’s participation in legislative deliberations, the largely conservative, landlord-dominated Congress passed a flawed agrarian reform law, which contained many loopholes that could be used by landlord interests to reverse the law’s redistributive and more positive provisions. As Moore and Putzel point out, the quality of institutions in political society, e.g., political parties and social movements, are crucial to the character and conduct of public policy (1999). The irony of the Philippine case is that the programmatic change efforts of a strong civil society in tandem with the agrarian reform movement, which has shown a capacity to function as an equivalent of political parties as demonstrated in the agrarian reform case, can be stultified by fragmented party systems, or what Olle Tornquist has referred to as ‘stalled popular potential’ (2002). Philippine CSOs’s foray into electoral politics under the party-list system in recent years has yet to create a qualitative impact on the over-all political system50. The crucial role of political linkages is also demonstrated in the case of Bangladesh. While similarly personalistic and clientelistic in nature, the country’s dominant political parties strongly competed for control of the educational system within the context of contending nation- and state-building agendas and differing historical interpretations of Bangladesh’s national liberation struggle (Hossain et al 2002). This political competition has played a significant role in the dramatic expansion of educational access in the country: from a gross enrolment rate of 72 in 1990 to 107 in 1998 (2002). Hossain et al interestingly points out that NGOs’s role in this competition had been through ‘threat of positive example’, that is, their wide, grassroots reach in education partly served to push the state to expand its control over the educational system51. Similarly, in Peru, the women’s comedores movement had been able to significantly play a role in national food policy because of the opportunities offered by structural linkages in the form of food programmes and the movement’s ability to link with political parties (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999). What these examples suggest is the interdependent nature of civil and political linkages, and the importance of transforming the political community. CSO capacity to engage in policy and improve governance not only involves strengthening core institutions of civil society but those 49 Although it remains flawed, the agrarian reform law could have been considerably weaker without the engagement pursued by civil society organisations under the broad coalition of the Congress for People’s Agrarian Reform (Houtzager and Pattenden 1999). 50 Tornquist suggests that the one of the principal weaknesses of CSO-based parties lies in weak ideological principles that hamper the aggregation of broad interests (2002). 51 Although it must also be pointed out that the period of rapid educational expansion occurred when international aid funding for primary education substantially grew (Hossain et al 2002). Changing the rules of the game * 30 of political society as well since these institutions are crucial in defining the nature and quality of the political and deep structural linkages between state and society, and, therefore, the major pathways by which the structures and rules of governance can be transformed. CSOs and the civil-political continuum To locate the various types of CSOs within the scheme presented (figure 2), an attempt at an illustration is made in figure 3. The typology of CSOs used here is from UNESCO (2001) and David Korten (1990). Figure 3. Four generations of CSO strategy State Representation Third and fourth generation CSOs; policy advocates, partners Participation Political society Civil society Interest organisations Informal economic activities First, second , third, and fourth generation CSOs; service providers , innovators, policy advocates and partners Corporate economy The UNESCO typology categorises education CSOs as service providers, innovators, policy advocates, and policy partners. Similarly, Korten’s typology describes four generations of strategy that NGOs (substituted with CSOs from hereon) have evolved and deploy in pursuit of their objectives. The first generation strategy is oriented towards service delivery; the second generation emphasises ‘small-scale, self-reliant local development’, that is, breaking external dependency through empowerment of local communities to manage their own development. The third generation strategy is concerned with ‘sustainable systems development’, replicating CSO successes at the micro-level, increased cooperation with state agencies, and a shift in CSO role from service provider to catalyst. The fourth generation strategy is ‘still evolving’ but is essentially concerned with the ‘promotion of institutional and structural reform through increasingly complex NGO/PO coalitions, both nationally and internationally’ (Clarke 1998, citing Korten). Changing the rules of the game * 31 Gerard Clarke, in his study of NGOs in the developing world, points out that for NGOs to be political, that is, engage in the struggle to influence the process of decision-making in the allocation of resources, they ‘must first participate in processes designed to create social meaning and attempt to cohere as a group or groups around that social meaning’ (1998). It is on the basis of the shared social meaning that NGOs participate in the distribution of resources and in the struggle to influence that distribution. Clarke identifies two levels of political engagements by NGOs. One level is to influence the allocation of resources ‘within the context of a given social meaning (ideology)’, and the other is to influence social meaning (e.g. development models, gender, ethnicity, education orientation, rules and structures of governance, etc.), and help social groups to cohere (ibid.). While many NGOs employ a mix of strategies, Clarke points out that those involved mainly in the direct delivery of services to a client group or population (first generation strategy) and in ‘small scale self-reliant local development’ (second generation) can be considered to be engaged largely in the first level. NGOs oriented towards ‘sustainable systems development’ (third generation) and ‘structural reform’ (fourth generation), on the other hand could be found engaging in the second level (ibid.). Figure 3 above shows that third and fourth generation CSOs have been positioned both in the political and civil spheres. This merely reflects the point raised earlier concerning the highly interdependent nature of political and deep linkages. Capacity for ‘(sufficient) co-ordination between action in the civil, civil-political, and explicitly political society’ (Tornquist 2002) must be built if these linkages are to simultaneously work in advancing civil society’s programmatic agenda. This means not only strengthening institutions in the civil sphere but also those in the political sphere. It is by strengthening the civil-political continuum, i.e., the horizontal axis in figure 2, can an effective shift be made in ‘who makes the rules of the game, when and how’. Changing the rules of the game * 32 5. Concluding notes This preliminary survey of notions of capacity by Asian-Pacific CSOs shows that education CSOs in the region are not only developing capabilities for engagement in policy, but also for the various dimensions and institutional arenas of governance. Conceptualisations of capacity cannot be de-linked from the related notions and agendas for which capacity is being built as well as from the socio-historical and institutional contexts in which readings and conceptions of capacity emerge. In the case of Asian-South Pacific CSOs, the concept of policy partnership is much broader than the functional definitions of policy formulation and administration. For them, policy partnership means participation in governance. This vision of policy partnership has broad implications for capacity-building. One, the acknowledgement of civil society’s central role in governance implies fundamental reforms in the prevailing structures of governance that privilege the domains of state and market. Governance, indeed, is not just about formulating and administering policy, which addresses the question, ‘who gets what, when and how’, but more importantly, about ‘changing the rules of the game’—that is, defining ‘who makes the rules, when and how’. CSO capabilities must thus include capacity to shift the framing of development, particularly, how governance of development is currently viewed and practised. This means CSOs taking lead and active roles in elaborating models that place equal, if not primary, emphasis on the crucial role of citizens in governance. Such undertaking could only be comprehensively and successfully undertaken through stronger links and collaboration between CSOs and social-political movements since the development of such framework encompasses the key domains of their strugglesthe civil and political realms. Second, this broad vision of policy partnership as governance foregrounds the multidimensional and overlapping nature of policy processes, including its multiple connections to wider social and political contexts, processes and influences. The paper has specifically highlighted the roles of political and deep structural linkages between society and state as important arenas of interface that can significantly consolidate or weaken CSO position in governance. The highly-interdependent nature of these linkages suggests that CSO engagements would have to encompass not only the civil realm but, increasingly, that of the political sphere as well. This implies building the capacity to negotiate and sufficiently coordinate citizen action across the civil-political continuum, that is, the ability to strategise, relate, negotiate, and forge links with political organisations and social movements to advance EFA. Additionally, the nature of and possibilities offered by existing political and structural linkages impacting on education policy need further and specific investigations and better understanding by CSOs if the potentials offered by these spaces of interface at the local and national levels are to be fully realised in favour of Education for All. Third, and as a consequence of the above, the nature and terms of support and funding to CSO capacity-building programmes would likewise have to adapt to the above shifts and rise up to the new challenges. International donor support and funding has been one of the major global forces that has had varying effects on CSO capacity. On the one hand, it has fuelled the rise of NGOs and CSOs in the developing world, enhanced legitimacy of CSOs as public actors, and provided resources that helped widen CSO and NGO outreach. On the other, aid conditionalities and the structure of aid funding continue to pose real constraints to CSOs, as Changing the rules of the game * 33 pointed out by UNDP in its own re-thinking about capacity52. Alan Fowler (2000), for example, identifies some of these constraining features: 1) the short-term nature of projectbased funding; 2) expectations that NGOs and CSOs apply particular methods insisted upon by the funder even if these are inappropriate; 3) ‘locking’ of funds to donor priorities, which may not necessarily correspond to those of CSOs and NGOs; and, 4) poor co-ordination among funders. Apart from these, donor governments send ‘mixed’ signals too (ibid.). Even as donor governments and agencies fund anti-poverty and national capacity-building programmes, they likewise support certain policies that reduce national capacity and increase poverty in Southern nations, e.g., inequitable trade agreements through the World Trade Organisation, refusal to undertake policy reforms in their own countries (such as the lifting or reduction of agricultural subsidies) that could correct trade imbalances between the North and South. The UNDP study on capacity has emphasised the need to establish ‘countervailing measures’ to begin to balance the ‘asymmetric relationship’ between donors and recipients (Browne 2002a). Whatever these measures are or will be, the processes for defining them must involve civil society. At the minimum Fowler recommends the expansion of donor funding to civil society organisations, not just NGOs, which receive bulk of non-governmental funding; and, the creation of spaces for continuing dialogue between donors and CSOs towards improving the quality of aid and the structure of the aid system to make these more flexible and responsive to the diverse, evolving, and long-term nature of developing CSO capacity53. At the maximum he suggests ‘changing the rules of the game’, that is, altering the structures, culture, laws, strategies, conventions and practices to make the aid system function equitably and fairly (Fowler 2000, emphasis added). ‘Put another way, in order for the aid system to spearhead and accelerate civic engagement in social development it must first become credible. And this means consistent deeds across the board, not words and double standards. Poor people and the societies in which they live must see and be convinced that their interests count most for those purporting to act because of the moral unacceptability of poverty and exclusion’ (ibid., emphasis in the original). Finally, underpinning the propositions in this paper is the assumption that civil society is essentially a political concept, and that building CSO capacity means developing political capacity (Tandon and Naidoo 1999). The notion that some form of ‘division of labour’ exists in the societal realm—state and parties for politics, corporations and market for economics, and family and community for civicsonly de-politicises the social complex of actors, histories, contexts, institutions and processes of the unequal relations of power that operate in the real world. As one civil anthropologist has argued, ‘All human communities are held together by shared values and ideals. This makes them all inherently political’ (Hann 1996). 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