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Adaptive Programming and going with the grain: IMAGINE's new water governance model in Goma, DRC
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Kirk, Tom (Author)
- Green, Duncan (Author)
- Stys, Patrycja (Author)
- Mosquera, Tom (Author)
Title
Adaptive Programming and going with the grain: IMAGINE's new water governance model in Goma, DRC
Abstract
Motivation
This paper explores adaptive approaches to development programmes that aim at improving service provision in underperforming sectors in fragile and conflict affected states (FCAS). It does this through a case study of the Integrated Maji Infrastructure and Governance Initiative for eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo's (IMAGINE) public-private partnership model for water provision.
Purpose
The processes and decisions that culminated in IMAGINE's model emphasize the need for programming that is culturally and politically aware, responsive to events, learns in real-time, is entrepreneurial, and works with the grain of local institutions to support change. Detailed case studies of such ways of working are crucial for programmes that seek to challenge and reform the status quo in FCAS.
Methods and approach
The paper is based on 42 semi-structured interviews conducted in the summers of 2019 and 2020. They reflect the broad spectrum of actors – individuals, public authorities, and organisations – involved in IMAGINE's evolution.
Findings
The narrative focuses on IMAGINE's attempts to professionalise and commercialise Goma's water sector. It shows how as IMAGINE repeatedly adapted to ground realities, it took on the characteristics of a public authority, thereby, engendering backlashes that threated its longer-term goals. However, by revisiting its initial values and logics it was able to get things done and achieve it aims.
Policy implications
IMAGINE's story suggests that adaptive programmes should put politically savvy local development professionals in key positions and enable them to carefully construct coalitions of allies across the systems they aim to disrupt. This may also require them to revisit and adapt their initial ideas, guiding principles and values as greater understandings of development problems are gained. A pubic authorities lens, attuned to the logics programmes seek to address and introduce to FCAS, may help analysts to foreground the implications of such adaptations.
Publication
Development Policy Review
Volume
n/a
Issue
n/a
Date
2023
Language
en
ISSN
1467-7679
Short Title
Adaptive Programming and going with the grain
Accessed
24/03/2023, 10:08
Library Catalogue
Wiley Online Library
Extra
Citation
Kirk, T., Green, D., Stys, P., & Mosquera, T. (2023). Adaptive Programming and going with the grain: IMAGINE’s new water governance model in Goma, DRC. Development Policy Review, n/a(n/a). https://doi.org/10.1111/dpr.12691
Theme
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