Search | Contact Us

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Opacity and “Development”

By George Stetson, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Political Science, Colorado State University


Leaving aside, for the moment, the questions of whether or not mainstream development actually works, what are the ethical implications of treating people as development-objects? Is it possible to get away from the inherent logic of “development,” which suggests that people are under-developed, and that they need us (the West) to develop them, to fix them, and in the end to save them.


I recently presented an academic paper in Montreal, Canada at the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Conference to explain how Village Earth was doing something quite different than mainstream development. The key shift, I argued, was a move away from the logic of project-management to the logic of alliance-building, which opens up the possibility to work WITH people as partners and as co-subjects rather than as development-objects. More concretely, it then becomes possible for an NGO, like Village Earth, to strategically use its geopolitical position in the world to acquire resources, to advocate for, and to collaborate with our allies on their ongoing projects, ideas, and creations. To be clear, this does not imply that we at Village Earth cannot be involved in local projects like water, health, or micro-enterprise development, but that our involvement is based on the terms of our alliance, rather than on the terms (and logic) of development per ser.


One of the best examples is the Village Earth approach to participatory filmmaking. Children of the Anaconda, a documentary co-produced, co-filmed, and co-edited with the Shipibo in January of 2005, among other things, increased the bonds of trust and friendship between Village Earth and the Shipibo, leading to multiple projects, workshops, partnerships, and (this summer) to the First Indigenous Tribunal of Chiefs in the Ucayali Region. The act of making a film WITH the Shipibo, of literally giving the cameras to the Shipibo, so that they could present themselves to the world through their own eyes, was built upon a logic of trust and solidarity, as opposed to a logic project-management where outsiders assume the role of “expert” and “manager.” It is this same logic that guides the Village Earth relation with the Lakota on Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. The coordinator’s approach is much less about managing projects than it is about collaborating WITH the Lakota on multiple projects, ideas, and Lakota creations. The Adopt-A-Buffalo program, the videos about land issues, and working WITH Lakota tiyospayes (roughly translated as extended families) to recover land, I would argue, has been successful because of a move to dignify people as partners (and friends) rather than objects of development.


In my own work as a scholar, I relate this very logic to the ideas of Edouard Glissant, a Caribbean poet and novelist. For Glissant, all peoples of the world have a right to opacity. Glissant’s message almost counter-intuitive hinges on a critique of the West’s obsessive desire for truth and transparency. Glissant argues that reducing things to the “Transparent” is a potentially violent act of appropriation. Even the simple, seemingly benign process of understanding, by rendering all things transparent, by making the Other (other peoples, cultures, etc.) perfectly knowable, introduces the potential to control and dominate the Other. Glissant’s advice is simple, but radical: “For the time being, perhaps, give up this old obsession with discovering what lies at the bottom of natures.” Glissant invites us to stop reducing the Other to something that we (in the West) are fully able to understand, something that we render transparent and visible. Opacity is to respect diversity (even to celebrate it) without creating a hierarchy that inevitably is based on something Western or “modern.” It prevents us (as an outside NGO) from digging too deep into the inner-workings of local communities, reminding us that there are certain places that might be “off limits,” and certain questions that might be offensive.

I bring in Glissant to
highlight that the logic of project management, based on transparency and reduction, might not only be inefficient but unethical. Anyone who is involved in development should consider the ethical implications of rendering people transparent and manageable. Is there inherent violence built into questionnaires, excessive planning, analysis, diagnostics and, in general, the process of acquiring information so that it is possible to manage projects? This is not to deny the seriousness of poverty, but only to consider the human dimensions of development planning and project-management. The shift from project management to alliance building in these Village Earth projects is promising precisely because it gets away from treating people as (transparent) objects to be developed. Rather, it dignifies people as empowered subjects, recognizes and celebrates diversity, and inspires relations of alliance, friendship, and solidarity.


Labels: , , , ,

posted by Village Earth2 at 0 Comments

Friday, September 21, 2007

Fall 2007 Online Newsletter

We are pleased to inform you of this summer's accomplishments, which were only possible with your support. Thank you!

New Indigenous Organization
During the Indigenous Tribunal this past June, Shipibo leaders from throughout the Ucayali region of the Peruvian Amazon decided to form a grassroots development organization. The new Organization for the Defense and Development of the Indigenous Peoples of the Peruvian Amazon, or ODDPIAP (as they call it), will work to bridge the gap between the poorly represented indigenous peoples and the government as they work to defend their territories and provide development assistance.

Above: The newly elected President of ODDPIAP.

Village Earth is currently working with the democratically-elected leadership to build the capacity of and support for ODDPIAP. We are also working together to raise the funds necessary to legalize ODDPIAP so that it can be officially recognized by the Peruvian government. The leaders of ODDPIAP are busy planning workshops throughout the region to mobilize students and community leaders to work together, and they are already preparing for the next Indigenous Tribunal to be held January 2008. Village Earth will continue to ally with ODDPIAP in their struggle for the self-determination of the indigenous peoples of the Peruvian Amazon.

For more information, visit the Project Blog or contact the project coordinator, Kristina Pearson, kristina@villageearth.org.

Appropriate Technology Grants Program


The Appropriate Technology Library now has a new discount pricing scale for low-income organizations. For more information, check out the new Appropriate Technology Grants Program.

VE Training Empowers Global Leadership

Village Earth and the International Institute for Sustainable Development recently pulled off another successful Participatory Practices for Sustainable Development training course, August 6-17, 2007. Participants came from all around the world including Sudan, USA, UK, Kenya, Guatemala, Peru and Americans working in Southeast Asia and Africa - in all their diversity to contribute to a dialogue about participatory community-based development.


Above: Training participants on tour at a local organic farm.

Participants learned the theory behind the Village Earth Approach and how it is constantly refined through action and reflection as the Approach is put into practice in the field. One highlight of the training included the participation of Limber Gomez from Peru and Adriana Lazaro from Guatemala, two Village Earth project partners, who contributed their perspectives and experiences as "internal activators" within Village Earth-sponsored activities and illustrated the effectiveness of the Approach as applied in their communities. The two-week workshop also included lively discussions about the importance of Appropriate Technology to building sustainable communities, the role of Monitoring and Evaluation, and a new section of the course focusing on non-governmental organization (NGO)-Community dynamics.

The group also decided to form a global network of development practitioners as the focus of the strategic planning session part of the workshop. Far from seeing themselves as competing NGOs, participants saw the need to pool their resources in a common task of building a dynamic network where expertise could be shared globally.
We are very grateful for the level of wisdom and experience that each participant brought to the training that helped to make this course a truly consciousness-raising experience.

For more information, please contact: info@villageearth.org

Village Earth Partners with the Indian Land Tenure Foundation to do Strategic Land Planning on the Pine Ridge Reservation
Village Earth is now accepting applications from allottees who own undivided interests on the same allotment(s) on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to do land planning workshops. For more information, visit the Pine Ridge Project Blog Contact: David Bartecchi - david@villageearth.org, 970-491-5754

Village Earth Founders Recently Returned from West Bengal, India
Drs. Maurice Albertson and Ed Shinn visited Milan Dinda and the Purulia project team on their way home from teaching at Trisakti University in Indonesia. They hope to return soon and hold a Village Earth training program with students from the agricultural university in Calcutta. For more information, visit the Purulia Project Blog.

New Guatemala Project Website and Blog
Adriana Lazaro, coordinator for the Village Earth Guatemala project, recently attended the Participatory Practices for Sustainable Development Training Course in Fort Collins, CO. Check out the new website and Guatemala Project Blog. We look forward to keeping you updated as our projects progress.


And we would love to hear from you - we welcome comments, questions, and feedback to our newsletter editorial board. You can reach us at: editor@villageearth.org.

Sincerely,
The Village Earth Team

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

posted by Village Earth2 at

s