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Introduction: Why Reflect Collectively on Capacities for Change?

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posted on 2024-09-06, 05:26 authored by Peter Clarke, Katy Oswald
‘Capacity development’ implies a promise of growing self?reliance, national ownership and sustainability, yet practice seems consistently to fall short of this emancipatory promise. This introduction argues for a reframing of capacity development for emancipatory social change. Articles in this IDS Bulletin show how understanding and practice must engage with complexity, appreciate the importance of specific culture and context, and continually address the role of power in shaping relationships, understandings and practices. Values and leadership are fundamental drivers of capacity development processes. This IDS Bulletin argues against a deficit approach based on linear causal logic and replicable ‘best practice’. Instead, practitioners are encouraged to develop a detailed understanding of the culture and dynamics of specific contexts, to detect energies for positive change and work to connect and facilitate them. Learning is at the centre of the approach. Capacity development is understood as a collective process of learning in action for social change. Support for capacity development processes demands a critical development practice that implies mutual learning, with an emphasis on reflective and experiential approaches. However, this reframing implies enormous challenges for development practice, and therefore considerable personal and organisational commitment.

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Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Citation

Clarke, P. and Oswald, K. (2010) Introduction: Why Reflect Collectively on Capacities for Change?. IDS Bulletin 41(3): 1-12

Series

IDS Bulletin Vol. 41 Nos. 3

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Article

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© 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © Institute of Development Studies

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    Volume 41. Issue 3: Reflecting Collectively on Capacities for Change

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