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Thursday 9 January 2014

Reflections from a student volunteer in Uganda

In summer 2013 I was fortunate enough to work as a volunteer investing money and trying to generally make improvements at a secondary school in rural Uganda. I recently entered the following essay in a competition (give it a go here!) on a title along the lines of 'what did you learn/how did your view of development change?'

Basically my key idea (not that original: similar sort of idea from Angus Deaton here) is we zealous international development-minded students should either:

 a) accept that the projects we get involved with (and I'm not talking about hopeless gap yah projects which no one would claim are very beneficial) may very well not have great long-term impacts but keep doing them anyway because of an intuitive feeling that we can't be wrong about micro, short term impacts (building a school is surely never bad right?) or some ideal of solidarity whereby us being there is a good thing in itself.

OR

b) don't go on summer projects but concentrate on campaigning at home on issues like illicit financial flows, transparency, indigenous rights/environmental destruction, take your pick (there is no shortage), where governments in the global North could often be doing a whole lot more.

If you fancy reading the whole thing, here it is below for your enjoyment...

"I spent summer 2013 working with two other volunteers for an NGO[1] in a secondary school in rural south-west Uganda, planning and implementing initiatives to improve the quality of education for the students using money we fundraised previously. We worked alongside school management, students and teachers, ultimately introducing measures improving the library, sanitation and counselling provision, among others. We were fortunate enough to receive constant and engaged support from the school, as well as a brilliantly warm reception from both school and community. Yet despite this overwhelmingly positive experience, in which we witnessed tangible outputs in infrastructure and school resources, the question of whether we have a long-term, sustainable impact remains doubtful. Having subsequently joined the central charity administration in a monitoring and evaluation capacity, I was struck by a double realisation: first, that we currently lack a means of knowing that our work is effective; and second, with the further discovery that our water purification scheme had failed, that it is possible that our work is not effective in many areas, and even that our whole model may be partly misguided(see Crawfurd 2013). Fundamentally, the idea of international volunteering and indeed international development, in the broadest sense, is to help promote positive changes in the lives of others. Therefore, short of rigorous evidence of impact, we are left with a challenge.
One immediate lesson to be learnt is that we need to focus our attention to the evaluation of programmes, in order to find out empirically what works. And indeed, impact evaluation and RCTs are undoubtedly ‘in fashion’ in the development world, as demonstrated by the popularity of Banerjee and Duflo’s Poor Economics(2012) and the establishment of the International Initiative for Impact Evaluation in 2009. My own charity is itself doing some excellent work to put in place a more robust M&E programme. But leaving aside the empirics and entering speculatively into the theory of how development happens, my volunteering experience suggests some potentially sobering lessons for any young international volunteer.
Our school did not perform well academically, achieving generally poor exam results and failing to get many students into university. In a wider sense, it is a school with many talented teachers and fantastic students, but which could be much better. We observed unmotivated and often undisciplined students and teachers, unfocused lessons starting late, and a chronic lack of effective communication between staff and administration, among other problems. To address these, we attempted to plug some gaps: we facilitated better access to the many books the school possessed by expanding the library; we introduced a system to improve students’ wellbeing through a peer-to-peer counselling system; and we improved sanitation to get more happy, healthy students in class more often. Nevertheless, comparing the problems we perceived with what we supplied as ‘solutions,’ it is clear that they do not match up. Part of this, admittedly, is due to the size of our investment, which was insufficient to even attempt to cover the financial shortfall faced by the school. Yet we also failed to prompt change in areas not directly determined by money: the basic operating pattern of the school; the motivation to teach well or learn; the power structures which deny voice to innovative and motivated teachers, for instance. In this way, what we supplied was investment, creativity and time to plan projects to facilitate better delivery of education and better learning at the school. But unfortunately, what I have come to realise is that this sort of facilitation cannot drive dynamic change or permanently improved outcomes.
Acemoglu and Robinson(2012) offer a broad theory of why some countries prosper and others do not, and I suggest that their analysis holds some relevance for us. They locate the drivers of prosperity in ‘inclusive economic and political institutions,’ implying that improvements come from gradual alterations in the institutional makeup of a country rather than an imposition of the ‘right’ policies. The latter idea they denounce as a manifestation of the ‘ignorance hypothesis’ which “asserts that world inequality exists because we or our rulers do not know how to make poor countries rich”(2012:57), therefore “enlightening and informing rulers and policymakers can get us out” of poverty (2012:440). This manifests itself, for example, in the ‘Washington Consensus,’ generally accepted to have been largely unsuccessful, which advocates “seemingly attractive macroeconomic goals such as a reduction in the size of the government sector, flexible exchange rates, and capital account liberalization”(2012:440). Applying these ideas to my experience, this logic seems evident at least partly in what we did; we came with ideas about how to better run a school (and the money to make change happen), on the assumption that the school management may not be aware of such ideas. Extending this thought further, we too advocated ‘seemingly attractive goals’ such as enlarging the library and improving sanitation. However, like Acemoglu and Robinson who find that it is “institutional patterns” which are “condemning them[poor countries] to poverty” (2012:61), it strikes me that the institutional pattern and environment of the school is what condemns it to underperforming. It is thus the interplay of fundamental factors, often political, including why students comes to school, what opportunities(or lack thereof) are available post-school, the private situation of students and teachers, the distribution of power and authority amongst the staff, the decision-making process at school, the demands made on and interests of the management, the relationships with boards of governors and with local authorities, extending all the way up to the ministry of education. And these areas are generally beyond the scope of student volunteers’ capabilities.
So where does this leave us? We have seen that many development NGOs lack empirical evidence of positive impact for ‘beneficiaries’, and are faced with a theoretical argument which locates the long-term solution to beneficiaries’ problems outside the remit of what we can achieve. There are therefore perhaps two options for young people in the global North. First, to continue participating in international volunteering programmes in their current form whilst striving to improve monitoring and evaluation to improve our offering, meanwhile recognising that the benefits will often be limited to (i) short-term gains,(ii) promoting ‘solidarity’ whereby our being there and interacting with people is recognised as an intrinsic good,(iii) encouraging volunteers’ interest in development in anticipation of further, more productive involvement, or even (iv)(more controversially) boosting the reputation of the school or organisation through our prestigious status as ‘outsiders’, often connected to racial factors. This option would reflect Chouliaraki’s (2013)idea of an ‘ironic’ attitude to development, whereby the desire to help others exists alongside a fundamental scepticism towards the benefits of the project of development itself. Second, we might avoid international volunteering, and instead concentrate either on fundraising on behalf of charities with demonstrated impact, or lobbying governments to change policies detrimental to the prospects of the global South. Indeed the recent revelation that for each dollar that reaches the global South in aid, seven escape through illicit financial flows(Green 2013) provides an arresting starting point. Whichever option is chosen, what is essential is that young people with an interest in development actively examine the value of what they are doing, and ensure that their actions are dictated by concrete outcomes not good intentions.
Bibliography
Acemoglu, D. and Robinson, J. A. (2012) Why Nations Fail (London: Profile)
Banerjee, A. V. and Duflo, E. (2012) Poor Economics (London: Penguin)
Crawfurd, L. (2013) ‘We don’t need no education’ Roving Bandit accessed 22/12/2013 available at <http://www.rovingbandit.com/2013/12/we-dont-need-no-education.html>
Chouliaraki, L. (2013) The Ironic Spectator: Solidarity in the age of post-humanitarianism (Cambridge: Polity)
Green, D. (2013) ‘Poor countries are losing $1 trillion a year to illicit capital flows – 7 times the volume of aid’ From Poverty to Power accessed 22/12/2013 available at <http://www.oxfamblogs.org/fp2p/?p=16967>



[1] Which has asked to remain anonymous"

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