Title: Lars Koch IBIS
1Lars KochIBIS
Making influence real New opportunities for
influencing education policy
2Outline of the Presentation
- The Paris Declaration and achievements from Accra
- New opportunities for Civil Society participation
in policy, plans and implementation The Accra
Agenda for Action - Making the Voice of Civil Society Heard
- How to engage in in policy dialogue and influence
policy, planning and implementation
3The Paris Declaration
- The Paris Declaration from 2005 is guiding donor
and recipient countries aid relationship - It is in implementation and both donors and
recipient countries increasingly subscribe to
Paris - 5 important principles
- Ownership
- Alignment
- Harmonisation
- Managing for results
- Mutual accountability
- Ownership is the key principle opening new
policy spaces - aid should take point of departure in
developing countries own strategies and plans
4Accra Agenda for Action
- Accra Agenda for Action (AAA)
- Adopted in September 2008
- Building on and Supplementing the Paris
Declaration - Civil Society is acknowledged as an important
partner in development - AAA is setting new standards for CSO
participation and dialogue with governments and
donors - Ownership should now be national (opposed to
Ministry of Finance) and Democratic with
parliaments and CSO on board - All important donors and recipient countries have
signed this declaration
5Accra Agenda for Action
- Country ownership is key. Developing country
governments will take stronger leadership of
their own development policies, and will engage
with their parliaments and citizens in shaping
those policies. AAA 8 - We will engage in open and inclusive dialogue on
development policies. We acknowledge the critical
role and responsibility of parliaments in
ensuring country ownership of development
processes. To further this objective we will take
the following actions - a) Developing country governments will work more
closely with parliaments and local authorities in
preparing, implementing and monitoring national
development policies and plans. They will also
engage with civil society organisations (CSOs). - b) Donors will support efforts to increase the
capacity of all development actorsparliaments,
central and local governments, CSOs, research
institutes, media and the private sectorto take
an active role in dialogue on development policy
and on the role of aid in contributing to
countries development objectives. AAA 13
6Accra Agenda for Action
- 20. We will deepen our engagement with CSOs as
independent development actors in their own right
whose efforts complement those of governments and
the private sector. To this end
- a) We invite CSOs to reflect on how they can
apply the Paris principles of aid effectiveness
from a CSO perspective. - b) As part of that process, we will seek to i)
improve co-ordination of CSO efforts with
government programmes, ii) enhance CSO
accountability for results, and iii) improve
information on CSO activities. - c) We will work with CSOs to provide an enabling
environment that maximises their contributions to
development. - AAA 20
7New Policy Spaces and Challenges
- The AAA opens new policy spaces for CSO
- Governments commit to engage in policy dialogue
with CSO (and parliaments and local authorities) - Governments and donors commit to an enabling
environment for CSO (legal, political, funding)
and to be more transparent - Donors commit to support (fund) CSOs, research
institutions, etc.
- CSOs are challenged to
- Engage in policy dialogue
- Improve coordination with government
- CSO are also challenged to
- Be more accountable and transparent
- Reflect on how they can apply the Paris Principles
8New Policy Dialogue Spaces
Donors Bilateral/multilateral
Dialog spaces
Budget support
Voice
Recipient government
National Poverty Reduction Strategy
Sector/Ministry Agriculture
Sector support
Sector/Ministry Inffrastructure
Sector/Ministry Decentral.
Sector Strategy
Sector/Ministry health
Sector/Ministry Education
Voice
Civil Society Natioanl, Networks, local
9Influencing policy spaces
- Increasingly sector policies will be the most
important space for CSO - National level plans (PRSPs etc) are often
general, less operational - Sector level (e.g. Education) is where most CSOs
have their capacity, knowledge and experiences - Donors are in many cases pushing for CSO to get
engaged they will in many cases be an ally - Especially at the consultative level, not
necessarily in details - Governments in general more reluctant to accept
the role of CSO and engage in dialogue - But governments have signed the AAA, are pushed
by donors and need the capacity of civil society
to reach results - CSO have to develop capacity to engage in
dialogue and advocacy based on experiences,
knowledge and research to influence politics - It is no longer sufficient just to doing good
locally! - CSOs ability to network with other CSOs, with
government, with donors
10Decision Making Cycle
Flagging problems Girls, Poor regions,
Bilingual challenges
Alliances Networks Building strong education
networks for influence
Analysing necessities
Evaluating Monitoring
- Participation and consultation in
decision-making - Official consultations, Lobby, conferences, etc
International NGOs
Analysing Monitoring results - legislation,
reforms, outcomes
Civil Society
Govern- ment
Policies Strategies
Donors
Dialogue space
Presenting Demands based on experiences and
research more teachers, New curriculums
Implementing
Planning
CSO coordinating with Government Showcasing
innovative approaches to education curriculum,
bilingual, etc.
Budgeting
Budgets transparency and participation, also at
district and school level
11Influence Through Strong Advocacy
- Practice/Project
- Experiences
- Best practises
- Implementation
The Advocacy Triangle
- Advocacy
- Based on practical experiences and best practises
proposals for educational reform - Strong networks build with other CSOs
- Negotiation with government
- Using media local and nationally
- CSO Capacity Building Organisational
Development - Assessing needs and challenges
- Build constituency and legitimacy
- Leadership and communication
12Summary
- Paris and Accra is opening new spaces for CSO
influencing policy - CSO are challenged to make use of these new
opportunities especially at sector level -
Education - CSOs will have to improve advocacy and networking
skills - Profound mapping of other actors and processes
among government, donors and CSOs - Networks for policy dialogue and lobbying
- Continued follow up in stead of one-off events
- Engaging in the entire decision making circle
- Evidence based advocacy based on own practise and
research - Develop strong and legitimate organisations and
networks
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