2.3.1 Institutional culture of public-sector agencies
One of the primary factors that influence the success or failure
of shelter policies, programmes and projects is the institutional culture of the
public-sector agencies involved. If these are positively disposed towards
innovation and responsive to changing patterns of demand, the chances of success
are considerably enhanced. Where agencies are reactive and inflexible,
opportunities for progress will be correspondingly reduced. The first approach
can be characterized as a management approach, in which resources are
continually being redeployed in line with assessments of need, while the latter
represents an administrative approach and is characterized by a preoccupation
with implementing inherited, or received, norms, standards and procedures,
irrespective of their relevance in the wider environment. Unfortunately,
public-sector agencies in many countries have not yet shaken off the traditional
administrative approach. This has particularly negative consequences for the
shelter sector, since it is not the exclusive preserve of any one profession or
discipline, and depends for success on the collaboration and sensitivity of many
professions and agencies.
The introduction of new approaches to shelter projects under
such conditions is greatly facilitated if political support is available at the
outset. This has been the catalyst in many successful cases, of which the MHP in
Sri Lanka is perhaps the clearest example. This was administered by a high-level
committee representing 12 ministries, with the NHDA acting as the lead agency.
Despite the enormous scale of the programme, the data show that the rural and
urban sub-programmes achieved a high proportion of their targets (95 per cent in
rural and 76 per cent in urban areas). The Ministry of Policy Planning and
Implementation has indicated that the Programme was completed satisfactorily by
the end of 1988. If this is correct, it was no doubt directly due to political
commitment at the highest level of government and the very high levels of public
investment involved.
Similar political commitment was largely responsible for the
successful introduction of sites-and-services projects in Egypt (Davidson,
1984), and the expansion of the settlement-upgrading programmes in Indonesia and
Zambia. Where such support is not available, the degree to which projects can be
expected to achieve their internal objectives, let alone generate a multiplier
effect, will be restricted. Innovative projects, such as those sponsored by
international funding agencies, tend to remain as isolated project cells. More
often than not, the concepts or methods that they were testing are never being
absorbed into the mainstream of the parent agencys
activities.