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Helping Villages Help Themselves. Localizing development in Myanmar

Joshi, Sudip LU (2014) MIDM19 20141
LUMID International Master programme in applied International Development and Management
Abstract
Key to Myanmar’s current reform is the shift towards people-centered development. In wake of this trend, I/NGOs are localizing their projects through autonomous village organizations. This research appraises the motivations leading to the proliferation and effect of such VOs in Myanmar. Data was gathered through desk review, surveys, FGDs and interviews. Sample for this study was drawn from development projects funded by Livelihoods and Food Security Trust Fund in Myanmar. The findings and conclusions suggest: motivation of I/NGOs for creating VOs are reactive and opportunistic; VOs are established in response to the government’s development strategy and gradual opening of development space in Myanmar. VOs also manifest national mood of... (More)
Key to Myanmar’s current reform is the shift towards people-centered development. In wake of this trend, I/NGOs are localizing their projects through autonomous village organizations. This research appraises the motivations leading to the proliferation and effect of such VOs in Myanmar. Data was gathered through desk review, surveys, FGDs and interviews. Sample for this study was drawn from development projects funded by Livelihoods and Food Security Trust Fund in Myanmar. The findings and conclusions suggest: motivation of I/NGOs for creating VOs are reactive and opportunistic; VOs are established in response to the government’s development strategy and gradual opening of development space in Myanmar. VOs also manifest national mood of economic liberalization, and I/NGO’s unwavering faith on market as the solution to poverty reduction. I/NGOs are setting up VOs for instrumental ends, as channels to implement projects efficiently. Most of the VOs have created a boundary spanning role, working with decision makers at the grassroots to make services work with and for local people. Similarly, power over development works are being shared amongst different VOs and given rise to plurality of development actors and increased social capital at the village level. However, interference from village authorities and influential leaders over VOs appear to be a pertinent challenge facing all villages. As the findings suggest VOs are also frequented by micro-management from host I/NGOs to larger extent. (Less)
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author
Joshi, Sudip LU
supervisor
organization
course
MIDM19 20141
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Village organizations, participatory development, social capital, Livelihoods and Food Security Trust Fund, Myanmar
language
English
additional info
If need be, contact the author at suedip.joshi@gmail.com/ www.suedipjoshi.com
id
4438708
date added to LUP
2014-09-09 10:35:42
date last changed
2014-09-09 10:35:42
@misc{4438708,
  abstract     = {{Key to Myanmar’s current reform is the shift towards people-centered development. In wake of this trend, I/NGOs are localizing their projects through autonomous village organizations. This research appraises the motivations leading to the proliferation and effect of such VOs in Myanmar. Data was gathered through desk review, surveys, FGDs and interviews. Sample for this study was drawn from development projects funded by Livelihoods and Food Security Trust Fund in Myanmar. The findings and conclusions suggest: motivation of I/NGOs for creating VOs are reactive and opportunistic; VOs are established in response to the government’s development strategy and gradual opening of development space in Myanmar. VOs also manifest national mood of economic liberalization, and I/NGO’s unwavering faith on market as the solution to poverty reduction. I/NGOs are setting up VOs for instrumental ends, as channels to implement projects efficiently. Most of the VOs have created a boundary spanning role, working with decision makers at the grassroots to make services work with and for local people. Similarly, power over development works are being shared amongst different VOs and given rise to plurality of development actors and increased social capital at the village level. However, interference from village authorities and influential leaders over VOs appear to be a pertinent challenge facing all villages. As the findings suggest VOs are also frequented by micro-management from host I/NGOs to larger extent.}},
  author       = {{Joshi, Sudip}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Helping Villages Help Themselves. Localizing development in Myanmar}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}