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Title: Active Citizenship in Central America: Towards a strong public


1
Active Citizenship in Central America Towards a
strong public?
  • A review of the DCU Active Citizenship programme.
  • Barry Cannon, School of Law and Government, DCU
  • INTRAC conference, Amersfoort, the Netherlands,
    3-5 December, 2008

2
Structure of presentation
  • Mainstream and alternative perspectives on
    Civil Society in democratisation and development
    (Diamond, 1999 Howell and Pearce, 2001)
  • Strong and weak publics (Fraser, 1994)
  • Active Citizenship Programme overview three
    pillars
  • Capacities
  • Research
  • Advocacy.
  • Conclusions Active Citizenship in Central
    America Towards a strong public?

3
Mainstream perspective on Civil Society
(Diamond, 1999)
  • CS intermediary between private sphere and the
    state
  • acts as check on state - legitimise and
    strengthen it, but NOT anti-state
  • CS stimulates political participation, educates
    citizens for democracy, provides group
    representation and articulation, helps improve
    political system, disseminates information etc.
  • mobilizes support for (and neutralising
    resistance to) economic reform policies in
    favour of market (p.248)

4
Mainstream perspective on Civil Society
(Diamond, 1999)
  • Overall aim of Civil Society hence is to
  • improve liberal democratic model through
    monitoring, reporting, documenting, educating,
    debating and so on but NOT to question it
  • make the market-led neoliberal economic model
    work more efficiently thus laying the basis for
    sustainable growth (p.260)

5
Critique of Mainstream perspective (Howell and
Pearce, 2001)
  • Individualist
  • Civil society is based on associational
    bondswhich reconcile the pursuit of individual
    self-interest with a common or public good
    (ibid 30)
  • Emphasis on the defence of the individual against
    the collective, rather than the furtherance of
    the interests of the collective
  • Lack of questioning of civil societys
    relationship to market seen as unproblematic
  • Ignores power relations within civil society
    homogenises it when societal inequalities are
    reflected in it
  • Ignores role of donors and the power they wield
  • Sees Civil Society as a means rather than an end
    in itself - reduced to a technical exercise of
    coordination, co-operation, and joint effort,
    depoliticized and neutralized (p.177).

6
Alternative perspective on Civil Society
(Howell and Pearce, 2001)
  • Civil society reflects a multiplicity of diverse
    and often diverging voices that share a wish to
    preserve a concern for a common humanity, undo
    the negative aspects of capitalist development,
    and promote forms of economic organisation that
    are environmentally sustainable and socially
    just (p.37)

7
Alternative perspective on Civil Society
(Howell and Pearce, 2001)
  • Common Good and collective emphasised as opposed
    to individual
  • Inequality, class and social differentiation
    recognised as embedded in CS, frequently
    conflictive rather than harmonious
  • CS realm in which dominant values and norms
    contested instead of facilitated, and can act as
    agent for such contestation
  • Challenges market driven, corporate controlled
    globalisation, and the inequities reaped through
    private accumulation (p232).

8
Alternative perspective on Civil Society (Cox,
1999)
  • CS is the realm in which the existing social
    order is grounded, and it can also be the realm
    in which a new social order can be grounded
    (p.4).
  • It is both shaper and shaped, an agent of
    stabilisation and reproduction, and a potential
    agent of transformation (p.5).

9
Weak Publics and Strong Publics (Fraser, 1994)
  • Separation of civil society and the state
    promotes weak publicswhose role is to form
    opinion but not to make decisions
  • Strong publics- civil society as opinion
    formers and decision makers, self managing
    institutions of different kinds which could
    become sites of direct or quasi-direct democracy
    co-existing with representative forms (p.59)
  • Civil society playing a co-equal role alongside
    the state taking active part in re-fashioning
    state and civil society in the context of the
    South, towards a development which ensures
    freedom, diversity and democracy (ibid.).

10
Active Citizenship in Central America Programme
overview
  • Two projects
  • Active Citizenship in Central America Research
    and Advocacy Project
  • Active Citizenship in Central America Building
    Capacities
  • Based on
  • Irish Aid funded Diploma in NGO Management,
    2001-present with business and administration
    departments in one university each in El
    Salvador, Nicaragua and Honduras
  • Established Irish Aid funded NGO network in
    region as core partners
  • Irish Aid strategic policy of working with Irish
    Universities
  • Research project developed by DCU for the
    Advisory Body of Irish Aid, Engagement with Civil
    Society for Poverty Reduction (2007)
  • 6 month research period (Jan-June 2006) and I
    year grant to continue existing programme (June
    2006-June 2007)

11
Active Citizenship in Central America Project
1 Research and Advocacy Project
  • Two main objectives
  • To enable the construction of effective, coherent
    civil society pro-poor policy proposals based on
    evidence of key issues affecting the poor,
    through research based activities led by
    universities and,
  • To positively influence the adoption of these
    pro-poor policy measures by decision-makers by
    enabling civil society to construct effective
    strategies for action to produce change, through
    the building of more effective CSO networks on a
    national and regional basis.

12
Active Citizenship in Central America Research
and Advocacy Project Activities
  • Regional workshop for partners in León, Nicaragua
    on 5 and 6 October, 2007
  • national committees and regional committee draft
    research agenda basic governance rules and
    procedures.
  • First full meeting of Regional Committee, El
    Salvador 23-25 January, 2008
  • Results
  • Further precision of a research agenda
  • Criteria for selection of research and advocacy
    projects
  • Delegation of administrative and operative
    responsibilities
  • Reordering of budget
  • Timetable of activities
  • Selection of regional administrator.

13
Active Citizenship in Central America Research
and Advocacy Project Activities
  • Call for projects
  • Document drawn up to guide the call for research
    and advocacy
  • Each country total funding 20,000 20,000
    regional proposal.
  • Dissemination Irish Aid networks
  • Duration March- April, 2008
  • 8 projects selected.

14
Active Citizenship in Central America Research
and Advocacy Project Funded projects themes
  • Regional
  • Women migrant social networks in Central America.
  • Honduras
  • Agro fuels and its impact on right to food in
    Honduras.
  • Analysis of Impact of International Cooperation
    in Honduras 1990-2008.
  • Nicaragua
  • Human Rights of migrants in Nicaragua
  • Needs of disabled people to achieve social and
    work integration.
  • El Salvador
  • Contributing to the construction of womens
    citizenship in El Salvador.
  • Characterisation of Pharmaceutical sector in El
    Salvador.
  • Reproduction of gendered images by young
    Salvadorans resulting in a higher disposition to
    violence.

15
Active Citizenship in Central America Research
and Advocacy Project
  • Achievements
  • Various spaces for regional discussion and
    networking developed
  • Coordination between universities or research
    units and CS orgs on research
  • Funding of 8 research projects with subsequent
    generation of knowledge on key issues for region
  • Difficulties
  • Process long and cumbersome
  • Conflicts of interest in committees, participants
    as/wishing to be recipients
  • Lack of clarity on functions of national and
    regional committees
  • Waning of interest after initial meetings
  • Lack of regional perspective amongst partners.

16
Active Citizenship in Central America Building
Capacities Projects
  • Objectives
  • To facilitate a more effective and informed civil
    society impact on policy-making by supporting the
    development of civil society's leadership
    capacity through the continued provision of
    scholarships for existing NGO Management Diploma.
  • To facilitate a more effective and informed local
    government impact on national policy making by
    supporting the development of local government
    leadership capacity through the development and
    provision of a Local Government Management
    Diploma.
  • To impact more effectively on policy on poverty
    in the participating municipalities through the
    construction of effective, coherent joint civil
    society and local government pro-poor policy
    proposals through joint research based activities
    led by universities and through the development
    and execution of joint municipality/civil society
    lobbying activities based on the evidence
    gathered through that research.
  • To encourage the adoption of a regional
    perspective through joint research projects and
    increased networking opportunities for partners.

17
Active Citizenship in Central America Building
Capacities- Activities
  • Two inter-related activities
  • Continued provision of Diploma in NGO Management.
  • Consultation between partners on consultancy and
    implementation.
  • Some Consultancy report recommendations
  • NGO Diploma
  • Relate content more to NGO experience
  • Cohesion between three countries
  • Emphasis on geopolitical context, development
    theory, civil society theory (20) to complement
    technical content (i.e. business and
    administration model) (80)
  • Municipalities report
  • Course local development philosophy encouraging
    networking and leadership
  • Similar mix Content as NGO diploma context,
    democracy theory, development theory etc. plus
    technical content.

18
Active Citizenship in Central America Building
Capacities
  • Achievements
  • Continued provision of NGO diploma
  • Increased opportunities for partner networking
  • Identification and implementation of consultancy
  • Difficulties
  • Consultancy not conceived and framed in context
    of previous processes and procedures built up
    since Diplomas inception five years previously
  • Dissatisfaction of university partners with
    consultant methodology and consequent reports
  • Concentration on consultancy to exclusion of
    other objectives
  • Need for period of reappraisal and reorientation
    with partners.

19
Conclusions Active Citizenship in Central
America Towards a strong public?
  • Global and regional context has changed since
    original conception of project in late 90s/early
    2000
  • Globalisation
  • Global financial crisis
  • Crisis of neoliberalism and changing development
    paradigms
  • Central America
  • CAFTA-DR where to now in context of Obama
    presidency?
  • EU/Central America negotiations
  • Migration fall in remittances less emigration
    - increased discontent, possibly violence?
  • Central American Civil Society must play part in
    reappraisal of global economic system making
    alternative proposals
  • strong public perspective more pertinent

20
Conclusions Active Citizenship in Central
America Towards a strong public?
  • Active Citizenship Programme displays both
    mainstream and alternative perspectives of CS
  • technical and research/advocacy elements
  • Inherited networks rather than created search
    for unified vision
  • Active Citizenship Programme must move towards
    promotion of strong public facilitating
  • Research to create alternative proposals
  • Spaces for discussion and dialogue within
    universities incl classroom and without
  • Engagement with policy makers AND with wider
    public esp poor seeking spaces for participation
  • Ongoing process need for further dialogue and
    discussion with partners to promote this
    perspective and discuss strategies.

21
Active Citizenship in Central America Towards a
strong public?
  • For more information see
  • http//www.ciudadania-activa-ca.net/
  • Bibliography
  • Robert W. Cox, 1999. Civil Society at the turn
    of the millennium prospects for an alternative
    world order, in Review of International Studies
    25, pp.3-28.
  • Larry Diamond, 1999. Developing Democracy
    Towards Consolidation Baltimore and London The
    John Hopkins University Press.
  • Jude Howell and Jenny Pearce, 2001. Civil Society
    and Development A Critical Exploration Boulder
    and London Lynne Rienner.
  • Various internal documentation.
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