Text and Pictures by Barry Greville-Eyres
There is no substitute for 'Walkabout' particularly in the official development assistance context
Background
Ironically, the
term walkabout is recognized in
technical and business management parlance as MBWA or management by walking around. It was popularized in the ‘80s and
involves managers meandering
about in an unstructured manner, arbitrarily through the workplace, to check
with employees/beneficiaries, equipment, or on the status of continuing work. An
Antipodean variation on the theme is the journey of discovery or rite of
passage during which adolescent males, in Australian Aboriginal culture, live
in the wilderness for a period up to six months. This enables them to make the
spiritual and traditional transition into adulthood. This socio-cultural practice
is entrenched, in various guises, in many traditional and even contemporary
societies (including African) marking an important learning and developmental
milestone in someone’s life. One could argue that the ‘generalized practice’ is
second nature but has been lost or severely eroded over time by external
influences including urbanization and globalization. Sense-around or the three
L’s of Listening, Looking and Learning are at the core of the walkabout
experience.
CLA (USAID) and capacity development (primarily UNDP and
other UN agencies, DFID-UKAID, AusAID-AustralianAID), often used
interchangeably in the official development assistance
(ODA) context, is the process (of
knowledge, skill, experience and attribute acquisition) through which
individuals, organizations and societies obtain, strengthen and maintain the competences
to set and achieve their own, time-bound development objectives.
The walkabout management (and learning) model is a simple
one, and in workplaces where employees are within proximity to each other it
can be extraordinarily effective especially nowadays where there is an
over-reliance on information and communication technologies. Pundits argue that
its destined for a comeback as it trumps verbose, impersonal emails
meticulously prepared from behind closed doors; smashes the glass cubicle-siloed
work space and mentality and more importantly, is handy for building rapport and cohesion among team members.
A key disadvantage that
MBWA has however is the limit posed on it by geography. In the case of
decentralized offices and or a regional sphere of operations, its becomes particularly
challenging and conscious decisions and active practices need to be put in
place to promote this orientation.
This article intends validating, based on a career of
practice, the notional concept of ‘walkabout’ yet also argues how integral it
is not only to good development per se
but also highly effective CLA/CD. There is no substitute for hands-on
management and it’s also widely accepted that intensive and participatory
engagement promotes home-grown and often, spontaneous
development solutions. An
attempt is made to locate CLA through Walkabout on a continuum citing some of
the more and less typical development responses, largely dictated by prevailing
contextual factors.
A fair depiction of Collaborating, Learning and Adapting (CLA) Pic. Courtesy of U.S. Mission Uganda
Gated and Grounded in Fragile and
Conflict Affected States (FCAS)
As a development practitioner, most of my recent work has been in FCAS
(including South Sudan, Somalia, Afghanistan, Timor-Leste, Iraq) where walking
around and as a natural extension CLA and CD, is exceedingly difficult and
often nearly impossible. Typically, staff are sequestered is secure compounds, as a matter of necessity,
and seldom have direct access to development assistance partners – whether
government counterparts, CBOs/NGOs, other stakeholders and beneficiaries.
Occasional and hard-earned engagement is at great risk with parties having to
run a gauntlet, of high drama, on either side of the wire. Personal safety
aside, national counterparts are often reluctant to venture into secure,
international compounds because of the grave danger en route, general
inconvenience and occasional disrespect meted out on them by local and foreign
guard forces. Conversely, some practitioners welcome ‘getting out of the wire’
as a rare opportunity to see things as they really are. Most err on the side of
caution and prefer not to venture out at all even with all the security
arrangements in place. All are reminded by security details that individuals
are, ultimately, ‘responsible’ for their personal security and therefore
exercise this ‘call’ accordingly.
Under these
circumstances, proximity is greatly reduced as is the ability to walkabout. Therefore,
working relationships are fleeting and national staff/counterparts ‘exist’ side-by-side
in two distinct, yet totally altered realities. Rapport, trust, face-time,
nurturing ‘holistic development’ through on-the-job mentoring and coaching which
are all vital social capital ingredients tend to be in short supply. Frequent
rest and recuperation (R&R) cycles and sporadic terror incidents add to the
climate of chaos and surrealness. Exceptions do exist and its not uncommon to
develop incredible bonds of friendship and mutual understanding under the most
trying circumstances.
Barbed wire, T-walls, barricades and birds .......
Personal Tip: My mission
was, within reason, to spend as much contact time as possible with national
colleagues and government counterparts. I facilitated access to our secured
compounds and ‘personalized’ the entire experience by receiving and seeing them
off at the gate. Transport was always arranged, and pickups/drop-offs were
timely and where necessary, I would shield them from awkward moments with guard
forces. Refreshments at the local restaurant or coffee shop was a MUST DO and
an ordinarily dull meeting was turned into, what I hoped, an outing and
pleasant occasion. Conversely, what cemented working relations and won healthy
respect in short time, was the willingness to venture out of the protected
expat-bubble and visit government counterparts at their workplaces.
A typical
development response in FCAS is to install a system of intermediate national staff,
almost always seasoned practitioners and advisors, to serve as an extension of their
international colleagues. Local advisors become the eyes, ears – sensory, atmospheric
and contextual receptors for the project, implementer and donor. This model,
used as a primary vehicle for CLA and CD, has worked well but the international
practitioner cadre bears an important responsibility in making it work seamlessly
and effectively.
Local Trainers were
Trained through (ToTs) and then sent out into ministries and departments as
dedicated points of contact and to deliver on project mandates. Language was
invariably always a problem and most projects had an excellent team of in-house
translators to support the process of developing and transferring knowledge,
skills and attitudes. Whereas most local advisors were trained professionals
(engineers, doctors and lawyers) many lacked the ‘soft developmental skills and
experience’ to take on the role as practitioner consultant. This is where the
role of the international practitioner became so critical and ‘mismatches’ were
not uncommon, where former city managers, lawyers and other professionals were
thrust into development work with little or no context-specific
experience. Nevertheless, this yielded
‘mixed’ and interesting results.
Comment: The
‘process’ of understanding a dynamic local context, through and with
intermediate advisors, and then jointly developing appropriate responses is
central to a sustainable CLA/CD journey. Enough time must be allowed to
continuously review both ‘process’ and ‘content’ issues as therein lies learning,
adaptive management and fundamental change. Each country and unique context have
its ‘natural rhythm’ and heart beat that should and cannot be hurried along
easily.
A decade or more
later there is a critical mass of experienced, local capacity in place, weaned off
from their international parentages that can continue this important work with
the ‘lightest touch’ of support and supervision. This remains an enduring
legacy of the helter-skelter development work done in the new (3rd) millennium
and which addresses, in part, sustainability issues raised by many cynics. Some recent Afghan insights - specially from southern Afghanistan (Helmand Province) are shared here at http://barrygreville-eyres.blogspot.com/2017/02/legacies-badlands-and-rough-diamonds.html.
Comment: Challenges
posed by language and the absence of professional translation are sometimes
taken for granted – this can be disastrous for a project and its implementation
if not remedied swiftly.
Comment: Another,
often, taken for granted dimension in FCASs is the impact of unresolved
conflict/trauma on a society and more specifically on CLA/CD. Experiences from
Timor-Leste are shared here.
This realization and the deeply associated complexities are a true
product of walkabout – venturing out of Dili and spending time in the
countryside with Timorese – both East and West.
A 'twist' on Walkabout
Barbed wire, T-walls, barricades and birds ....... |
How to Entrench Support and
How Not To
Embed, notwithstanding its strong militaristic connotations, is
probably the more commonly used term to take the walkabout concept to its
absolute, ‘ideal’ extreme. In general terms, CLA/CD often works best if you
physically co-locate oneself directly with your local project colleagues and or
government counterparts. This is permissible outside of FCAS situations and
where one would want to optimize contact/face-time. Typically, when commencing
on a new project, as a senior expat practitioner, one is reverently and
ceremoniously ushered to a plush office secluded from project machinations and
hullabaloo.
Personal Tip: Immediately ditch the lofty and prized project ‘unreal estate’ in
favor of co-locating yourself in a ‘general office’ arrangement where you share
with middle-level colleagues/counterparts particularly general and personal
assistants/secretaries. In quick order, one will have your finger on the ‘true’
project pulse and open yourself to the trust, respect and cultural uniqueness
of national staff. You will also have so much more fun in a communal office
arrangement with never-ending learning.
If your role is to provide strategic and institutional strengthening
support to the leadership of a government agency, then the ideal approach is to
‘embed’ yourself in proximity to the leadership – specifically in the office of
responsive and interested counterpart(s). Common leadership and project tendencies
are to often establish a ‘separate’ project office which makes reasonable sense
but does little to directly promote integration and CLA/CD. Project offices are
always better resourced and reinforces a ‘we-them’ orientation posing physical
as well as psycho-social barriers. Being fully ‘embedded’ does not negate the
need to actively engage in ‘walk and talk about practice.’
Comment: Advocate high visibility/walkabout – spend time on the move
practicing the 3 Ls - across the organization’s rank and file. Drivers, guards –
security personnel, secretaries, cleaning – and auxiliary support staff ALL have
incredible insights to share and as part of a project team also have a vested interest
in the project – specifically its plans, progress and success.
Walking the Talk
Platitudes and lip service, especially on the part of program/project
leadership, are not enough. A quick scan of development assistance websites and
associated job posts confirms that CLA/CD remain a topical and central andragogical
theme throughout the industry. It’s the understanding thereof and actual ‘doing’
that can prove to be challenging and somewhat confronting. As an adopted
approach it should be ‘practiced’ across project rank and file – in a wholly
integrated and systemic manner. ALL become ‘learners’ and ‘educators’ and no
one is exempt from ‘internalizing and living out’ this dynamic dualism. Institutional arrangements are critical to
underpin this ‘learning orientation’ that should seek to:
·
Acknowledge and reward innovation
and excellence;
·
Support the taking of informed decisions and
calculated risks;
·
Design/implement plans and
M&E frameworks that are flexible and agile;
·
Consider ever-changing contexts
and incorporate them appropriately;
·
Create time, space and opportunities
for ongoing dialogue and discussion on progress and learning (both analytical
and critical) through after action reviews, focus group feedback, reflection –
stock taking and other periodic sessions;
·
Locate the leadership and
management cadre in such a position to ACTIVELY lead the process but equally,
to empower project staff through functional delegations;
·
Promote sound, open and participatory
management practices avoiding excessive centralization and micromanagement;
·
Install an informal system of
gurus or champions to support the orientation;
·
Pivot learning (guide, support
and direct) around a strategic and dedicated learning position with an
important caveat - a shared-communal learning responsibility rather than of one
individual in that position;
Discoveries and rare pleasures when going 'walkabout' - meeting and making new friends because you put yourself out there. |
Regional Programs – Harder
and with Greater Complexity
CLA, through
Walkabout, in a regional project context is challenging, illusive and often a
moving target. Multiple countries mean an exponential amplification of learning
with a plethora of learners and educators; convergent but often, divergent
contexts/positions; governments; regional entities; interested and affected
parties. It also implies some understanding of and consensus around:
With whom do we
want to learn? (greater focus for impact)
What do we want
to learn about? (urgent and important issues)
How best to
learn within a given regional context? (an appreciation of learning styles,
methodologies and tools)
Further insights are provided below.
Lingua francas, colonial legacies, multi-culturalism and
tribalism
Action research
indicates that people’s perceptions of and responses to social change (practicing
collaboration, learning and adaptation in project-based contexts) are likely to
be situation speciļ¬c and grounded in location-based histories, social networks,
cultural norms and institutional arrangements (Paschen and Ison, 2014). They
also involve a variety of stakeholders at all societal levels. This implies, firstly,
bridging this important ‘socio-cultural divide’ that is often taken for
granted. This can only be done by ‘old-fashioned’ communication and engagement
(talking the talk). Failure to do this can and does pose barriers to learning
and collaboration. To encourage a better
and greater socio-cultural appreciation of the varied perspectives that exist
across a transdisciplinary knowledge network, stakeholders should also cross-learn
about the perspectives of fellow stakeholders in their specific context or in
this case, geographic region. A departure point is to learn about each other’s
cultures and histories; existing knowledge, skills and attitudes; and prevailing
realities. An off-the-shelf solution from elsewhere or a totally different
development paradigm that is re-engineered or retrofitted is problematic and
bound to fail. Cross-learning and contextual appreciation presupposes the time,
openness, willingness and opportunities to do so to the mutual benefit of all
significant parties. Even if these fundamental foundations are in place,
practitioners need to remain sensitive and hyper-vigilant as there is ‘so much
more’ lost in translation than language and literal meaning.
Geo-political
context, regional power and economic blocs
Most
regional ‘governing’ blocs or communities are put in place to fast-track economic
growth, social progress, sustainable development and cultural advancement. A common
scenario may be multiple but decentralized governing blocs operating out of
different locations in a vast geographic region, with diverse but equally overlapping
mandates where the minnow(s) is ultimately subordinate to one supra-bloc. A
complex operating environment fraught with power dynamics, pecking orders and
countless protocols. A typical project or development response is to embed bodies
within the blocs with less of an emphasis on roles, responsibilities and
professional competencies. Regional walkabout or travel can be demanding, circuitous
and time consuming but nevertheless critical. Under these circumstances
teamwork becomes more important than ever.
Knowledge capture and dissemination
As
discussed under the heading Walking the
Talk, the design and implementation approach should be precise and unequivocal.
Teams and all members therein ‘learn by doing’ and it should be a requirement
that all play an active role in this regard.
Concluding thoughts
CLA, whether planned/formalized and or purely opportunistic/spontaneous,
is more often intuitive and about sensing and feeling one’s way through
situations. Some people are blessed with this orientation and inner learning
voice – others are not. Organizations and projects are certainly not – more
reason for leaders and management to critically consider whether ‘business as usual’
is really an option – or perhaps not. Its only through walkabout and experience
that one can begin to build a ‘learning repertoire’ and then affect some measure
of change.
In my experience, the smallest is enough:
‘I'm happy to inform you that as of this week, I'm
now the XXXX Officer. This wouldn't have been possible without all the effort
you put into making sure that the project recognized my efforts. I can't
appreciate your persistence, support, and guidance over the past year enough.
Thank you so much………’