By Yossef Ben-Meir
What development projects deliver short-term
relief to people and long-term economic structural change for sustained growth
and should therefore be part of the upcoming economic stimulus package? The
answer: projects determined and managed by the local communities they are
intended to benefit.
Depending on life conditions and challenges rural and urban communities face and
the ideas they have for local development, projects communities typically
prioritize to implement include roads, schools, clinics, community centers,
daycare, and cooperatives. They are in private sector development, pubic health,
green initiatives, training, and empowering people. They are in agriculture,
manufacturing, and human services and development.
Community-level projects directly and more quickly impact local populations
because of their proximity. Projects are located in local communities where they
stimulate jobs and purchases of materials and equipment. As projects are
designed, implemented, and functioning (more immediately because of community
control and local reliance) stimulus takes effect. There is not a lag in waiting
for a trickle-down of benefits.
Bottom-up stimulus would have groups of tens, hundreds, and thousands of local
citizens gather together and assess their challenges and opportunities in the
process of creating an action plan for development. "Participatory" planning
activities help guide community members through dialogue and information
gathering in order to develop solutions to their pressing needs. Their community
projects funded by government will create multi-tiered, private-public
partnerships, and advance both federalism and national unity.
In bottom-up stimulus, decision-making of local participants and partner groups
is improved through information sharing and collaboration. Risk is shared in
these community investments; local people and organizations also contribute
in-kind, sometimes in the form of labor and partial financing. Bottom-up
stimulus diversifies the economy and makes it more resilient in times of
fluctuation.
The question now becomes: what programs can deliver bottom-up stimulus and
should be earmarked in the economic package? Here are five recommendations that
taken together can catalyze tens of thousands of viable community projects.
1. Double the size of AmeriCorps (to 150,000 volunteers) and thirteen-fold
increase the Peace Corps (to President John Kennedy's goal of 100,000). To
expand and reform, the agencies should recruit volunteers with generalist
backgrounds and emphasize in their training and service the organizing of
community meetings and partnership-building, a role their volunteers are
positioned to perform. Investing in volunteerism (and the community projects
volunteers catalyze) will reduce unemployment and unleash in the near future a
powerful wave of social entrepreneurs.
2. In public universities and colleges, support programs and new centers for
community mediation, training, and development that enable students, faculty,
and others to engage local communities and assist them in development planning
and implementation. University-community partnership for development and
"action-research" will bring win-win transformative benefits. State funded
universities and colleges are being hit hard by the economic downturn and this
is an important way they can contribute to and benefit from the stimulus.
3. At least double the funding for the soon-to-be called Council for Faith-Based
and Neighborhood Partnerships, in addition to President-elect Obama's proposed
reforms of the Council, including nondiscrimination in hiring, training to
access funding, and serving 1 million students in summer and after school
programs. I also suggest requiring religious institutions to have a separate
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization for the community-service related projects they
administer to help avoid potential impropriety with public funds. The Council
should encourage interfaith partnerships to increase project sustainability.
4. Establish a new fund that injects bottom-up stimulus in local areas suffering
socio-economically and environmentally through no fault of their own; for
example, because of natural and human-made disasters, and social dislocation
caused by free trade. These communities of people are in serious need and stand
to benefit the most from the process of establishing community-owned and managed
projects.
5. Increase funding and training for community extension agents from government
departments (e.g., Interior, Energy, Housing, Health and Human Services, and
Commerce) and agencies (e.g., Small Business Administration and Environmental
Protection Agency). Those in federal, state, and local government who interface
with community groups can be ideally situated to bring people together to plan
and implement development initiatives.
Robert Rubin, the self-described consigliere of Citigroup and former Treasury
secretary, described as a "perfect storm" the events that led to the global
financial collapse. The perfect storm then assisted the rise of Barack Obama, a
leader quite familiar with the mechanics of community organizing and bottom-up
social change and movements. The perfect storm - and the immediate and long-term
economic results the country needs to navigate out of it - could now indirectly
deliver its antidote: bottom-up stimulus.
About the author: Yossef Ben-Meir teaches sociology at the University of
New Mexico in Albuquerque and is president of the High Atlas Foundation (www.hightatlasfoundation.org),
a nonprofit organization that advances community development in Morocco.
... Payvand News - 12/26/08 ...
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