Non-governmental organisations and empowerment: a study of women's self-help groups in India
Abstract
The thesis examines the nature of empowerment for poor women in India, and the
factors that influence empowerment outcomes arising from NGO interventions.
Specifically the thesis looks at the role of accountability of the NGO to the people
with whom it is working as a factor for empowerment. Empowerment of the poor
and marginalised is becoming important a part of poverty alleviation strategies in
development practice and it is recognised that the unequal power relations in the
lives of the poor has denied them access to many development benefits. NGOs
are seen to be important agents in empowerment as they are generally regarded as
being closer to the communities with which they are working, than other
development agencies, and being public-benefit organisation the goals in much of
their work generally support empowerment outcomes.
The research was concerned with how the accountability relationship an NGO has
to the people it is working with affects the empowerment outcomes they
experience. The thesis contends that NGOs are generally not ideal facilitators for
empowerment as they are not membership organisations and as a consequence the
people with whom they work do not have a direct or mandated accountability
relationship with the NGO.
This thesis defines empowerment as both the expansion of choice of an individual,
and their capacity to act on those choices. The thesis looked at 15 NGOs in
Kamataka and Maharashtra in India, and interviewed 77 self-help groups of poor
women who were served by these NGOs. The results of the study show that
women closely respond to the notion of changes in their agency as being key to
what they see as empowering. The greater expansion of choice an action then
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enabled them to take greater control of their lives, and they were able to gain other
development outcomes and resources that were available to them.
The research found that accountability of the NGO to the groups, together with
the period for which the group had been together and the decision-making of the
groups, were correlated with empowerment. The research focused on the
accountability of the NGOs to the groups and found that this was an area that
many NGOs had some difficulty with. First they had competing accountability
relationships to other stakeholders, namely their donors and the regulators; and
secondly, as public benefit organisations they were hesitant to hand high levels of
control over to a beneficiary constituency
These findings have important implications for development practice, which in
recent years has focused on more on efficient program management practices
(including accountability to the donor) for effective programs. These findings
point to a stronger focus on formalised participatory processes which hold the
development agency to account to the beneficiary constituents as a powerful
empowerment process in its own right.
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