Transcript Slide 1

Frances Seymour
World Resources Institute
Environment, Poverty, and
the MCC Conference
June 24, 2005
The Access Initiative
…is a global civil society coalition promoting
public access to information, participation,
and justice in national decision-making that
affects the environment.
International Commitments
1992
178 governments sign the Rio Declaration.
Principle 10 mandated appropriate access to
information, encouragement of public
participation, and effective access to judicial
proceedings.
2002
WSSD Plan of Implementation
calls on governments to implement
Principle 10.
The Access Initiative’s goal…
…is to promote the
accelerated and
enhanced
implementation of
Principle 10 in
countries around
the world.
Why focus on procedure?
How decisions
get made
What is decided
Who gets a
seat at the
table
Processes drive outcomes
Processes that
provide:
 Access to
Information
Decisions that
are more likely to be:
lead to
 Equitable
 Participation in
Decisions
 Environmentally
Sustainable
 Mechanisms for
Accountability
 Actually
Implemented
The Access Initiative’s identity is…
…a global civil society coalition led by a
regionally-structured “Core Team” of six
organizations, with WRI serving as global
secretariat.
The Access Initiative’s strategy is to…
• Develop and continuously
refine an indicator-based
tool to assess government
performance
• Support civil society teams
in an increasing number of
countries to conduct
assessments
• Utilize the Partnership for
Principle 10 to urge
governments to act on
assessment results
What does TAI attempt to assess?
Both law and practice
related to:




Access to information
Public participation
Access to justice
Capacity building
With what results?
 Enhanced credibility for civil
society critiques
 Platforms for constructive
government-civil society
dialogue and collaboration
 Explicit commitments from
all participants to improve
law, practice, and capacity
At what cost?
 In-country costs of
conducting an assessment
on the order of $30,000
 Rapid expansion in Latin
America and Eastern Europe
demonstrate capacity to
scale up
Acting on Assessment Results
Through the Partnership for Principle 10, NGOs,
international organizations, and governments make
specific commitments to improve performance

A Brief History of TAI
 November 2000: First workshop
 Early 2001: Assessment method and
organizational structure developed
 Late 2001-2002: Method tested in 9 countries
 September 2002: Pilot results and PP10
launched at WSSD
 2003: Method refined (Versions 1.0 and 1.1)
 2004: Expansion to new countries ramps up
 2005: Version 2.0 in development
 2006: TAI active in at least 40 countries
TAI Pilot Test Countries
Chile
Hungary
India
Indonesia
Mexico
South Africa
Thailand
Uganda
United States (CA
and OH)
Expanding the Network: 2003 - 2006
Europe: Bulgaria, Estonia, Germany, Ireland,
Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal,
Ukraine, United Kingdom
Africa: Cameroon, Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania,
Zambia, Zimbabwe
Latin America: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia,
Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Panama, Peru, Venezuela
Asia: Philippines, Vietnam
Repeat assessments: Chile, Hungary, India,
Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa, Thailand, Uganda,
United States
The TAI Methodology
Assessing Access to Information, Participation,
and Justice for the Environment: A Guide
CD-ROM of Version 1.1
The TAI Methodology
The TAI methodology provides more
than 100 indicators to assess
government performance in providing…




information disclosure
public participation
access to justice
investments in capacity-building
What does the methodology measure?
Law
• Questions about the presence and quality of the
legal framework
Practice
• Questions about the presence, timing, ease,
regularity and scope of practice
• Similar questions about practice in providing
different types of information or participation
in different decisions
Objectives for Version 2.0
• Simplify and cluster indicators around fewer, bigger
issues
• Identify priority indicators
• Create a flexible software that allows researchers to
add new indicators
• Move to a web-based application
• Improve indicators for capacity-building and access to
justice
• Add indicators to capture “effectiveness”
TAI and MCC Criteria
 Developed by independent third party
 Utilizes objective and high quality data
 Analytically rigorous and publicly available
 Broad country coverage and comparable across
countries
 Clear link to growth and poverty reduction
 Policy-linked (governments can influence on 2-3
year horizon)
 Broad consistency in results from year to year
Possible interim indicators for MCC
1-2 year horizon: Has government
cooperated with an independent
assessment of performance?
3-4 year horizon: Has government
responded to the results with specific
commitments to address identified gaps?
5-6 year horizon: Has government showed
progress between the first and second
assessments?
To learn more
Visit www.accessinitiative.org and www.pp10.org for
information on TAI and its related initiative, the
Partnership for Principle 10.