World Bank - Civil Society Engagement Review of Fiscal Years 2010

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Transcript World Bank - Civil Society Engagement Review of Fiscal Years 2010

World Bank Civil Society
Engagement
Review of Fiscal Years
2010—12
Civil Society Engagement Continuum
ACTIVITY
NATURE OF
INTERACTIVITY
LEVEL OF
DECISIONMAKING
EXPECTED
OUTPUTS
Information
access/
Dissemination
One-way
None
Better informed
outside
stakeholders
Policy Dialogue
Two-way
None
Both sides better
informed
Low
Views of
stakeholders taken
into account
Shared
Shared goals and
action (short term,
ad-hoc)
Equal
Common goals and
action (long term,
institutional)
Policy /
Progammatic
Consultation
Collaboration
Partnership
Two-way
Two-way
Two-way
• Access to information (2010)
• 247,786 documents released
• 1.3 million documents downloaded
by the public
• Open Development (2011)
• 7,000 indicators
• Open Finances (data since 1945)
• Mapping for Results (2,500
projects)
• Annual Meetings (-100
600+ / 400
sponsored CSOs / CS Forum)
• Food Roundtables (2008 – 2011)
• Book Launches (Oxfam, AI)
• Global Level
• Two dozen consultations on environment,
access to information, and social
accountability.
• 600 public meetings in 100+ countries
with 13,000 stakeholders.
• Country Level
• 82 of CASs
• 100% of PRSPs
• Programmatic Collaboration
• food security, disaster recovery, health,
education
• Increased participation in Bank
projects (82%)
• Increased Grant Funding
• DIRECT: 26 grant mechanisms $197 million
• INDIRECT: 2 billion through CDD
• Joint Training / Data Collection on
Open Development
• CSOs with Seat at the Table
• Advisory: CIFs, GEP, HNP
• Decision Making: GAFSP and GPSA
Partnership
Collaboration
Influence
Consultation
Dialogue
Information
Involvement
Lessons Learned
cont.
• Overall upward trend but uneven coverage and varying
quality.
• Consultations guidelines will be useful.
• Certain areas continue to be more prone to
collaboration (education, health, climate change) while
others more contentious (energy, safeguards).
• New areas emerged this period (information, food
security, disaster reaction).
• More balanced and mature interaction on both sides
(agree to disagree respectfully)
• CSOs increasing engagement of Executive Directors.
• Inviting CSOs to play deliberative role in governance is
significant advancement.
• Dr. Kim brings unprecedented experience
and understanding of CSO sector.
• Scaling-up relations with CSOs expected to
be feature of his tenure.
• Most CSOs welcome emphasis on climate
change but some may question energy
choices.
• CSOs supporting new
poverty eradication goal
but not yet sure how
to engage in practice.