Transcript Slide 1

A Primer on the
CSO Development Effectiveness Process
October 2008 • www.cso-effectiveness.org
History (1): Getting CSOs on board
Advisory Group: created by the OECD DAC Working Party on Aid
Effectiveness in January 2007 to give civil society an opportunity to
enrich aid effectiveness agenda; will be discontinued after its final
meeting in October 2008
• Regional consultations “Civil Society and Aid Effectiveness”
(Brussels, Cotonou, Hanoi, Kathmandu, Lusaka, Managua)
• North-South Civil Society Dialogue (Nairobi, November 2007)
• International Forum on Civil Society and Aid Effectiveness
(Ottawa, February 2008)
Main statements:
• Paris Declaration is not applicable as such to CSOs.
• The scope and roles of CSOs in development is broader and
distinct from that of governments and donors.
• CSOs are development actors in their own right.
History (2): The way to Accra
February 2008
International Forum on
Civil Society and Aid
Effectiveness: side
meeting starts CSO
effectiveness process
September 2008 High-Level
Forum in Accra: AAA
offically recognises CSO
development effectiveness
process
2005 Paris
Declaration on
Aid Effectiveness
2007 Creation of the
Advisory Group on Civil
Society and Aid
Effectiveness
June 2008 Exploratory
Meeting on CSO
Effectiveness: Open
Forum for CSO
Development
Effectiveness launched
Exploratory Meeting in Paris (June 2008)
Who? Over 70 representatives from networks,
platforms and individual CSOs from around the world
Objective: Building consensus on objectives,
mechanisms, dialogue with stakeholders and
governance of the CSO effectiveness process
Main result: Launch of a global Open Forum for CSO
Development Effectiveness for the biennium 2009-2010
Progress report: summarises the key agreements
reached on the meeting for the Accra High-Level
Forum
What the Open Forum is commited to …
The Open Forum …
1. Will elaborate CSO effectiveness principles focusing on the
diverse roles of CSOs as development actors
2. Will build consensus based on national and regional activities
and consultations
3. Will be an inclusive and multi-stakeholder process, managed
and led by CSOs
4. Will need to be owned by CSOs from both the North and
the South to be credible and relevant
5. Will especially take into account gender issues
6. Will focus on development effectiveness, not aid
effectiveness
What the Open Forum aims for …
1
An open, inclusive and representative process, owned by CSOs
around the world, taking into gender issues
A vision on development effectiveness based on national and
international policy dialogue as a tool for awareness raising
2
3 Common principles regarding CSO development effectiveness
Guidelines on how to apply these principles and documentation of
4 good practices for context-relevant mechanisms
5
A consensus for engaging in a political dialogue with donors and
governments to address the needs for enabling environments for
CSO effectiveness, based on the recognition of the distinct roles
and voice of CSOs as development actors in their own right.
Driving forces:
Who is guiding the process?
Global Facilitation Group
Chosen by GFG;
will be in charge of practical
aspects of the CSO effectiveness
process (communication, website,
logistical and administrative
support, fundraising)
25 CSO platforms and
networks;
provides overview,
coordination, leadership and
visibility to the Open Forum
for CSO Development
Effectiveness
Supporting Organisation
Currently: CONCORD
Composition of the GFG
Africa: FECONG (Mali) • AFRODAD • CSPR (Zambia) • REPAOC (West
and Central Africa)
Asia: SANSAD (South Asia) • IBON International • APRN • PCFS
Europe: CONCORD • Nordic+ Group • European Union Presidency
Group
Latin America and the Caribbean: ALOP • UNITAS (Bolivia) •
Coordinadora Civil (Nicaragua)
Middle East and North Africa: Arab NGOs Network for Development
(ANND)
North America: InterAction (USA) • CCIC (Canada)
Pacific: Australien Council for International Development (ACFID)
International CSO Networks: Plan International • CARE
International • ITUC • ACT Development • Caritas/CIDSE • CIVICUS
Women's Organisations: Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and
Development (APFWLD)
Accra Agenda for Action – a success?
In the AAA, donors and goverments commit to …
“Deepen our engagement with CSOs as independent development
actors in their own right whose efforts complement those of
governments and the private sector. We share an interest in ensuring
that CSO contributions to development reach their full potential.”
“We welcome the CSOs’ proposal to engage with them in a CSO-led
multistakeholder process to promote CSO development
effectiveness.”
“We will work with CSOs to provide an enabling environment that
maximises their contributions to development.”
What’s next?
2008
2009
Global CSO Forum to agree on effectiveness framework;
and regional processes on implementation of
2010 National
agreed principles
Creating the conditions and tools for national and
sectoral processes
National and sectoral consultations on principles
guiding CSO development effectiveness
2011
Building a multi-stakeholder vision on development
effectiveness
4th High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness 2011:
multi-stakeholder declaration on development effectiveness?
More information
www.cso-effectiveness.org
[email protected]
The pilot phase of the Open Forum is financially supported by CSO contributions and by: