Transcript Slide 1

European Commission
Role of Leader in creating
local alliances
by Jean–Michel Courades
DG Agriculture and rural development, European Commission
National Rural Network Annual Conference
1st December 2009 -Dublin
Community Strategic Guidelines
for Axis 4
Strategic role of Leader :
• To involve Local actors (better governance at the
local level)
• To mobilize Local actors (endogenous development
for growth and jobs - mobilization of local
resources)
Community Strategic Guidelines
for Axis 4
• How to involve and mobilize local actors ?
• LAG key actions:
– local capacity building
– establishing partnerships (public-private partnerships and local
networks)
– local initiatives being a win-win for both business and community:
“mutually supportive actions between agriculture, the environment
and the wider rural economy and population”
– community-led local development strategy
• Leader is contributing to the creation of local
alliances
– at the LAG level
– at project level
• Local territorial alliances play a key role for
– sustainable development
– integrated development
– innovation
Alliance at LAG level: which
actors ?
• Mix of public and private actors
– At decision-making level representation of the economic and social
actors and civil society (at least 50 % of the local partnership)
• Local actors
– Representative of partners from the economic and social partners, as
well as other representatives of the civil society, such as farmers, rural
women, young people and their associations
– Local public authorities (e.g. communes and/or association of
communes)
Alliance at project level
Indicators used in Leader+ MTE (Schleswig-Holstein) Level of
cooperation in local projects
•
•
25
Number of projects with several
partners
Type of project partners
no project partner
project group and
public partners
Number of Projects
20
private partners from
similar areas
15
private partners from
different areas
10
public and private partners
from different areas
5
public and private partners
from similar areas
0
Schlei
SHS
Steinburg Westküste
ETS
Holsteins Herz
several public
partners
Source: LAG management
Governance indicators used
MTE (Schleswig-Holstein)
•
Results
– Cooperation of actors from different sectors/institutions
• In the LAG
• In projects
•
Impact
– New organisational structures
– Cooperation beyond LEADER
– View of LAG members and outsiders on changes
Local alliances formalized in local
development strategy
• Local development strategy
– Shared values « living together », « solidarity »
and « consolidated links in rural areas «
– Common vision
• Common priorities
• Common project for the territory
• Themes: Innovation and diversification
Local alliances for
innovation
• Alternative food networks/direct marketing;
care farming
• rural innovation system are based on local
networks, on the collaboration of partnerships
among diverse public and private groups.
Local alliances formalized in
LAG structure
• Public-private partnership is a formal local
network
• In the majority of RD programmes LAGs have a
legal statute
Life cycle of a LAG alliance
• Forming the alliance : Establishing the ground rules by finding
out what procedures are acceptable regarding the task ahead;
solving the internal conflicts
• Local development strategy is established. The members
accept a common set of expectations constituting an
acceptable way of doing things.
• Implementation/Performing: The group is ready to work.
Having fully developed, the group may now devote its energy
to getting the job done.
• Maintaining/sustaining: This phase is characterised by the
intention of the group to stay together although the principle
task (i.e. the programming period) has been fulfilled.
Analysis of Leader+ good
practices results
• Examples of activities involving farmers
and links with measures for diversification
of the rural economy are numerous and
varied, and involve all countries
• There was little evidence in Leader+ of
linkages between first and second axis
(agriculture and environment)
Thank you for
your attention!