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Special Report

Join the online follow-up discussion!

After an initial round of general opinion (Dutch | International) on the report Less Pretension, More Ambition by the Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR), The Broker is now launching an online follow-up discussion on the future of aid and foreign policy under the aegis of a global development strategy.

This follow-up discussion will concentrate on the following questions:

  • On what basic principles should a new global development strategy be built? Go directly to the discussion platform for the topic getting the basics right.
  • How should changing global circumstances be analyzed, and what kind of a framework should the corresponding new global approaches and priorities be given? Go directly to the discussion platform for the topic going global.
  • What is the best way to develop specific (local and global) context analyses – ‘diagnostics’ – that can serve as a basis for specified (country or regional) strategies? Go directly to the discussion platform for the topic identifying obstacles.
  • What role can civil society and (international) NGOs play, both within developing countries and at the global level? Go directly to the discussion platform for the topic global civil society.
  • What kind of new national and international institutional architecture – one that does justice to new global realities, including global public goods and policy coherence for development – is needed? Go directly to the discussion platform for the topic building a new structure.
  • What kind of knowledge infrastructure is needed to support this new architecture, both in terms of knowledge infrastructure and the organization of the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Go directly to the discussion platform for the topic knowledge infrastructure.

Background information on the follow-up discussion

Less Pretension, More Ambition, a report written by the Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR), has succeeded in shaking up the aid debate. It has reiterated the urgency of thoroughly rethinking development policies. Over the past two months, more than 100 people contributed to the blog about the WRR report hosted by The Broker. Indeed, rapidly changing international relations, global crises, growing insights into what works and what doesn’t, and political, social and cultural turmoil in donor countries, make it necessary to fundamentally overhaul the traditional aid paradigm.

In a Special report to issue 19, The Broker has summarized the debate so far. This 24-page report provides a springboard for further and more in-depth discussion.

In the report, the WRR team kicks off by outlining their main recommendations. The subsequent discussion is divided into four sections. First, ‘Getting the basics right’, explains general principles: the motives, goals, definitions, scale and concepts of development that determine how a policy is shaped. Second, ‘Going global’, explores one of the main pillars of the report, namely global development. It is precisely because global development requires the most scrutiny that it is given prominence over another pillar, the need for ‘diagnostics’ and a more ‘country-specific approach’, discussed in the third section, ‘Identifying obstacles’. Finally, ‘Building a new structure’ examines the consequences of all this for the ‘development architecture’, i.e. the new set of governmental and other organizational institutions that will be needed to manage new realities.

This is obviously an arbitrary classification. The report tackles so many issues that there is essentially something for everyone. Not surprisingly, responses were varied and often contradictory. Above all, we have tried to create a ‘synthesis’, a common ground upon which to build a new development strategy that will usher in a new phase of the debate and produce real alternatives.

Occasionally there were fundamental disagreements as well. Sometimes a constructive debate needs clear opposition, as it gives people something to choose from. We hope this will spark a constructive follow-up debate that will lead to the emergence of a new development architecture in the Netherlands.

We would like to set the bar even higher. The WRR calls for the formulation of a Dutch ‘globalization agenda’, an ‘analysis of Dutch interests at a global level, and a strategy to safeguard global public goods’. If the interests of the poor and the excluded are seen as a global public good, then we cannot agree more. Traditional poverty reduction should be embedded in a much more comprehensive global policy.

Although only a limited number of blog posts truly deal with these issues at a global level, the vague contours of a new policy area are beginning to emerge, which the WRR calls ‘global development’. This means a policy that focuses on global public goods, global governance and policy coherence – supranational factors that create an enabling environment and remove constraints for development and emancipation. Some advocate combining this with worldwide (and Dutch national) environmental policies and suggest that global sustainable development be used as an umbrella concept. Others look at violence and conflict, and prefer policies that focus on global human security.

This is not to say that global development should entirely replace aid at the local level. On the contrary, endogenous development is the explicit aim. And it is also at this level that context-specific analysis – diagnostics, as the WRR calls it – should lead to more strategic policy making. The biggest challenge might be how to consolidate these two different perspectives – the global and the local – into one coherent, effective analytical and policy framework.

We hope to welcome in the next round of debating the views of those who up till now have refrained from participating: the economists, political scientists, international relations academics, sociologists involved in transnational networks or global social movements, climate philosophers, experts in the field of ICT and web 2.0, ‘new wars’ or urbanization, as well as defence and energy specialists – in other words, all those who in light of their specific expertise should be contributing to new perspectives on global development.

We hope that everybody will join us again for a constructive follow-up debate on The Broker website, where you can find longer versions of the sections in this special report containing extensive quotes and links to the relevant texts.

The four sections of the Special report in issue 19 of The Broker are included separately below. Links to longer versions of these sections are included in each of the discussion platforms.

In its report Less Pretension, More Ambition, the WRR recognizes that aid can make only a limited contribution to development. A shift of emphasis is needed towards development and growth, with more focus on global and regional issues.   read more >>

The energetic online debate about the motives, definitions and perceptions of development is a starting point for reformulating development policies.   read more >>

Our increasingly interdependent world requires development policies that acknowledge the global context and address a new reality where a variety of actors as well as the state play a role.   read more >>

We need to expand our knowledge and use it in more context-specific analyses. The question is at what scale: national, regional or global?   read more >>

A new institutional architecture for global development is sorely needed. How can this be done without shifting the focus away from those who need it most, namely the poor and the marginalized?   read more >>



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