Title: Participatory Resilience in Rural Manitoba
1Participatory Resilience in Rural Manitoba
- Cynthia Neudoerffer
- PhD Candidate, Rural Studies
- School of Environmental Design Rural
Development - University of Guelph
- Livelihoods Ecosystems
- Dealing with Complexity in Rural Development
Agriculture - 5 June 2006
2Sustainable Livelihoods Ecosystem Health 2005
WorkshopsA story from Antigonish, Nova Scotia
3Presenting Situation the Entry Point
Analysis of
Stakeholders the research team, community,
others. Whose issues are they?
Presenting Issues complaints and/or research /
agency agenda
Issues ecological, social, and health
Policy, Politics, Governance Who decides?
The Given History ecological, physical, social,
economic, political, governance
Multiple socio-ecological stories, pictures,
and system descriptions
People and Their Stories
4Presenting Problem Degraded Watershed
- Community
- Analysis of
- ecological / social /
- health issues
- policies politics
- stakeholders
- Systems
- Descriptions
-
- Narratives
- qualitative
- quantitative
People their stories
Collaborative Learning Action
5Participation
- Originally a radical connotation
- Power unsettling oppressive power relations
- Engage the marginalized in a process of
empowerment that would enhance the capacity of
individuals to improve or change their lives
6Arnsteins Ladder of Participation
- Participation without redistribution of power is
an empty frustrating process for the powerless.
It allows power-holders to claim that all sides
were considered, but make it possible for only
some of those sides to benefit. It maintains the
status quo. - Its all about POWER
7Arnsteins Ladder of Participation (1969)
Citizen Control
- power guarantees citizens govern institution,
- full charge of policy managerial aspects,
- negotiate conditions under which outsiders may
- change them
Delegated Power
- dominant decision-making authority
- hold power to ensure accountability
Partnership
- power redistributed through negotiation,
- share planning decision-making
Placation
- some influence but still tokenism, e.g. few
- worthy poor hand-picked for committee
Consultation
- sham if offers no assurance
- that concerns ideas taken into
- account
Informing
- one-way info flow, no feedback,
- no power for negotiation
Therapy
- cure citizens of pathology
Manipulation
- info gathering, public relations
8Some critiques of Participation
- Participation is intrinsically a good thing
- A focus on getting the techniques right is the
principle way of determining success - Considerations of power and politics on the whole
should be avoided as divisive and obstructionist - Empowerment is a buzzword
- Efficiency greater productivity at lower
cost - Tool for achieving better project outcomes
9Participation Power
- PRA frameworks set up - micro v.s macro, margins
v.s centre, local v.s elite, powerless v.s
powerful - Power NOT monolithic system v.s those people
- Myth of community - assume commonality of
interest but more realistically site of both
solidarity conflict, shifting alliances, power
social structures - Need to explore micro points of power
- Power is EVERYWHERE, analyzed through creation of
social norms customs practices throughout
society, informal interactions carried out in
daily life
10Participation knowledge
- local knowledge is itself constructed as part
of PRA process, reflects social relationships of
process - local knowledge shaped by local relationships
of power, authority gender - public nature of
PRA often conceals these relationships - When defn of needs, project activities,
target groups are open, much is at stake to
control - Local knowledge shaped by dominant groups
- Often mirrors priorities abilities of outsiders
- Myth of local culture - constraint, glue or
resource to be tapped - what about when local
culture / knowledge is oppressive to certain
groups / people?
11Participation tyranny of tools
- Success is defined by getting the tools right -
doing the tools done participation - CONTRAST review of prominent South Asian NGOs
e.g. BRAC, Sadguru, AKRSP - Informal, personal interaction important
- Dialogue
- Listening learning to stories
- Building networks of trusting relationships
building credibility, trust, respect, shared
understanding
12Researching Participatory Resilience - a story
from Rural Manitoba
13The story of the past
The story of the present
People Landscapes Their Stories
The story of the future
14Presenting Situation the Entry Point
Analysis of
Stakeholders the research team, community,
others. Whose issues are they?
Presenting Issues complaints and/or research /
agency agenda
Issues ecological, social, and health
Policy, Politics, Governance Who decides?
The Given History ecological, physical, social,
economic, political, governance
Multiple socio-ecological stories, pictures,
and system descriptions
People and Their Stories
15Questions for Discussion
- Is this re-casting of AMESH helpful, both for
thinking and communicating about Ecosystem
Health? - Who has the power to select different narratives?
Whose stories to we listen to? What do we do when
we are faced with incommensurate stories? - How do we take advantage of emerging windows of
opportunity when there might be space for an
alternative narrative to gain prominence?