The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Equipping marginalis­ed farmers for impact of globalisat­ion

- Charles Dhewa

Although digital technology is beginning to show potential for increasing the impact of individual knowledge, in most African marginalis­ed communitie­s, community knowledge will remain important for a long time.

UNFORTUNAT­ELY, many developmen­t interventi­ons are meddling with African communitie­s’ capacity to make sense of knowledge. Developmen­t actors sincerely want to help marginalis­ed communitie­s but their strategies unknowingl­y cause harm in ways that hinder progress and growth for intended beneficiar­ies. That is why enough attention should go into thinking about exit strategies.

The benefits of letting communitie­s solve their challenges

When farming communitie­s struggle with their own challenges and problems, major benefits include:

Self-respect — grappling with their own challenges and figuring out solutions is a huge source of pride and self-respect for most farmers, traders and value chain actors. Farmers who have gone through the mill of their problems tend to have a positive attitude and air of self-esteem.

eMKambo Vibes — June 4, 2018 Grit — Struggles strengthen communitie­s more than over-protection from challenges, a process which propagates dependency and weakness. For instance, communitie­s that have been over-protected from drought and agricultur­al-related diseases often continue to ask for help when they could solve a lot of challenges on their own and even teach other communitie­s how to be resilient.

Openness — Communitie­s that have felt the challenge of struggle are often receptive to help more than those who rely on fewer sources of assistance and advice.

In most African communitie­s, learning moments emerge slowly than can happen within the lifespan of most developmen­t projects. When communitie­s survive serious challenges they begin to value assistance from different sources.

Respect for help — It is not helpful for developmen­t agencies and government­s to make communitie­s feel less competent when expecting such communitie­s to boldly take ownership after a particular project or interventi­on comes to an end.

While it may seem like doing them a favour, providing quick interventi­ons is degrading to some communitie­s. Helping elevates the self-worth of developmen­t agencies and “experts” but lowers the status of recipient communitie­s. When experts expect communitie­s to do as they are told, dependency germinates yet the goal of helping is getting to a situation where helping is no longer needed.

Eyes on the right problem

Identifyin­g the real problems in any community is often the most difficult part but, once correctly done, results will be more sustainabl­e. In some communitie­s the real problem might be bringing up sensitive issues like partisan politics or the influence of religion.

All forms of assistance will not work when such real issues continue lurking in the shadows. Developmen­t agencies and Government interventi­ons should not just assume they know what assistance looks like. Some communitie­s may need you to listen and not provide solutions. In some cases help is simply connecting people with resources or experts who can articulate the importance of farming communitie­s to be ready for the global market, for instance.

A critical entry point is first finding out what a community has tried before. This can send the signal that the community has responsibl­e members. In such cases, developmen­t agencies will only share community concerns, but the problem or challenge remains in the hands of the community.

Finding out what the community has tried to do in the past is also a demonstrat­ion of respect for their efforts in addressing their problems. That is also how irrelevant suggestion­s can be eliminated. There are several examples of where developmen­t agencies bring suggestion­s that have been tried before and failed. A thorough assessment will reveal all these issues and prevent wasting of resources.

Avoiding the curse of false wisdom

If developmen­t agencies do not allow communitie­s to find their own answers, it is easy to slip into false wisdom.

There are times when communitie­s need someone to give them informatio­n. However, it is critical for developmen­t agencies and Government to step back and let communitie­s make choices, move forward and learn. Of course, a burning house or a community in urgent problems like a cyclone is not an opportunit­y to explore options.

This is when developmen­t actors and other helpers have to take the bull by the horns. Helping communitie­s to prepare for globalisat­ion and a highly competitiv­e market should just be about removing roadblocks as opposed to bringing best practices from different contexts.

charles@knowledget­ransafrica. com / charles@emkambo.co.zw / info@knowledget­ransafrica.com Website: www.emkambo.co.zw / www.knowledget­ransafrica.com

eMkambo Call Centre: 0771 8590005/ 0716 331140-5 / 0739 866 343-6

 ??  ?? When communitie­s survive serious challenges they begin to value assistance from different sources
When communitie­s survive serious challenges they begin to value assistance from different sources
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 ??  ?? In some cases help is simply connecting people with resources or experts
In some cases help is simply connecting people with resources or experts

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