Participatory Change: Ten Steps in Supporting Grassroots Rural Development
Participatory Change is a way of working with grassroots groups that combines community organising (e.g., the approaches of Saul Alinsky, Cesar Chavez, and Si Kahn); popular education (e.g., the approaches of Paulo Freire and the Highlander Research and Education Center); and international participatory development (e.g., Participatory Rural Appraisal).
Participatory Change is an approach to grassroots work that has 10 steps:
1. Research. This refers to the process where we learn everything we can about the community in which we will be working. We use two major research methods: community immersion, and talking with community leaders.
2. Outreach. This is the process of holding one-on-one meetings with grassroots leaders about the community's needs, assets, and goals. Crucial to this outreach process is listening – fully, deeply, and actively. At this point, we have no predetermined set of issues or solutions – so we can listen openly.
3. Forming an Idea. Through one-on-one conversations, an idea for a community improvement project emerges. CPC staff may have ideas of our own, and we will share those ideas as part of the conversation. Yet from the start, all decisions and choices are made by local people.
4. Forming a Vision. In the first meetings of a group (five to ten people), we use participatory exercises and methods to help the group clarify its vision and goals. By setting these, the group charts its future direction. From this point, group members begin working together on concrete tasks.
5. Project Definition and Planning. Here we have three activities: (1) defining and planning a community improvement project, (2) making connections with people or groups that can support that project, and (3) conducting a feasibility study to make sure the project is doable.
6. Project Implementation. Getting to work involves a spiral of action, learning, and planning. Action: the group works together to accomplish a concrete part of their project plan. Learning: group members stop and reflect to learn from the experience of accomplishing that task. Planning: the group plans the next phase of the project. This is followed by a return to further action, learning, and planning.
7. Defining Organisational Structure. This is a process where the group looks at several ways of structuring themselves (ranging from a loose community association to a formal nonprofit organization), then selects a structure that makes sense to group members and seems sustainable, given the group's vision and goals.
8. Organisational Capacity Building. The goal here is to facilitate the development of sustainable grassroots organisations which are accountable and responsive to community members and their priorities. To help groups build sustainable organisations, we focus on two areas: organisational capacity building and leadership development.
9. Grantmaking. Through our Western North Carolina Self Development Fund, CPC provides small grants ($500 to $5,000) for new grassroots groups or new projects. Grassroots groups often need a small investment to begin their work, yet there are few foundations that provide this sort of small (yet high-risk) investment in fledgling grassroots groups.
10. Building a Grassroots Network. CPC hosts an annual grassroots gathering, where groups from across Western North Carolina come together to learn from each other; support each other; and develop a common vision for strengthening democratic participation and influencing systems change at a regional level.
Participatory Change is an approach to grassroots work that has 10 steps:
1. Research. This refers to the process where we learn everything we can about the community in which we will be working. We use two major research methods: community immersion, and talking with community leaders.
2. Outreach. This is the process of holding one-on-one meetings with grassroots leaders about the community's needs, assets, and goals. Crucial to this outreach process is listening – fully, deeply, and actively. At this point, we have no predetermined set of issues or solutions – so we can listen openly.
3. Forming an Idea. Through one-on-one conversations, an idea for a community improvement project emerges. CPC staff may have ideas of our own, and we will share those ideas as part of the conversation. Yet from the start, all decisions and choices are made by local people.
4. Forming a Vision. In the first meetings of a group (five to ten people), we use participatory exercises and methods to help the group clarify its vision and goals. By setting these, the group charts its future direction. From this point, group members begin working together on concrete tasks.
5. Project Definition and Planning. Here we have three activities: (1) defining and planning a community improvement project, (2) making connections with people or groups that can support that project, and (3) conducting a feasibility study to make sure the project is doable.
6. Project Implementation. Getting to work involves a spiral of action, learning, and planning. Action: the group works together to accomplish a concrete part of their project plan. Learning: group members stop and reflect to learn from the experience of accomplishing that task. Planning: the group plans the next phase of the project. This is followed by a return to further action, learning, and planning.
7. Defining Organisational Structure. This is a process where the group looks at several ways of structuring themselves (ranging from a loose community association to a formal nonprofit organization), then selects a structure that makes sense to group members and seems sustainable, given the group's vision and goals.
8. Organisational Capacity Building. The goal here is to facilitate the development of sustainable grassroots organisations which are accountable and responsive to community members and their priorities. To help groups build sustainable organisations, we focus on two areas: organisational capacity building and leadership development.
9. Grantmaking. Through our Western North Carolina Self Development Fund, CPC provides small grants ($500 to $5,000) for new grassroots groups or new projects. Grassroots groups often need a small investment to begin their work, yet there are few foundations that provide this sort of small (yet high-risk) investment in fledgling grassroots groups.
10. Building a Grassroots Network. CPC hosts an annual grassroots gathering, where groups from across Western North Carolina come together to learn from each other; support each other; and develop a common vision for strengthening democratic participation and influencing systems change at a regional level.
Source
'Mountain Views a quarterly Journal of the Center for Participatory Change', Volume II, issue 3, Summer 2001.
Comments
Since we are dealing with grassroot people I would like to request for more information on participatory methodology for change.
With thanks,
Joshua O.Onyango
Kenya Water For Health Organization
P.O. Box 61470
Tel 254 2 557550
Email ed-kwaho@nbnet.co.ke
NAIROBI
As a development practioner in a war raveged country like Sierra Leone, I find this information useful to my present work area.I am working for the Human Rights and Development Centre-HuRiDeC as Project Development & Training Officer-CARE Sierra Leone. I hope I will have access to more detailed materials like these ones. Thanks a million.
Participatory change
It is good.However it depends so much on national commitment to a participatory strategy and avoidance of overlapping authorities on jurisdictions.
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