Interim Institutions and the Development Process: Opening Spaces for Reform in Cambodia and Indonesia
Author: Daniel Adler, Caroline Sage, Michael Woolcock
Date: 2009
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32 pages
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How can donors facilitate the development of better governance institutions in developing countries? This paper from the Brooks World Poverty Institute analyses current development practice in institution-building through two case studies in Cambodia and Indonesia. It argues that traditional, linear, technically-driven approaches are unproductive due to the inherent unpredictability of socio-political processes. Donors should instead embrace the concept of ‘interim institutions’ as a means of promoting equitable political contestation and facilitating positive and sustainable change.
While there is broad agreement within the development field on the importance of ‘good governance’ and other institutional factors for improving development outcomes, understanding of how to realise these goals remains elusive. At present, most donors favour policy and project interventions that aim to quickly achieve the ideal institutional ‘end-state’ which supposedly embodies the characteristics of a well-governed, fully functional state. These interventions enable donors to adopt technical, expert-led approaches in which political and economic development is standardised and more easily managed.
Evidence from developing countries, however, suggests that this approach is flawed. Governance and legal reform are inherently adaptive development issues, ill-suited to technical interventions. Examination of two case studies, from Cambodia and Indonesia, reveals some broad findings that illustrate the deficiencies in current development practices:
Moving away from this rapid, linear, technically-driven approach, a potentially viable alternative is a more process-oriented approach that focuses on building ‘interim institutions'. These are formal or informal institutions that have the potential to engage with and incrementally transform the political economies within which they exist. They are likely to be hybrid in nature, based on local knowledge but underpinned by the principles of rule-based, transparent, and accountable decision-making.
Rather than seeking to transform developing country politics rapidly from the outside, donors could support the creation of spaces where equitable political contestation can occur, enabling institutions to evolve and develop organically and sustainably. Some strategies for facilitating this transition include:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Adler D., Sage C., Woolcock M., 2009, 'Interim Institutions and the Development Process: Opening Spaces for Reform in Cambodia and Indonesia', Brooks World Poverty Institute, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
Organisation: Brooks World Poverty Institute, http://www.bwpi.manchester.ac.uk/