Wednesday, January 11, 2012

People; Processes and Systems -- What Common Points between Sustainability Planning in Health and Food Security?

Hi all -- we hope to have an interesting discussion with Food Security colleagues at a Microlink Breakfast Seminar on January 26, 2012.
Microlinks Connections header
I've been asked to share some of our experience with the Sustainability Framework, and with the help of Sharon Arscott-Mills and two Food Security colleagues, Sudhir Wanmali and Owen Calvert, will try to lead a discussion about how some of the lessons learned can be applied to Food Security. We'll try to address some of the tensions between Value Chains as a strategy and the sustainability of Food Security outcomes in vulnerable populations as a larger goal.

Visit the Microlink page and register for this event here.

Maybe see some of you there.
Cheers,

Eric

Reminder-- the initial study, conducted for UNICEF with Thoric Cederstrom and Patricia Costa, which got CEDARS more concerned about the links between Food Security, Health, and Sustainable Social Development is available here.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Some critical thinkers about complexity in development assistance

Thanks to Matt Dettman for pointing me to a new link,  now referenced in our resource page.

The idea of development happening in complex adaptive systems is so new, that the bloggers of 'Aid on the Edge of Chaos' are highlighting a speech on global resilience from 1970!

I'm going to keep an eye on this blog and see what other nuggets can be gleaned.

Cheers

Eric

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Projects don't "do" Sustainability. Do they?

Trying to advance sustainability in the planning, design, implementation and evaluation of health programs--community health programs, or health system strengthening interventions--is our meat and potato at CEDARS. Some regular conversation topics keep coming back. One of the most critical and reasonable one comes up when someone says: "I like these ideas; it makes sense, and it does or would make sense to our local partners. But really, that's not how we work. We have 30 to 60 days to write a proposal, then staff up and kickoff a project and get deliverables. When exactly would you introduce those ideas?"

I've had these discussions so many times, so let me try to summarize the three lines of rationale these will gravitate toward:

  • [1] It is actually possible to bring the steps of the Sustainability Framework (SF) process into the life of a project, and it doesn't have to be done as a ritual, design-along-the-dotted line kind of a thing.
The Lessons Learned report documents this with some level of detail, and options are presented again in the Long View Manual. And we're always interested in discussing practical options. 

  • [2] The SF doesn't suggest a set of steps because we somehow missed how projects were planned for, designed, awarded, and implemented. 
There's a large body of evidence that the traditional way we end up running our projects has an inherent bias AGAINST sustainability (this may provide a useful, albeit long, reminder).

The proposed steps of the SF are trying to re-introduce in project designs some elements, which are naturally neglected and which have shown to have a major contribution to sustainability in multiple settings. We really did not invent anything, but having observed and learned from practitioners' best practices in the field, the SF is offered as a set of tools to attempt to intentionally force within our non-sustainable projects, some elements, which have a much better-than-average chance of improving the sustainability of health achievements in the communities where our projects place their heavy boots (rather Firestone or Dunlop 4x4 tires) on the ground.


  • [3] The main issue is really again a - wait for it - system issue, but hear me out - I'm talking about a different 'system.'
Through the SF we often speak of the "local system" -- these actors / stakeholders who hold the future in their hands, on whose social capital, trust, cohesion, and then capacity, skills and performance, positive outcomes will rest long after we're gone. But, we are all are part of a global development system. Some call it an industry. This term denigrates the value of what a lot of people are doing day-to-day, but it reflects a basic truth: we operate in a system of agencies, funding streams, implementing mechanisms, country offices and project structures, private and government sponsors, marketing strategies, bids, projects, pursuit of "results", writing of promises in glamorous proposals, funding of some of these proposals as objectively as possible based on evidence, though sometimes not totally immune to fads, evaluations--the good, the bad and the ugly--and more lessons learned, and re-learned, and re-learned.

If I turn to those of us on the implementation side of thing (whether direct, partnership-capacity building, or just your friendly neighborhood beltway bandit Technical Assistance provider), of course we are on the receiving end of donor funds. This creates imperatives for survival (institutional, jobs, livelihoods). And this creates a necessity to be "responsive" (you cannot have great implementation of a project you did not win!). But we also influence and bring some learning to the overall system, even to our donors. If I look at USG language on sustainability, for example, I was struck last year by how the language had changed from old RFPs, concept notes and strategies, to how the Global Health Initiative writes about sustainability.

Years of experience, activism (think Global Fund), Paris Declaration, and maybe evaluation-research seem to have influenced how the language of sustainability is written up. Donors have their own systemic constraints, but over the long run, we are all eager to learn about what works and how.

If our traditional project approaches and the way we deal with sustainability as an afterthought or through literary prowesses in our applications and evaluation reports have not been working (for the long-term of societies we serve), and just feed into an empty cycle (actually working quite well for the development system we're a part of), it has consequences on those we call beneficiaries. Shediac-Rizkallah, much referenced in the sustainability literature, really drove that point clearly: except for emergency situations, unsustainable approaches do cause harm in the long run. I think we tried to make that point--numbers attached!--in last year's Health Policy and Planning paper. Sustainability is not the only thing, and there are times when compromises need to be made. But by and large, as we get resources to deliver results, we need to strive to inform the system we are a part of, about what maximizes sustainable benefits for communities and societies. Being more intentional, explicit, rigorous (honest?) in our dealings with the S-word will influence how our global development machine will operate tomorrow. And in the meantime, we will be doing a better job on the ground, in the local system which we are disrupting.


So, projects might inherently not be designed to maximize sustainability; and it might take a little work to introduce more intentionally some fundamentals, which successful 'sustainable' projects have implicitly integrated. And yes, the broadening of the M&E lens, which this requires is an additional challenge.

In the current context of increased country ownership, the main question is going to be how seriously we want to take the sustainability question at the local and global levels. After that, let's just find the tools that get the job done.


Eric

Monday, October 24, 2011

Ontological Measurement

Great op-ed in the NYT today:

There are two kinds of measurement: ontic--meaning finding out how big or small a thing is using a scale, beginning point and unit; and ontological--more of an experience than an act, when we sense that things don't "measure up" to what they could be. The argument is that anything complex cannot be described through ontic measures, though we may think we have perfected them. We are tempted to seek all meaning through ontic measuring, perhaps because we have not made similar gains in developing ontological measurement methods.
This has implications for how we approach measuring progress toward sustainability, especially as we describe it as relationships in a complex system. Are scales and indices appropriate to describe something like "community capacity"? Can it be measured empirically? Is such an exercise worthwhile? Or should we pursue an ontological method?

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Systems, Systems, Systems

This was quite cute and slick - so we're all thinking about systems. (Mothers and families being the first agents of the "system" though, right?).

Interesting page from the World Bank and nice video clip.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Index of Governance as an Example of Quantification of an "Intangible"

You cannot deal with sustainability without a thorough look at the "environment". I uploaded a link to an attempt to do just that and create metrics--an index for governance. It's methodologically interesting, and the response from a country perspective (Rwanda) on the creation of these metrics is a good illustration of both the value and perils of trying to quantify complex issues such as governance and (for us) sustainability. But the critical thinking provoked by the creation of metrics seems, in itself, to be worthwhile.

Friday, July 1, 2011

DISCUSS! Quantifying Vulnerability to Climate Change: Implications for Adaptation Assistance

This is an article that Matt Dettman has brought to our attention. Read and DISCUSS! in the comments section.

Quantifying Vulnerability to Climate Change - Wheeler