 |
Human
Development
Foundation |
PROJECT
PAKISTAN
#3 ·
Plan of Operation
In setting up Project Pakistan under
the Partnership approach, the first step is to initiate a dialogue with all
potential partners in the endeavor, namely with all individuals and organization
whose active involvement will be solicited. The purpose of the dialogue is to
seek their support and ownership of the idea of partnership, and to use a consensual
process to define the precise contours of an action plan. The goal is not only
that each partner 'owns' the project but also that every one has a voice in
designing it.
The following outline operational plan for the project is intended precisely
to initiate this dialogue. It fleshes out the implications and entailments of
Partnership approach and provides recommendations on speedy operationalization
The ideas presented here build upon
the various points raised by HDFNA and other partner institutions in our interviews
with them and our own experience of working with NGOs in Pakistan and elsewhere.
The purpose is to lay out the key elements that will be necessary for the project
to succeed and to provide the partners with an agenda for discussion, rather
than impose a rigid structure upon the project.
In order to highlight the priorities
imbedded in this discussion, a summary checklist of steps that need to be taken
in the immediate future by HDFNA and its partners--along with suggested deadlines--are
presented in Box 3.1.
Box 3.1: Next Steps—A Checklist of Milestones and Things
to Do
Assuming that this report is approved by the HDFNA Board
by mid-July, 1998, here is a checklist of next steps that need to be taken
by HDFNA and its partners in the immediate future.
::
By end August1998 Circulation
of this report to potential partner for their comments.
:: By
August 1998 Identification of members
of Pakistan Advisory Board for HDF-P.
:: September
1998 A set of meetings between heads of partner
organization and HDFNA representatives in order to establish familiarity,
a common understanding of the goals of the project, and delineation of mutual
responsibilities. The meetings will also refine the Plan of Operation into
a detailed Plan of Action; determine staffing needs for the initial project
site (Mardan); work out investment costs and procedures; and produce a draft
budget for the first year.
:: September
1998 Drafting a Memorandum of Understanding
to be signed by prospective partners--with requisite legal advice and inputs
from all partner organizations.
:: October
1998 HDF-P
registered as a Cooperative Society, and an Advisory Board formally constituted.
:: Oct-Dec
1998
Hiring of staff for initial project site (Mardan). Formation of Local Project
Management Committee.
:: By
December 1998 Appointment of National Coordinator. The national
office begins operation.
:: By
December 1998 Design of poverty eradication component (NRSP),
health awareness (APPNA-Sehat), primary education (TMF), a local Human Development
Index (HDC), gender strategy (Aurat Foundation), and communication strategy
(SDPI), in consultation with all partners and HDFNA. The communication strategy
to include guidelines for data collection, a framework for monitoring and
evaluation, and a process for the dissemination of results.
:: December
1998 First meeting of the HDF-P
Advisory Board; finalization of operational details for initial project site;
decision regarding the initial shape of the HDF-P National Office.
:: January
1999
Formal Launch of HDF-P activities. First field Office (Mardan) begins operation.
:: January
1999
Formation of a Task Force to prepare a social and financial feasibility report
for prospective Project 2.
:: March
1999
First two units (1000 households each) on board.
:: June
1999
First (M&E) Assessment Report produced.
:: June
1999
Feasibility Report for Project 2 submitted to HDF-P. Regional Coordinator
for Project 2 appointed.
:: June
1999
Second meeting of the HDF-P Advisory Board; review of lessons from the project's
initial six months; decisions regarding Project 2. Establishment of Task Force
for design of Project 3.
:: September
1999 Project 2 begins operation.
:: December
1999 Second (M&E) Assessment
Report produced.
:: December
1999 Feasibility Report for Project
3 submitted to HDF-P.
:: December
1999 Third meeting of the HDF-P
Advisory Board; review of lessons from the project's first year; decisions
regarding Project 3; initiation of a plan for fundraising in Pakistan.
The following four sections lay
out the contours of the Plan of Operations along four themes:
v
Program issues
(focussing on program goals and elements, criteria for site selection, recommendations
on potential sites and a time table for project expansion);
v
Partnership issues
(focussing on the identification of potential partners, modalities of forming
a partnership, and an outline Memorandum of Registration);
v
Governance issues
(focussing on the need to establish a strong national presence, community empowerment
and involvement in management, and mechanisms for operational collaboration
with partners); and
v
Communication and Monitoring
issues (including a communication and dissemination
program, proposals for a local Human Development Index, a system of internal
data collection, and a comprehensive monitoring and evaluation program).
3.1
· Program Issues
This section discusses the principal
elements of program design, lists the criteria and mechanism for selection sites
for the project (both at the stage of its initiation and for subsequent expansion),
and recommends a 5-year timetable for regional expansion including the identification
of candidate sites.
3.1.1
Program Elements
True and lasting collaboration cannot
be cultivated unless all partners fully share, and are equally passionate about,
the defining philosophy and core values that form the basis of Project Pakistan
and the approach adopted to operationalize it. In talking to the leaders
and staff of the suggested partner institutions and in reviewing their documents,
it is clear to us that this bond of vision and values does in fact exist between
HDFNA and the partners identified in this report. Box 3.2 builds on these
conversations and documents to articulate the elements of these shared core
values. Specifically, it defines the basic belief that motivates the initiative,
the overall goal of the project, and the strategy and approach adopted to achieve
this goal.
These core values lead the project
directly towards an orientation towards community mobilization for social change.
Social mobilization is, therefore, the first point of entry of the project into
any community. Once a community has expressed a willingness and readiness
for self-organization and invites the project to initiate its activities, the
project staff will work with the community in conducting an initial needs assessment
based on which project staff and community leaders will chalk out a program
of specific interventions.
Box 3.2: Project Pakistan—Core Values
· Belief ·
People have the ability and the willingness
to help themselves if they are provided the enabling conditions, guidance
and support to do so.
· Goal ·
To
contribute to an apolitical movement for positive social change and community
empowerment through mass literacy, enhanced quality of education, universal
primary health care, and grassroots economic development.
· Strategy
·
To mobilize and capacitate communities
to organize themselves to plan, implement and manage a program of integrated
human development.
· Approach
·
To
establish:
v
an indigenous
Pakistani program;
v
to provide
communities with technical assistance for capacity development;
v
on issues
related to integrated human development;
v
through
a collaborative partnership of like-minded NGOs;
v
empowering
community participation
at every stage of decision-making;
v
interacting
with government agencies to support and strengthen a culture of efficient,
honest and professional delivery of quality services; while
v
ensuring
constant quality improvement and a broadening of the discourse on
community-led social development through a comprehensive system of assessment
and communication.
The field activities of the project
will be undertaken at the Regional Field Office level. Each Field Office
will be responsible for an administrative region, defined by a Tehsil.
While committing to cover the entire Tehsil over the long term, the project
will undertake its actual activities in modules, or units, of around 1000 households
each. Work in each region will begin with only a few units on board (usually
2-5) and new units will be added depending on the availability of resources
and community responsiveness. Generally, it is expected that opportunities
to expand within a Tehsil will be given priority over expanding to new Tehsils.
Functionally, the activities undertaken
at the field level will be organized around three clusters covering Community
Mobilization and Economic Opportunity activities, Health Awareness activities,
and Education activities respectively. Staffing at the Field Office level,
and later at the National Office level, may be structured around the same three
substantive areas.
v
Community Mobilization, Poverty
Eradication, and expansion of Economic Opportunities.
This cluster will have the lead responsibility for making first contact with
communities and the initial assessment of their needs. Its primary responsibility
is to support the process of social mobilization through technical assistance
and advice on community organization. This includes the formation of village
wide community organizations, or, as appropriate, specialized groups (such as
savings committees, women's support groups, school boards, health committees),
and implementation of a plan for women’s empowerment. In accordance with experience
gained in Pakistan on community development, the social mobilization will be
organized around activities related to the expansion of economic opportunities
on the basis of express demands by the community (although not necessarily the
entire unit). Other entry points include human resource development, income
generation schemes, physical infrastructure development, or natural resource
management.
v
Primary Health Care.
This cluster will undertake activities related to primary health care, including
health awareness for the purpose of a universal improvement in personal health
behavior. Specific tasks include household health surveys, primary healthcare
visits, and a health care training programs. Working with community health committees,
the goal is to provide general awareness and technical advice for activities
on preventive and promotional aspects of primary health care, potable water
and adequate sanitation, and personal hygiene. An area of special focus is mother
and child care--including immunization, safe delivery, family planning, antenatal
care, postnatal care, nutrition, growth monitoring, and control of diarrheol
diseases and upper respiratory tract infections. The program will also provide
referrals and first aid for accidents and injuries. It will seek to establish
links with governmental District Health Officers and work with them to improve
the quality of health care available to the public.
v
Formal and Non-formal Education.
The goal of this cluster is to mobilize the community
to enable it to ensure universal primary education of good quality for its children.
The work to be done includes assisting the community organization to survey
the coverage and quality of available educational services, identify critical
gaps to be filled therein, and prepare a local educational plan. The latter
will be developed with the participation of community representatives, key education
officials (e.g. government schoolteachers and principals), and project staff.
The action plan will include a phased time-table for upgrading the quality of
existing educational services, and expanding the coverage of these services
to meet identified needs. The program will include mechanisms for teacher motivation
and training, long term investment in teachers, curriculum development, establishment
of pooled libraries, involvement of communities (through the formation of school
boards for each school), and mobilization of community support and resources
(e.g. donated buildings for new schools). Initially, salaries for new teachers
will be partially supported by the project and partially by student tuition.
3.1.2
Site Selection
Site selection refers to two types
of decisions: the selection of new project regions (i.e. new Tehsils), and the
selection of new villages or communities for initiating community mobilization
programs. The latter responsibility, namely the selection and approval of new
communities or villages within a region, should lie squarely with the Local
Management Committee (defined below) but with two provisos. First, the agreement
of the community to begin project operations must be prior to the initiation
of work. Second, all decisions on expansion should be communicated regularly
to the HDF-P National Coordinator, and formally ratified by the Advisory Board.
The selection of new project regions
is a broader and more serious exercise. The decision on this issue would involve
both the HDF-P Advisory Board and HDFNA Executive Board, the latter in its capacity
as the main donor. Understanding the dangers inherent in either starting too
big or growing too fast, the following timetable of expansion is suggested:
v
Initially, the project should
start operation in only one Tehsil, with the aim of covering five units of 1000
households each in that Tehsil within a year.
v
At the end of the first year,
one more Tehsil (again with an initial target of about five units of 1000 households
each) should be added.
v
A strategic decision will have
to be made by the Advisory Board in the second year of the project on whether
to utilize the project's resources in expanding rapidly within the existing
two Tehsils or whether to add a third Tehsil. It is recommended that, given
success in the first two Tehsils and the availability of additional resources,
a third Tehsil may be added to the project by the end of Year 2.
v
Once the project has begun operating
in three Tehsils, future expansion plans should be made only if improved coverage
within the existing Tehsils is ensured. This improvement should not be sacrificed
simply to expand coverage.
v
In Year 3, the HDFP Advisory Board
and the HDFNA Board should begin considering the modalities and a timetable
for moving from the Partnership approach to the Facilitation approach in at
least one region, for complete coverage of a Tehsil.
In addition to the above considerations,
the decision on when and where to begin operation after the first Tehsil will
also depend on the lessons learnt from the initial experience. As a rule,
a new region should be added only when the necessary resources are assured and
without wavering in the commitment to the ultimate goal of complete coverage
of the Tehsils in which the project is already operating.
Tehsil Mardan is recommended
as the first site from where Project Pakistan should
be launched. APPNA-Sehat is already working in Mardan and has done impressive
work in mobilizing nine units of 500 households each in its program of health
awareness. This process has already resulted in the emergence of a number of
CBOs in the community and there is considerable interest within the communities
and within APPNA-Sehat's field staff in expanding the work that has already
been done into an integrated human development program. The choice of Mardan
is also influenced by the fact that both NRSP and the Aurat Foundation have
an existing presence in District Mardan.
The candidates for subsequent
expansion include Pind Dadan Khan and Khushaab (where TMF has a strong presence),
Badin and Turbat (where NRSP has a strong presence), and Rahim Yar Khan
(for which there is interest from HDFNA membership). These suggestions are made
with an eye also on the need for geographic balance.
The process for selection and approval
of new regions should be clear and transparent. In this report, we propose two
alternative processes to this end: a standard process, and a special process
for exceptional cases. The standard process will entail the establishment of
a Task Force by the HDF-P Advisory Board for the preparation of a social and
financial feasibility report on proposed new project sites. Proposals for selection
of sites can come from any of the partners, and should be agreed through a careful
screening process, including the approval of the HDFNA Board. Upon approval
of the site by the Advisory Board, it must compose the Task Force, and provide
it with appropriate terms of reference for the preparation of the feasibility
report.
In making such a selection, the
organization and its decision-makers will have to exercise their judgment as
the pros and cons of various alternatives. The following general criteria are
submitted to provide guidance on the process. In most cases, the decision will
involve balancing between different principles. In some cases, however, most
of the contributing factors will point in the same direction.
v
The project should address locally
felt needs.
v
The project should have the willingness
and resources to make a long-term commitment to the Tehsil. All NGOs selected
as partners for the particular Tehsil should be willing to begin operations.
v
The availability of resources,
and commitment, to begin working in around five units of about 1000 households
each in the first year.
v
At least in the first few years,
regions where one of the NGO partners already has a presence should be given
a priority.
v
In general, however, the focus
should be on relatively under-served areas rather than those where many NGOs
are already concentrated.
v
The project should be approved
by the HDFP Advisory Board of Governors and ratified by the HDFNA Board.
v
Except in rare and special cases,
regions of operation should be defined as a Tehsil.
An alternative, more summary process
should be initiated in response to a significant donation tied to particular
sites. While some of the above criteria will continue to be applicable, the
primary consideration in the special case is the availability of significant
financial resources, enabling a short cutting of the process of project development.
One or more members of HDFNA may be eager to contribute to a project in a particular
region, and may be willing to raise the necessary financial resources (including
their own contributions). The foundation should encourage such initiatives by
treating them as special cases, and establishing a special Task Force both to
prepare a social and financial feasibility report, and raising sufficient funds
to make the long-term commitment to the project possible. It will often be appropriate
in such cases to request the sponsoring individual to head the task force. The
guiding principle for all site selection decisions in such cases is the ability
to mobilize sufficient resources and the willingness to make such a commitment.
3.2
· Partnership Issues
This section identifies partners,
relationship (and exit) arrangements, and the basic elements of a formal partnership
document. The first goal is to identify the institutions and individuals that
should be approached by HDFNA in designing and executing Project Pakistan. A
longer but by no means exhaustive list provides the names of leading institutions
with which partnership relationships can be established. A shorter identifies
those with whom collaborative work can be started fairly rapidly. If institutional
or other unanticipated obstacles create difficulties at a later stage, changes
can be brought in through mutual discussion. The nature of partnership and the
number of partners will naturally evolve over time. A second goal is to outline
the mechanism for establishing a close working relationship with these partners,
both through project management committees and a national Advisory Board. Finally,
this section also provides guidance on the key issues to be addressed in Memorandums
of Understanding (MoU) to be signed by all partner organizations to outline
the terms of the partnership.
3.2.1
Suggested Partners
The following list is based on interviews
with representatives of Pakistani NGOs as well as HDFNA members, a review of
an earlier report on this project (RIM 1998), and our knowledge and analysis
of the institutional landscape of Pakistan. This analysis reveals that a large
number of organizations share significant elements of the vision and goals that
have shaped HDFNA’s formation. While it is impossible to provide an exhaustive
list of these organizations, the obvious names are AIE, AKRSP, APPNA-Sehat,
ASR, Aurat Foundation, Baanh Beli, GBTI, HDC, HRMDC, IUCN, Khwendo Kor, Network,
NRSP, MMBT, OPP, Pattan, PILER, SAHE, SAP, SDPI, Saiban, Shehri, Shirkatgah,
SPO, SRSC, Sultana Foundation, Sungi, TMF. Some of these work in selected geographical
areas, others specialize in certain core activities (women’s issues, education,
health, research, advocacy, training, community development), but all are potential
candidates for partnership with HDFNA. The list can include some government
agencies as well, although the continued efficacy and transparency of government
agencies is difficult to predict.
While it is difficult to narrow
down the list to a few organizations, we recommend the following six organizations
as the initial partners in HDFNA’s Project Pakistan.
If difficulties emerge either during the discussion stage or during project
implementation, other partners could be approached for the specific project.
However, HDFNA should continue to consider these as its partners in a larger
sense, i.e. as fellow travelers engaged in the pursuit of the same national
goal.
v
In primary health care, the obvious
candidate is APPNA-Sehat. It has a close relationship with the founder
members of HDFNA, and has been a pioneer on health awareness work in Pakistan.
v
In the area of primary education,
Tameer-e-Millat Foundation (TMF) has considerable experience in establishing
and operating formal and informal primary schools with the support and involvement
of the local community. Other like-minded NGOs include the Ali Institute of
Education (AIE, which specializes in teacher training), the Malik Maula Baksh
Trust (MMBT, which has considerable experience in the provision and upgrading
of primary education in a sustainable manner), the Orangi Pilot Project (OPP,
whose home schools have been a success story replicated by many other organizations),
and the Aga Khan Education Service (AKES, which has established primary schools
in Karachi and the Northern Areas).
v
In poverty education, community
organization and economic opportunity, the leading national organization is
the National Rural Support Program (NRSP). It follows the model of community
development that evolved out of the highly acclaimed AKRSP and OPP programs.
Other organizations, with some variations in theme (or with more restricted
geographical concentration) are AKRSP, OPP, SPO, and SRSC, and Sungi,
v
In the area of gender and development,
the most prominent national organization is the Aurat Foundation (AF).
Other relevant organizations are Shirkatgah, ASR.
v
On the development of a local
database and a local Human Development Index, the organization that would have
the most to contribute is the Human Development Center (HDC). It would
also be able to use this opportunity to deepen its analysis of the human development
situation in South Asia.
v
In terms of a research-led process
of monitoring the performance of the project and converting into consensual,
policy relevant lessons, the Sustainable Development Policy Institute
(SDPI) is the appropriate organization. It can apply its experience with the
research-led process on pollution abatement to the human development context,
and use an institutional framework similar to that of the government business
roundtables to develop policy lessons and guidelines for future work.
The above recommendation is based
on the following criteria:
v
A similarity of approach and a
shared commitment to the core values defined earlier (Box 3.2).
v
A demonstrated expertise and proven
track record in an area of importance to Project Pakistan.
v
A complementarily of expertise
and interests.
v
A commitment to community empowerment
and human development.
v
Express desire and potential ability
to work with other NGOs in a collaborative project.
Substantively, NRSP, APPNA-Sehat
and TMF form the 'field' component of the partnership in areas of community
mobilization and economic opportunity, health awareness, and education respectively.
The operating style of each is highly complementary, each emphasizes community
empowerment and consultative decision-making, and each operates through a variety
of community organizations in their own activities. There is much that
they have in common and much that can be gained from collaboration between them.
HDC, Aurat Foundation and SDPI form
a second cluster of partners who focus on assessment and communication. HDC's
proposed principal contribution is the development and maintenance of a local
Human Development Index (HDI), meant both to empower local communities in assessing
their own situation and making required decisions, and to enable the donors
and investors to monitor the results of their activities. The local HDI, along
with a regular internal program for data collection (to be designed by SDPI),
will form the 'statistical' component of monitoring and evaluation. However,
there are at least two other components to monitoring and evaluation which cannot
be covered directly by the local HDI and which will require a regular system
of assessment. The first of these relates to non-statistical indicators of empowerment,
particularly of women, and the second to issues of institutional development,
vulnerability, community participation and capacity building. Aurat Foundation
is an ideal partner for the first of these and SDPI is particularly well suited
for the second. Aurat Foundation should also be asked to work closely with the
project field staff to establish, provide training for, and oversee a strong
gender and development (GAD) component to the project.
An added operational advantage of
selecting these six NGOs is that the head offices of all (except Aurat Foundation)
are in Islamabad. Also, while each organization has been identified because
it brings a particular set of expertise and experience to the project, each
organization also has a larger interest in integrated human development and
will therefore bring more than just those skills to the partnership.
3.2.2
Setting up a Pakistani presence
We recommend that HDFNA should set
up a formal institution in Pakistan with the support and advice of selected
partner organizations. In order to avoid confusion and for the purpose of this
report, we will refer to this Pakistani institution as the Human Development
Foundation of Pakistan (HDF-P). It is absolutely essential that HDFP have a
clear legal standing. This is the basic minimum required to ensure smooth collaboration
over the long-term. It will help clarify the division of responsibilities; establish
a transparent decision-making structure; provide a clear system of financial
flows, responsibilities and incentives; and most importantly an umbrella organization
to support and service the partnership. HDFNA will be the sponsoring organization
for HDF-P.
We recommend that HDF-P establish
a resident Pakistani identity for itself as soon as possible. Besides registration
under Pakistani laws, this will entail the opening of a national office headed
by a National Coordinator, and the formation of a high-profile Advisory Board,
drawn from the founding members, and including representation from HDFNA and
partner organizations, eminent resident Pakistanis, and community leaders from
selected project areas. The national office will be the focal point and secretariat
for all management and policy decisions pertaining to the project. Recommendations
on the constitution of the Advisory Board are presented later in this chapter.
HDF-P should be registered as a
non-profit organization in Pakistan. This can be done either under the Cooperative
Societies Act 1860, or the Companies Ordinance 1984, depending on the legal
advice. While some details on the nature of the organization are provided below,
an initial point about its founding membership can be made here. In order to
make explicit the fact that program represents a joint effort by Pakistani Americans
and Pakistani activists, the initial membership should include individuals from
both groups. For instance all members of HDFNA’s Executive Board as well as
the representatives of selected partner organizations (and other like-minded
individuals) could be invited to become founder members of the new organization.
The partners should immediately
begin discussions on formalizing a charter or vision statement for the new organization,
including a Memorandum of Partnership outlining the terms of the partnership.
While the outlines of the vision document are fairly clear and relatively non-controversial,
it will still require considerable discussion on details. This should be the
first item on the agenda for discussion between prospective partners. It is
very important to have total clarity on all relevant issues for the preparation
of the vision statement, since it will be the enabling document of HDF-P, and
therefore of Project Pakistan.
The question of partnership is more
complex, and will involve legal advice as well as detailed consultations with
the heads (and possibly the Boards) of each partner organization. Agreement
will have to be reached on a number of issues that underlie the acceptance of
ownership and responsibility for the project by prospective partners. These
include governance (i.e. the HDF-P decision-making structure, and representation
and participation in meetings); management (division of personnel, assets,
and responsibilities, such as allocation of staff time to HDFP projects);
membership (expansion and termination of membership); and steps to be taken
in the event of the dissolution of the organization.
We recommend complete transparency
in all matters. Transfer of assets between partners or to HDF-P should only
be at arms-length market prices, secondment of staff on clear and explicit terms,
and expansion or termination of membership according to pre-agreed terms. If
this is followed, the (hopefully unlikely) events of membership termination
or dissolution will not entail lengthy legal intricacies, and all HDFP assets
will naturally remain at the disposal of HDFP or HDFNA.
In order to help in these discussions,
and to assist partner organizations in thinking about the ultimate shape of
the vision statement, salient issues for agreement are listed in Box 3.3.
Box 3.3: A Vision for HDF-P—Some Ideas
· Objectives
·
:: As
in Box 3.2.
· Governance
·
:: HDFNA
will be the sponsor of Project Pakistan as well as of HDF-P.
:: HDF-P
will be the implementing organization, responsible for programmatic and management
decisions on the project.
:: While
formal legal and fiscal authority of the organization will be vested in its
Board of Governors, programmatic decisions will be entrusted to a high-level
Advisory Board comprised of resident and non-resident Pakistanis. It will
meet at least once and preferably twice a year.
:: The
Advisory Board will be constituted of representatives from HDFNA, partner
organizations, community leaders from selected project areas, and eminent
individuals.
:: All
operational decisions, including the decision to begin operation in a particular
area, will be taken in consultation with partners who are already be working
in that region. All partners undertake not to begin overlapping or duplicating
operations in a region where the project is already working without consultation
with HDF-P.
:: The
heads of all project partners will be represented in HDFP’s decision making
structure. In particular, a Partner's Coordination Committee (consisting of
all partners) will report directly to the HDF-P Advisory Board.
· Responsibilities
·
:: HDFNA
makes a long-term commitment to the project and to providing initial and continuing
financial and technical support to HDF-P.
:: Each
partner organization undertakes to support the work of the organization. The
nature of this involvement will vary from organization to organization. However,
in all cases it will include, a) the regular participation of the head of
the organization in the meetings of the HDF-P Advisory Board; and b) setting
up a system for providing regular advice and feedback to the project's field
staff.
:: HDF-P
and HDFNA undertake to mobilize additional resources for the project from
Pakistani as well as international sources.
· General ·
:: All
project partners will treat the project as their own and will report on and
publicize it in their annual reports.
:: The
project will seek to extend the work and goals of the partner organizations.
:: HDF-P
partners retain their right to continue working independently in other areas
in existing or future projects.
In addition to the issues listed
in Box 3.3, which are fairly straightforward divisions of responsibility, the
partners will also have to reach agreement on a set of somewhat more complex
issues. Discussions on the following issues should be part of the initial
meetings between the partners and appropriate clauses on them may be added to
the Charter.
:: Staff
reporting lines. The staff working on Project
Pakistan will be HDF-P staff and will be paid directly by HDF-P. However,
it may be advisable to have a joint reporting line for staff members responsible
for an area (e.g., health or education) where a particular partner has the necessary
expertise. This might be done through a system of matrix management for
these staff members. The partners should decide whether such staff members
should or should not be given dual affiliation.
:: Salaries.
The different NGOs listed as potential partners for the project have wide variance
in the level of salary and other support provided to their staff. The
partners need to jointly determine the level of staff salaries for the project
(which will itself determine the quality of human resources hired). Moreover,
a system of standard compensation for staff from the partner organizations who
may be 'seconded' to the project or may act as occasional consultants needs
to be determined. In order to avoid problems at a later stage, it is suggested
that a standard rate be determined for long-term assignments and occasional
consultancies at the outset.
:: Transfers
of assets and staff. If the project decides,
as is recommended here, to begin operation in an area where one or more of the
partners are already operating, a decision will need to be made about how the
existing operations merge into the joint project, and the terms and conditions
of the transfer. The details of such a transfer--including a mechanism
for compensation--will have to be worked out with some care, particularly in
relation to staff and capital assets.
:: Termination
Clauses. Frequent changes in partnership at least
in the initial years are both unlikely and unwise. HDFNA must make a long-term
commitment to its partners, from whom it seeks a similar long-term commitment
for the project. In short, one does not foresee partner changes in the immediate
future. However, partnership is a delicate arrangement, requiring the building
of trust and comfort with each other. This might not be possible in every case,
and mechanisms for the termination of a partnership should be agreed upon from
the outset.
:: Adding
New Partners. On the other hand, as a project develops,
new needs arise, and new partners might be needed to respond to those needs.
An analogous mechanism is needed for adding new partners if such a need arises.
Ordinarily, this should not involve any reduction in the role or responsibilities
of existing partners, including their representation on the Advisory Board or
other decision-making forums.
:: Dissolution:
A third possibility, namely the dissolution of HDF-P also needs to be accounted
for in the termination clauses. In such an eventuality, all assets should revert
to HDFNA, and efforts should be made to find suitable employment for project
staff. In each case, clear guidelines about the division of assets and liabilities
should be provided.
A number of issues have been raised
in this section, and elsewhere in this report, that need to be addressed during
the first meeting of HDFNA and its partner NGOs (assuming that this report and
its recommendations are accepted by HDFNA and its partners). This meeting
is of the utmost importance and it is crucial that each institution be represented
at it at the highest level. Ideally, the meeting should be convened by
HDFNA and attended by the heads of all selected NGO partners, assisted by relevant
staff members. This report should serve as the background document for
the meeting. This meeting will not only finalize the working details of
the partnership but will also be the first step in collaboration between these
organizations. It will, therefore, serve the added purpose of enabling
each to learn more about the interests and priorities of the other and better
define the complementarity that each brings to the partnership. Box 3.4
provides a draft outline agenda for this first meeting of the partners.
Box 3.4: First Partners' Meeting—A Draft Agenda
· Introduction
·
:: A
presentation by each organization, introducing its vision, goals, and program
activities.
:: A
presentation of the Project Pakistan idea and of this report.
· Partnership
Issues ·
:: Agreement
on a vision statement for HDF-P (based on Box 3.3 above).
:: Rights
and responsibilities of partners. Procedures for expanding or terminating
membership.
:: Procedures
to be adopted in the event of dissolution.
:: Structure
of decision making for HDF-P, including rules and procedures, composition
of Advisory Board and Project Participation Committees, and relationships
between different levels.
:: Establishment
of a National Office for HDF-P and/or interim arrangements (based on Chapter
3).
· Program Issues
·
:: Program
design, including operations and staffing (based on Chapters 3 and 4)
:: Investment
strategy, including revision of cost estimates, and preparation of draft budget
(based on Chapter 4).
:: Site
selection and project timetable.
· Management
Issues·
:: Staff
reporting lines.
:: Salaries.
:: Transfers
of assets and staff.
:: General
discussion on other related issues.
The key to the success of the project
will be the efficacy of the governance system set up to manage the process of
collaboration. In building on the discussion in earlier chapters, the
goal is to set up a system of governance which:
:: Provides
for meaningful community participation at all levels of decision-making and
management.
:: Gives
the project a distinct Pakistani identity and established a resident presence
for HDFNA in Pakistan.
:: Gives
all partners a deep sense of joint ownership of the project and seek from them
a formal system of inputs and interaction in the day to day operation of the
project.
:: Establishes
processes and procedures for efficient and effective collaboration between HDF-P
partners.
:: Builds
on the synergies between partner organizations and brings down the cost of operation
to a level significantly less than what it would be if each partner were to
operate independently in that region.
:: Build
a mechanism for periodic and regular contact and with government.
:: Allows
for the best advice and guidance from non-resident as well as resident Pakistanis.
The governance structure proposed
for Project Pakistan responds to the above by setting up a management structure
at the local level which empowers community participation, establishing a national
presence and identity for HDF-P, and creating mechanisms for operational collaboration
between various partners and regular interaction with government.
3.3.1
Community Empowerment
Project management at the local
level will be the responsibility of a Field Office. The details
of the technical design and staff allocation for this field office will have
to be decided by the collaborating partners and will build on their experiences
with their own different programs. A sample structure for staffing the
field office--built around the program elements discussed earlier and based
on the structure that the three proposed field partners (APPNA-Sehat, TMF and
NRSP) now use in their individual programs--is presented in the next chapter
as a rough template for cost calculations. At this point, however, this structure
is advanced only as a possibility rather than a recommendation. The exact structure
of the Field Office should be developed jointly by the field partners keeping
in mind their own experiences with such projects and the social, economic and
political realities of the particular local environment. It is, however, to
be expected that because of synergistic gains, the HDF-P Field Office should
be able to operate on a staff and a budget considerably less than the combined
budget of the three field organizations working individually in the same area.
Operationally, the Field Offices
will report to the HDF-P National Office and through it to the Advisory Board
and the HDFNA Board. Some technical staff members of the Field Office may also
be required to report directly to a focal point in one of the partner organizations
on technical and substantive issues through a system of matrix management.
With respect to governance, the
Field Offices will ensure maximum community involvement and empowerment in relevant
decision-making. For this purpose a Local Management Committee
will be set up at the Tehsil Level. The key features of this committee
will be as follows:
:: Each
Local Management Committee will consist of the around 13 members. These
will include: the Coordinator of the HDF-P Field Office Coordinator (1); up
to three representatives of relevant partner organizations (1-3); elected representatives
of the communities where the project is operational (4-6); representatives of
local civil society (e.g., lawyers, educationists, professionals, etc.) and
other NGOs working in the area (2-3); and invited officials from local and Provincial
government (2-3).
:: The
Chairperson will be elected by the Committee from amongst the community leaders
or local civil society.
:: The
community representatives will be elected directly by the community organizations.
All other members will be nominated by HDF-P.
:: To
provide continuity and ensure prompt action, the relevant Field Office will
act as the secretariat for, and the Coordinator of the Field Office as the secretary
of the Committee.
:: The
Committee will meet at least once every three months.
:: The
Committee will assist and advise the Field Office in local trouble shooting,
coordination with other governmental and non-governmental agencies, identifying
needs and priorities of the Tehsil, including new communities where the project
can begin working.
In addition to the above all local
management will be through community organizations. This would
include local school boards, community health committees, savings groups, and
other community based organizations formulated as part of implementing the project.
These community organizations will be responsible for all community-level decision
making. The project will make a commitment to work in a community in concurrence
and with the support of these organizations.
3.3.2
Establishing a National Presence
A National Advisory Board will
be constituted both to guide and personify the project. It should be a functional
rather than a ceremonial body entrusted with authority over program issues.
It would serve as a symbol of cooperation between resident and non-resident
Pakistanis, provide a venue for advancing collaboration between the partner
organizations at the highest levels, and lilies with the Board of HDFNA (the
two Boards would have some overlapping membership). The quality of the membership
of the Advisory Board should reflect the aspirations of the project as well
as the values of HDFNA.
An Advisory Board of 15-20 members
is envisaged, with roughly equal representation of resident and non-resident
Pakistanis. It should include selected representatives from partner institutions
(generally their chief executives), key civil society groups (NGOs, journalists,
lawyers, educators, notable professionals, and academics), the communities in
project areas, and the government (e.g. the Deputy Chairman of the Planning
Commission). Non-resident Pakistani embers should be selected on the basis of
their expertise, commitment, and willingness to participate actively in project
activities.
The Advisory Board should meet at
least once (and preferably twice) a year. Its secretariat will be the HDF-P
National office. This will ensure continuity, not burden board members with
undue secretarial tasks, and avoid possible delays in regular tasks such as
notifying meetings, recording minutes, or distributing decisions.
The Advisory Board will provide
operational, policy and profile guidance to the project, assist in fundraising
by enhancing the project's profile with government and international donors,
report to HDFNA on financial and program matters, and address issues of coordination
and collaboration between partner organizations. It will also initiate the process
for reaching a decision on project expansion to new regions by establishing
a Task Force with requisite responsibilities. Finally, it will review monitoring
reports, oversee budget preparation, and prepare annual reports.
The members of the Advisory Board
will be the principal champions of the institution in Pakistan and North America.
They will work closely with the HDFNA Executive Office and the HDF-P National
Office on issues related to enhancing the project's profile, raising funds from
international and national donors, and representing the project and HDFNA in
Pakistan.
Besides the co-chairs of HDFNA and
the heads of partner organizations, the list of potential candidates to be invited
to join the Advisory Board include Mr Shoaib Sultan Khan, Mr Arif Hassan, Mr
Abid Hassan Manto, Mr Farrukh Captain, Ms Bushra Gohar, Mr Aslam Azhar, Mr Sami
Mustafa, Dr Zulfiqar Gilani, Dr Hamid Kizalbash, Dr Zafar Mirza, Mr Sami Mustafa,
Ms Stella Jafri, Dr Anita Ghulam Ali, Mr Nisar Memon, Mr Karamat Ali, Mr Farooq
Sumar, Dr Shamsh Kassim-Lakha, Dr Nighat Saeed Khan, Ms Khawar Mumtaz. The list
of potential government representatives would include the Deputy Chairman Planning
Commission, Secretary Planning, Secretary Finance, Provincial Additional Chief
Secretaries (Development). A number of political personalities from all political
parties have shown support for human development agendas. A short list would
include Mr Ahsan Iqbal MNA, Senator Sartaj Aziz, Mr Mushahid Hussain, Senator
Shafqat Mahmood, Mr Daniyal Aziz MNA, Senator Taj Haider, Mr Shahbaz Sharif,
Mr Farooq Sattar MPA.
An HDF-P National Office
should be set up in Pakistan to oversee day to day operations. The office would
ultimately be headed by a Chief Executive responsible for overall management,
reporting to the Advisory Board, managing the budget, preparing annual reports,
supervising field offices, and managing coordination between partner organizations.
The Chief Executive would also be the Chair of the Partner's Coordinating Committee
(PCC) and the ex-officio secretary of the Advisory Board.
Realizing that it may not be possible,
or even desirable, to establish an HDF-P National Office right in the beginning
(especially since the project will be working in only one location to begin
with), one of the partner institutions could be designated as the interim secretariat
for HDF-P.
3.3.3
Operationalizing Collaboration
It is important to build into the
governance structure a number of formal and informal opportunities and venues
for coordination and collaboration between the partner organizations.
The following are some of the key opportunities that this Plan of Operation
provides for operationalizing collaboration.
v
The heads of partner NGOs and
the co-chairs of HDFNA are members of the Advisory Board.
v
A Partner's Coordination Committee
will be set up at the national level with high level representation from all
partner NGOs (preferably the heads of organization). The Chief Executive
of the HDF-P National Office will chair the committee. All Field Office
Coordinators and any relevant staff from partner NGOs will also be invited to
attend its meetings. The Committee will report, through its Chair, to
the Board of Governors and will review and resolve issues related to operational
coordination and collaboration between partner institutions. The Committee
will be a forum for brainstorming and troubleshooting on issues related to partner
collaboration. It will also be responsible for recommending the timing
and sites for possible project expansion to the Board. The Committee will
meet once every three months, including meetings immediately prior to each meeting
of the Board of Governors.
v
Representation of partner NGOs
on the Local Management Committee will be encouraged as appropriate.
v
Each partner NGO will set up an
internal system for providing timely and regular advice and guidance to HDF-P
project staff. While each organization will set up the system which is
best suited to its own structure, it is expected that a professional staff member
will be designated at each organization to serve as the focal point for HDF-P
related activities.
While the above discussion pertains
to collaborating with partner NGOs, it is also important to maintain regular
contacts with government decision-makers. This is especially important
since the long-term goal of the project is to move from the Partnership approach
to the Facilitation approach, which requires a much more central role to be
played by local government agencies. For this purpose, one or two
seats on the Advisory Board as well as the Local Management Committees should
be reserved for officials of the Federal and Provincial/local governments respectively.
In general, government functionaries should be invited to these positions on
the basis of their individual interests and commitment rather than simply because
of the office that they hold. Their participation in these forums should be
strictly by invitation from HDF-P rather than by government nomination. Nevertheless,
one seat might be reserved for an ex-officio government representative in order
to ensure continuity.
3.4
· Communication and Monitoring Issues
The broad definition of communication
used in Chapter 1 requires that this component be viewed not merely as an exercise
in publications and public relations, but as the principal ingredient in the
construction of a knowledge-based system that strives for constant quality improvement
and excellence. By a similar token, monitoring is seen here not simply as "accounting"
but as a mechanism for establishing transparency and legitimacy and for constant
learning. The purpose of a strong communication and monitoring program,
therefore, is not simply to chart whether the project is a success or not but
to ensure a continuous process of error correction. Finally, it is a mechanism
for creating local knowledge and strengthening local capacity for knowledge
creation, analysis and decision making. In other words, it is an essential tool
for empowerment of local communities. The communication and monitoring component
of Project Pakistan has the following goals:
v
To ensure that HDF-P is a 'learning
institution' that is able to learn from both its successes and mistakes and
is capable of changing course in response to that learning.
v
To contribute to a national and
international discussion on human development by translating project achievements
into policy lessons, and documenting and disseminating the benefits of integrated
human development.
v
To demonstrate the importance
of collecting detailed and reliable social and economic data at the local level
and its utility in empowering local communities, and enabling them to obtain
the maximum benefits from development interventions.
v
To build local capacity by involving
local experts in data collection and analysis, and local community organizations
in the assessment of social trends.
v
To establish a research orientation
at the local level among community members as well as project staff.
v
To establish the intervention's
legitimacy and transparency by continually providing key audiences in Pakistan
and abroad with information and analysis on the project's achievements.
3.4.1
Communication and Dissemination
Although the HDF-P communication
strategy will have a complex set of audiences, two large groups are particularly
important. The first of these are resident Pakistanis including, but not limited
to, the direct beneficiaries of the project. The second are non-resident Pakistanis,
including but not limited to, HDFNA contributors. The key communication goals
for the first audience are:
a)
establishing the legitimacy of
the project as a 'Pakistani' initiative;
b)
broadening a discourse on community-led
social change and governance;
c)
sowing the seeds of a movement
for change by presenting a viable model for large-scale human development in
Pakistan; and
d)
introducing capacity building
and empowering elements into the project design itself.
While some of these goals are also
relevant to non-resident Pakistanis, they are interested in a number of additional
goals. To wit:
a)
mobilizing and arousing interest
in Pakistan amongst these groups including amongst second generation Pakistanis;
b)
supporting fundraising for the
project and keeping contributors informed of the results of their investment;
and
c)
establishing the legitimacy of
HDFNA as an effective ambassador of NRPs in Pakistan.
HDFNA should launch a comprehensive
research-based communication program from the very beginning, based on some
of the following ideas:
v
First, invest in a general dissemination
program that produces material for mass consumption such as brochures, a newsletter
for financial contributors and others, and regular annual reports.
v
Second, institute a systematic
research and analysis initiative. Much of this will be based on the local HDI,
internal data collection and monitoring programs discussed later in this section.
In addition to a regular stream of in-house studies, HDF-P should also encourage
and invite outside scholars to study its program by providing access to data
and financial support. |