My wife and I went to the annual Baha'i conference on Social and Economic Development in Orlando earlier this week. The session on dealing with how to design and run development projects in fragile post-conflict countries, such as Iraq or Afghanistan was particularly enlightening.
Here's a picture of my summary of the recommended strategy:
In words the steps are:
- Invest in project
- Crash and burn
- repeat
Yeh, right.
ON THE OTHER HAND, consider the following body-building strategy:
In words, the steps are
- Go to gym
- destroy muscles by exercise
- repeat
Here's the thing though -- that turns out to be the only way to build up muscles -- you have to destroy them in order to build them up.
The reason is that there is something else going on, that was left off the diagram. So, maybe the diagrams should look more like this, and match the cartoon this posting started with:
We now have these steps in our success formula:
- go to Gym
- Destroy muscles by exercise
- Then a miracle occurs
- (repeat)
WE, thank God, don't need to understand molecular biochemistry, or structural engineering, or biological pathways and the Krebs Cycle, or all that stuff. All that stuff is done FOR US. We just need to recognize that a process is already in place that we can simply tap into and utilize.
The whole point of the SED conference, in my mind, the summary of it all, is that the following diagram is ALSO true, and is really just the exact same process on a larger scale:
So the steps are
- Invest in project
- crash and burn
- then a miracle occurs
- (repeat)
In particular, the point is that the local people, the indigenous population, need to be the ones doing the investing in their own self-help project. AND, they need to realize that this project is very similar to muscle building, or learning how to shoot baskets at the gym -- the way you "succeed" is by repeatedly failing and going back for more.
There is no other pathway. There are no shortcuts. There are no pills to take. There is no way to "import" infrastructure, and simply assemble the pieces in place, like some sort of prefabricated building.
But, despite all that, we are correct to place our hope, and our project planning dollars, in the fact that "then a miracle occurs."
Comment -- This insight actually has a rather profound impact on how donors and funding agencies should assess whether a project is a "success" or a "failure".
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