Exploitation in the name of development
>> Monday, June 10, 2013
BENCHWARMER
Ramon S.
Dacawi
(The
environmental issue - like other development issues - has become a
milking cow of sorts for some local, national and international “development
workers”, be they in government or in the private sector. In trying
to make sense of this so-called “Environment Month”, we retrieve a
previous column piece on this fractured culture of development.):
Twenty one years back, the world’s leaders
came out of that summit in Rio de Janeiro with a freshly minted term:
“sustainable development”. The jargon was supposed to be our guide in
exploiting the earth’s resources. Not to the point of their depletion but to
ensure their availability for use by the future generations of human, animal
and plant kind.
Twenty one years after the Rio pact was
inked, we hardly took off the ground. The dismal reality of unsustainable
development is all over. This is the reality on the ground,
notwithstanding billions of fund resources sourced and spent in the
name of “sustainable development”, not only by governments but those who now
call themselves “civil society”.
What we have here is a classic disunity
between theory and practice, a plethora of slogans crying out for
action. From “sustaining development”, we have shifted our battle cry,
this time to “mitigating” global warming or climate change. What we have is an
endless exercise in tagging and labeling to justify requests for institutional
fund support. Like resources supposedly for “sustainable development”, much of
these funds are going to administrative expenses, including trips to
international conferences to sustain and enrich our language on such issues of
the day.
What we have here is a legion of wordsmiths
calling themselves “development workers”. They are those who establish a
perception for a need for their services, from their developing their own
processes and their own language of “development” and
then imposing these on the indigent, indigenous and rural communities who
are supposed to be beneficiaries of the fund grants accessed through their
agencies – be these government or non-government organizations who now call
themselves “civil society”.
There’s a term for this “art” (if you can
call it that) of creating a need for one’s expertise as a “development worker”.
It’s called “erythrogenesis”, fellow Baguio boy, Prof. Alex
Brillantes told me. It’s all about the ability to create a problem
that the creator can and will solve, thereby providing the opportunity to show
people how talented the problem creator is for solving the problem he had
deliberately triggered.
In a forum in 1997 in Chiangmai, I heard the
terms “civil society” and “benchmarking” repeatedly in the discussions. “Civil
society”, I was told, refers to those who were previously called, plain and
simple, “non-government organizations”. Unable to suppress my ignorance of
development language, I asked whether, in the same token, it would be apt to
classify those in government as the “uncivil society”.
In that conference, I learned another term
from fellow delegate, Thai Prof. OpartPanya. In Thailand, he told
me, development workers from the West working in Asia are sometimes called
“development tourists.” They are in the Third World as tourists in the guise of
development work.
The issue of language or jargon complicating
or blocking development is found in that alcoholic product endorsement on
television by world boxing champion Manny Pacquiao, he who exemplifies the
truism that “ it’s better to give than to receive”.
The boxing icon reads and orders from the
menu “roasted mountain legumes” to go as finger food (pulutan) in his drinking
session with billiards ace Efren “Bata” Reyes and other friends. It’s supposed
to be “peanuts”, plain and simple, as television viewers immediately see. They
need not strain for the meaning of the three-word combination, unlike those
mouthed by “development workers”.
There’s also valid suspicion that some fund
requests and allocations for projects are being kept under wraps, even while
those benefitting from these grants proclaim democratic and community
participation in decision-making and implementation of activities to justify
the funding.
Worse, some existing programs have been used,
without the knowledge and consent of the owners or implementers of the same, as
bases for fund requests. After the release of the grants, not a single cent
goes to the programs, the concepts of which were stolen and used to strengthen
chances of funding grant approval.
Recently, scuttlebutts have it that a group
trying to corner a substantial amount of fund grant for “climate change
mitigation” from an international development organization was silently tapping
two prestigious universities as would-be implementing partners, yet wary that
the plan – and the funding details – would be leaked to the communities where
these educational institutions are serving.
In some cases, the endorsement signatures of
respected leaders of a community are tapped to heighten the integrity of fund
grant applications. Once the grant is released, however, the leaders, whose
names carried weight in the fund approval, are no longer updated on how the
fund is being used.
In some programs covered by fund grants,
community members are tapped as audience in seminars where they are allowed to
contribute an idea or two that will be incorporated in the so-called “terminal
report” on the success of the project. The “terminal report”, prepared in
development language that people in the “beneficiary community” can’t
understand, will be submitted by the ”implementing NGO” to the funding
institution as proof of the project’s success.
We need to simplify and demystify the
language of development if we are truly committed to help villages get closer
to what they should be as “success stories” - be it in “sustainable
development”, “climate change mitigation”, “gender sensitivity” or whatever
thrusts of the day are being imposed on us by the developed nations of the West
or the North.
Failure to do so smacks of cultural
insensitivity, if not outright arrogance and exploitation of the misery of the
poor and disadvantaged. Sadly, this is the reality on the ground, imposed by
the “developed” nations and perpetuated by “development workers” for
their own development, in collusion with consultants who get paid for telling
the “beneficiary communities” what they already know, but in a language they
don’t understand. (e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments).
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