Working in Collaboration
Governments' ability to identify and implement policies that
promote gender equality is greatly enhanced by the active participation of other
players from the development community and civil society. These agents include
individual women and men, community-based groups, private-for-profit firms,
trade unions, non governmental organizations, and multilateral and bilateral
agencies. Interaction between public institutions and other actors provides the
basis for a more informed policy dialogue on gender issues. It also lays the
foundation for operational collaboration and for broadly based support for
public policy measures.
Over the past several decades NGOs have become major players in
international development. NGOs are by no means homogenous. In the field of
development, they range from large volunteer and charity organizations, many of
them based in industrial countries, to community-based self-help groups. They
also include research institutes, volunteer-sending agencies, religious
organizations, professional associations, and lobbying groups.
NGOs concerned with gender issues have had a particularly
important role in designing and implementing gender programs, especially at the
grassroots level, and in advocating policy change at the national level NGOs
have been effective in providing information and education to women and in
helping community-based women's organizations lobby for change. In many
countries collaboration between NGOs and governments is still relatively new.
Nonetheless, it is growing rapidly-most visibly in the delivery of social and
financial services.
For example, in Peru a proposed basic health and nutrition
project aims to improve the quality and accessibility of health and nutritional
services, with an emphasis on poor women and children. NGOs are expected to play
a major role in implementing the project and will be responsible for 75 percent
of training and research, 40 percent of education, and 20 percent of service
delivery (World Bank 1994g). In Africa many HIV/AIDS support programs are
managed by NGOs with assistance from governments and funds from international
donors.
In the long run choices made by private sector agents are
profoundly important for the persistence or reduction of gender inequalities
In the financial services sector NGOs have found innovative ways
of overcoming barriers that women face in access to credit and savings
facilities. Among the better-know programs are the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh,
ACCION International in Latin America, and the NGO consortium ACCORD in Africa.
NGOs have been very successful in organizing village banks and mobile banking
systems to reach the rural poor. These credit programs provide women not only
with the funds to finance income-generating activities but also with
opportunities to acquire basic business skills and to assume leadership
positions within their peer groups.
Governments also seek to collaborate with a range of
institutions from the private sector. In the long run the choices made by
private sector agents- whether households, firms, or trade unions-are profoundly
important for the persistence or seduction of gender inequalities. Joint
public-private sector initiatives can be vital in changing peoples perceptions
about the benefits of investing in or hiring women. The private sector has a
comparative advantage in providing certain kinds of services to women-for
example, vocational education and training. Collaboration with the private
sector- often means that public resources can be reallocated to those
investments that offer the highest rate of social return. such as basic
education and health
care.