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Is Enough Attention Paid to Human Resource Development Issues in CDD Projects? Some Lessons from DPIPs and Karnataka Tanks project By Self Reliant Initiatives through Joint Action (SRIJAN), New Delhi May 5,SRIJAN/DPIP 2004 1 CDD Projects with which SRIJAN Works SRIJAN/DPIP 2 Four Central Questions 1. 2. 3. 4. How to get right people and develop staff capacity in the field? Why and how to develop district staff capacity? Why to develop staff capacity in partner civil society organizations (NGOs)? How to renew and revive enthusiasm at mid-term? Are HID lessons generic enough? (could the lessons from Indian CDD projects be applied in other countries and other sectors such as health?) SRIJAN/DPIP 3 Organization of Presentation Context of Government, and CDD specifically Human Resources and Institutional Development Strategies in DPIP MP/Rajasthan/AP and Karnataka Tanks – Enabling Environment – Recruitment and Selection (R&S) System for human resources – Capacity Building Impact/Results Lessons for Project/Institutional design SRIJAN/DPIP 4 Institutional Context of CDD projects Social - political context: feudal relationships creating dependency => elite capture of rural/ local institutions - result => poor outreach of programs, leakage, etc Decentralization to the district level is not being pursued vigorously any more, Existing achievement ratio - 20% (notional figure) implies poor sustainability of either the project benefits or economic benefits SRIJAN/DPIP 5 CDD Project Context Large coverage area (min. 6 to max 14 districts in a state, 2000 to 7000 villages in each state) Bottom up planning and demand or community driven Projects to promote groups and village level structures - key objectives are -- building their capacity and empowerment SRIJAN/DPIP 6 Concept of a Village Process Facilitation Team (PFT) A full time cadre of people in a facilitative role (facilitator characteristics explained later) Competence to design and implement sub projects (certain intellectual competence) notwithstanding support in technical areas Team of four to five members dedicated A cluster of 20 to 25 villages or about 2500 poor families over a period of five years Base at block headquarters close to the village cluster SRIJAN/DPIP 7 Typical structure in a CDD project State Project Support Unit District Project Support Unit (DPSU) Village Process Facilitation Team (PFT) Village 1 Village 2 Village 3 Village n SRIJAN/DPIP 8 Size of the Human Resource Requirement, say in MP 50 to 60 locations (village clusters) where PFTs need to be set up Need to recruit over 200 to 250 PFT members, and 50 to 60 staff for 14 district units This staff has to come from various departments (who should be willing) SRIJAN/DPIP 9 Strategies for Human Resource and Institutional Development Staff Selection System for ensuring “process sensitive government staff” joins the project Orientation and learner centric capacity building programme for field units Capacity Building at District Partnership with NGOs Enabling Environment and Conditions SRIJAN/DPIP 10 HR/ID Strategic Intervention – ONE Staff Selection System SRIJAN/DPIP 11 Desired Characteristics of Facilitators to be selected Motivation to succeed, ability to respond positively to challenges Empathetic attitude towards the poor, and women Intellectual competence at the job Ability to work in a group/ team Integrity SRIJAN/DPIP 12 Staff Selection Methodology Psychometric (RING TOSS) - Achievement Motivation - Risk taking/ fear of failure Sociometry (Scored Group Discussion) - Ability to work in a team -Power and control motivation level Extended Interview (“critical incidents”) - Approach to work - formula for success/to move up in life SRIJAN/DPIP Selected 50 teams in MP and Appraised 25 in Karnataka 13 Results More than 90 PFTs are in place in 14 districts (more than 250 staff) stronger groups, and stronger process orientation Interesting innovative ideas (rich diversity) – music band, community tube well, sprinkler, tent house SRIJAN/DPIP 14 Challenges in Staff Selection from Government Getting staff “relieved” from parent departments (a hugely bureaucratic procedure) Difficulty in attracting the right kind at the DPM level (who needs to be a class one officer, and perhaps additional collector rank) Difficulty in finding people for “gender specialist” at the district level, and engineers, Women workers and Agriculture specialists at PFT level from within the government SRIJAN/DPIP 15 Conclusions and Lessons for Project Design Process Sensitive Recruitment and Selection system is possible to develop and institutionalize in government, could lead to accelerated filling of positions with individuals having “desired skill - attribute mix.” Voluntary application from individual staff rather than department driven process Word of mouth and “contacts” to identify right people SRIJAN/DPIP 16 HR/ID Strategic Intervention TWO Capacity Building SRIJAN/DPIP 17 Field Staff’s Capacity Building in Participatory Processes Orientation SRIJAN/DPIP 18 Orientation Workshop Purpose: – Give common orientation to people coming from different departmental background – Acquire basic understanding of DPIP’s objectives, structure, and operational functioning (there is an OM) – Appreciate the attitudes required for working with village communities, and its demand driven nature – Get an estimate of where they stand in terms of skills, attitudes, and behavior required in this project – Finally, this is another occasion to stay or quit the project SRIJAN/DPIP 19 Five Day Staff Orientation Camp Participants Share Past Experience Village Interaction provides live data about behavior Ready to Learn new Skills and Attitudes Returning to Group for Processing the Experience All PFTs and DPUs went through it in MP DPIP SRIJAN/DPIP Change it for a tribal project? 20 Methodology Create a learning environment – valuing everyone’s community development experience, crystallizing learning for oneself based on group’s feedback often given in a creative, indirect form such as skit Village assignment – to observe oneself in a “lab situation” and generate data about ability to communicate with villagers (esp. Poor and women) and to work as a team Evening sessions to clarify administrative matters related to transfer, posting, and reporting Four types of issues are identified and discussed – problem of participation and forming groups, – problems of implementation such as release of money, CSR based budgeting, linking with existing groups (such as SHGs and watershed), – Administrative issues of coming to work in DPIP – Link with administration and PRIs SRIJAN/DPIP 21 Results Orientation workshops generated high level of bonding and enthusiasm among participants (PFT members) to take up intensive work in the community More than 20 workshops have been held and approximately 300 plus participants have gone through it Staff are ready to be located close to the villages and spending intensive time with community Better results in terms of assets created in comparison with Rajasthan SRIJAN/DPIP 22 Challenges Need to provide them skills/ confidence to – Evolve activities into sub sectors – Take up new functions such as marketing, processing etc. – Evolving groups into village organisations and linking them with Panchayats Need to have enough capacity building organizations to take up problem solving role as 14 districts are well spread out SRIJAN/DPIP 23 HR/ID Strategic Intervention Three District Capacity Building SRIJAN/DPIP 24 District Project Managers (DPMs) Workshop DPMs should begin to appreciate the difference between DPIP and other Government poverty alleviation projects their role is sophisticated – DPMs need to understand that rather than using orders and authority their role is to get the work done by the PFTs SRIJAN/DPIP 25 DPM Workshop – Village Visit Who are the poor in the village visited and what are their main problems/difficulties? What are the difficulties in getting their participation? What has been the process of CIG development in the village? What are the different aspects of PFT’s role in the village/CIG SRIJAN/DPIP 26 DPM Workshop – Results (more) ready to play facilitative role!! Could not understand why a group was needed keen to play Public Relations role rather than be keen observer of village process Not too keen to read! Reinforcement by State Administration feedback session attended by Secy (RD) – emphasized Facilitative role SRIJAN/DPIP 27 Challenges Not enough decision making power to respond to local situation - Circulars or orders from the state limit this Not enough exposure to successful projects so cannot guide the field teams Still work is not interesting enough to keep them here, and not seek a transfer SRIJAN/DPIP 28 Product being designed – for Rajasthan DPIP Livelihood Visioning and Project planning at Village Level Re-shaping DPU culture District Visioning and Exposure Visits Business Process Reengineering (scrutiny of groups and projects that NGO submit) SRIJAN/DPIP 29 HR/ID Strategic Intervention Four Collaboration with Civil Society Organizations or NGOs SRIJAN/DPIP 30 Field Agency Selection System 360 degree Feedback Process – consultation with villagers (clients), staff, leadership including the Board, and district administration Development Impact - Visits to NGOs’ field Integrity - checking account system (trail of bills to debit to a budget item in a project) Governance – Read proceedings of the board meetings Objectivity of the Panel – THREE MEMBER TEAM - project admin, academic, NGO background – Scoring SRIJAN/DPIP – Feedback to NGO 31 360 Degree Method for Field Agency Selection Assess Developmental Processes and Impact in NGO Villages NGO Governance (Interact with Board) 3 Member Panel Interact with Staff (Skills and Attitudes) Check out with District Administration WOULD APPLY To PRI SRIJAN/DPIP SELECTION? 32 Challenges in Rajasthan and Karnataka Assumption is NGOs have the manpower and the capacity, the fact is large number of NGOs come up afresh (83 in Rajasthan, 58 in Karnataka) Project tends to ignore HR needs of NGO teams – “contracts for performance”? 412 groups and sub projects in two years’ time, by a team of 5-6 people. NGOs serving merely as body-shops? SRIJAN/DPIP 33 HR/ID Strategic Intervention Five Enabling Environment SRIJAN/DPIP 34 Core Values Participation and Ownership of Community Transparency Collaboration Empathy With Poor SRIJAN/DPIP 35 Enabling Conditions Travel norms modified – women members are given additional allowance, soft loan for vehicles ( 4% interest subsidy),Money for office support Project allowance – approximately 10 to 25 percent including HRA Incentives for performance (Mobile phones and jeep allowance if project investment target is met) Flexibility – people could try new things and make mistakes Access to state leadership and state project unit Trust the staff - Technical Assistance could be sourced from anywhere, TS powers with PFT SRIJAN/DPIP 36 Lessons For Project Design District units need to be empowered too with CB inputs Three phase design (i) start up phase to get the village process going, (ii) consolidation phase for district capacity build up, and (iii) acceleration phase for taking activities into sub sectors or regional development Capacity Building needs evolve, should respond to field results as they occur NGO partnership needs serious re-thinking, can’t be managed through “performance contracts” to realize their potential as empowerment and poverty reduction agents State vision development - involvement of political and high level bureaucratic involvement is absolute 37 SRIJAN/DPIP must Thank You SRIJAN/DPIP 38