BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
It’s
still hard for me to understand, much less demystify, the emerging and
fast-changing language in the name of development. Whether these are mouthed
and espoused by government technocrats or “civil society consultants”, the
jargon remains over my head.
In
a forum in Thailand in 1997, I heard the term “civil society” uttered more than
50 times by speakers coming from Southeast Asian Countries whose projects were
being supported and documented by the Canadian International Development
Agency-Canada-Asean Governance Innovations Network, through the Institute on
Governance based in Ottawa.
Unable
to make sense of it, I asked whether there was also an “uncivil society”, and
whether they come only from government. It triggered laughter and I consoled
myself with the thought that I’d contributed – even at my own expense - a
little humor in an international forum of otherwise formal and
stern-looking doctors of education and philosophy seriously making their
presentations. Initially, I thought they were discussing the beginning and
future of the universe, not this thing called “governance”.
I
continue to hear “sustainable development” now and then. It was the rallying
point and guidepost of the 1992 World Summit in Rio de Janeiro. One
environmentalist patiently told me the term is the same as “resource
multi-use”, whatever that means, too.
In
the same token, it is taking me sometime to grapple with my ignorance on how to
“touch base” with, “inter-face” or “cross-fertilize” ideas with development
workers. No thanks to the coin minters, management language is being
“specialized” and “institutionalized” overnight, “optimized” to the hilt and
becoming a masterpiece of great complexity among the stars, far from the ken of
ordinary mortals like me.
Unable
to transcend the overly simplified stage they call “micro-level”, I admit
inability to cope. My ignorance gives me the creeps, as math did in school.
There is that gnawing feeling – and fear – inside me that, without my
knowledge, understanding and consent, the wheel has been re-invented and it is
about to run me over. I think they call this “information anxiety”.
I
like “governance” best for its definition: the sharing of power,
authority, duty and resources and commitment. Good governance brings
together those in formal government, those who changed their label from
non-government organizations to civil society, business and others to address
together an issue, tackle a problem or do a project for the benefit of the
community. I guess it was also called “multi-stakeholder partnership” among
“champions” of development. President Noynoy Aquino calls it “public-private
partnership”.
Top
priority or “flagship” of this partnership now is the relentless fight against
poverty which, on a “macro-level” is “endemic” or common in the so-called Third
World ( or is it South?). It is being addressed with support from
“development consultants” bring in development funds and its language from the
“North” or the developed countries. In Thailand, Dr. Opart Panya of Mahidol
University told me, these workers are called “development tourists” as they are
tourists in the name of development,
Whatever.
It is consoling to note that some of the rich and powerful have always been fighting
poverty. They never lower their defenses lest they become part of and add to
those already mired in it.
B-O-T
is, perhaps, the best “indicator” of my ignorance of development
gobbledygook. The term has replaced “turn-key” in the implementation of development
programs. It’s applied, they say, to vital government projects which formal
government can hardly fund and, therefore, will have to pass on to the private
sector to build, operate and eventually transfer to government.
Long
before B-O-T was coined, it was already being practiced in Benguet and other
parts of the Cordillera. They built the Ambuclao and Binga Dams here, operated
them and transferred the electric power to Metro-Manila. To do this, they
transferred the displaced Ibaloys, whose ancestral lands were inundated,
somewhere. Like pine trees, the displaced and dispossessed were unable to
adjust to the lowland heat and had no recourse but to return, even if they had
been stripped of their lands.
They
also built the mines, operated them and transferred the gold, silver and copper
to Metro-Manila and elsewhere, and paid the taxes to Makati.
That,
I guess, made the Cordillera a genuine pioneer and model in another development
jargon: “user-friendly”. (e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments.)
No comments:
Post a Comment