Participatory Development Praxis 79
5
Participatory Development Praxis
in Pakistan’s Punjab: A Case Study1
Akmal Hussain
INTRODUCTION
A programme whose goal is nothing short of overcoming poverty in
rural Punjab within a decade is historically unprecedented in this
province in terms of both magnitude and complexity of effort. It
was therefore clear from its inception that the Punjab Rural Support
Programme (PRSP) would have to bring together a talented team
of managers, each of whom could combine creativity with commitment.
The challenge was to create a work culture in which this creativity
and commitment could be sustained through an intensive
work schedule and collective synergy. Since we were facing a
unique set of circumstances in each of the eight regions where we
started work, it was necessary to develop a management system
that permitted sufficient space to each member of the team for independent
thought and action, while at the same time, creating an environment
for collective reflection and conceptualization through
which we could deepen the quality of social action. This chapter attempts
to present the principles underlying the management style
and work procedures of PRSP, while also reporting on the strategic
plan we devised through initial field visits, the objectives we specified
for the program and the remarkable results that were achieved
in the first four months.
Box 5.1 Mission Statement
Overcome poverty in rural Punjab within a decade by actualizing the potential
of the poor through a regional support system. This system shall be designed to
enable organization of poor village communities through rediscovery of community
consciousness and to provide access to skill training, credit and technical support.
The purpose of such a support system is to initiate and sustain a process of diversified
growth of income and the human, natural and economic resources of the poor.80 Akmal Hussain
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE AND SOCIAL CHANGE
Introduction
Overcoming poverty in rural Punjab is fundamentally a process of
empowering the poor to actualize their creative potential. Such a profound
social change to be sustainable has to involve tapping into
the specific cultural well–springs of creative consciousness of the
Punjab peasantry.
The peasants of Punjab may be poor, but they are inheritors of
a rich cultural and philosophical tradition that is reflected in their
forms of apprehending social life, their poetry and folklore. Through
their forms of love and social action, the peasants of Punjab express
their dreams and sorrows and create their individual and collective
history.
The consciousness of the poor peasantry in rural Punjab has been
deeply influenced by the Punjabi Sufi saints. This can be seen in
the folklore and experiential reference points of contemporary language
use in rural Punjab. Six interrelated elements of the Punjabi
Sufi tradition may be relevant to the PRSP endeavour:
1. The growth of the self involves a transcendence of the ego
through a relationship of love (Ishq in Punjabi) with the ‘other’.
Tuun hi tanna tuun hi banna
Rum rum wich tuun
Kahey Hussain faqir sien da
Ma nahi sub tuun
You are the woof and you the warp
You are in every pore
Says Shah Hussain Faqir
Naught am I, all is you
(Shah Hussain, 17th century)
2. The practice of Ishq involves combining passion with rigorous
rationality.
Hathi ishq mahawat Ranjha
Unkess de de huriay
Passion is the elephant
That Ranjha guides with hisParticipatory Development Praxis 81
Sharp spear of reason
(Shah Hussain, 17th century)
3. The true stature of a person therefore is measured not in terms
of what he owns, but what he gives to others.
Lakh crore jinha de juria
So bhi jhoori jhoori
Bhatth pai teri chadar chiti
Changi faqiran de bhori
Those who have accumulated
wealth in countless coins,
That too is dust, mere dust
Your clean white cloak is cast into
the fire
Better is the mud coloured one of
The Faqir
(Shah Hussain, 17th century)
4. By the same token the more developed a person’s consciousness,
the more he locates himself in the collective being of the
community
Saadh Sangat dey ohley rehnday
Budh tinhaan di soori
The Faqirs have their being in the
togetherness of the community
For their consciousness is in full
bloom
(Shah Hussain, 17th century)
5. The process of growth of the self therefore is progressive integration
with the community:
Shah Hussain Shahadat Paenn jo maran mitraan de aggay
Shah Hussain they have achieved eternal life, who die for their
fellow men.
Mitraan di majmani khatar dil da lahoo bali da.
As an offering for your fellow men burn the blood of the
heart.
(Shah Hussain, 17th century)82 Akmal Hussain
6. Dialogue is conceived by the Sufi as a process of mutuallyfertilizing
reflection, which so enters consciousness that it becomes
the basis for existential choices and action.
Gal oh keeti saaday khiyal pai
Pai wo nibhai loriyay
What you say has entered my
consciousness,
So, now my being seeks its
fulfilment
(Shah Hussain, 17th century)
These elements of the Sufi tradition are deeply rooted in the consciousness
of the Punjabi peasantry. They lie just below the surface
of language use, in their silences, as much as the cadences of their
speech. Najam Hussain Syed, (perhaps the greatest Punjabi Sufi poet
of the 20th century) has referred to this subliminal consciousness of
the peasantry:
Kitay chup dhalaiaan utte dhol marindi-e-unnakhi
Somewhere on the slopes of silence
beat the drums of the unsaid
Door kidaen chaitay de kandhiaan uttey rehi ranjhan taendi
chhan
Far on the banks of memory falls
your shadow, Ranjha
Chup ohley chaeh lai bhathi-e-unnakhi kolon buch buch langay
saray
Behind the coverlet of silence,
the unsaid crouches, we slip past,
trying to avoid it
[Najam Hussain Syed, 20th century]
Once this counter consciousness of love and relatedness, of integrity
and creative action is brought to the surface, a new recognition
and set of values come into play. The challenge in the dialogues undertaken
by PRSP was to bring about this gestalt switch in consciousness
through word, gesture and work procedures. Participatory Development Praxis 83
The awakening of this consciousness in however nascent a form
was seen in the work of PRSP to be a material force for social change.
One of the important factors in the rapid growth and depth of Community
Organization (CO) formation in the PRSP is that this consciousness
was tapped during the dialogues.
Box 5.2 Deploying Consciousness For Social Change
Six inter-related elements of the Punjabi Sufi tradition may be relevant to the
PRSP endeavour:
1. The growth of the self involves a transcendence of the ego through a
relationship of love (Ishq) with the ‘other’.
2. The practice of Ishq involves combining passion with rigorous rationality.
3. The true stature of a person therefore is measured not in terms of what he
owns, but what he gives to others.
4. By the same token, the more developed a person’s consciousness, the more
he locates himself in the collective being of the community.
5. The process of growth of the self therefore is progressive integration with the
community.
6. Dialogue is conceived by the Sufi as a process of mutually fertilizing reflection,
which so enters consciousness that it becomes the basis for existential choices
and action.
PASSION, PARADIGM AND PRAXIS
Consciousness, Organizational Structure
and Work Procedures
The defining feature of the programme is the passion, which impels
those who work in it and those for whom we work. It is not just an
emotion but a form of consciousness. It comes from transcending the
ego and relating with the community through love. Thus, passionate
consciousness is both a cohering force of the community and also
the synergy through which the PRSP team engages in a process of
action and reflection. This principle is the basis of the work culture
and PRSP’s methodology of action. It is illustrated by the dialogues
that occur between PRSP personnel and rural communities on
one hand and between the members of PRSP team on the other. 84 Akmal Hussain
The dialogues are designed to identify and actualize the creative
potential of individuals.
The form of learning and creative growth pursued by PRSP
through its dialogues has been called ‘prophetic’ as opposed to
‘messianic’ (Cooper 1971, Hussain 1974). The messianic leader/
teacher/manager is one who claims to embody the truth and if his
followers want to become something they can only be his shadows.
By contrast, the prophetic leader/teacher/manager is one who abnegates
his own exceptionality and recognizes each individual as
the unique origin of change. The participants in the dialogues
whether between PRSP and a community or within PRSP itself, are
essentially co-equals in a journey of actualizing each other’s creative
potential in the context of social change.
The organizational structure reflecting the messianic approach
is hierarchic and restricts the space for independent thinking. Its
work procedures involve issuing instructions or blindly implementing
them. By contrast, the organizational structure associated with
the prophetic approach is non-hierarchic, designed to provide space
for thought and action by autonomous individuals in collegial interaction.
Its work procedures, instead of being simple dichotomies between
instructions and compliance, are designed for mutually
fertilizing dialogues, action and collective reflection.
Alternative Paradigms and the Methodologies of Action
The paradigm of the PRSP is a framework of thought and action that
has been called Participatory Development (Hussain 1994). This
is exactly opposite to the paradigm that has been followed by development
practitioners in Pakistan during the last 50 years. Since
Pakistan’s independence, the idea behind development actions was
that the poor are victims to whom certain goods and services have
to be delivered. This is the ‘top-down’ paradigm. In the past, governments
at best tried to develop administrative mechanisms through
which goods and services could be handed out to the poor. It is now
widely recognized that such an approach has not worked because in
the process of delivering goods and services, a large part of the resources
get lost en route, while poverty is reproduced after some time
(Hussain 2004, 2003). The problem of the lack of goods and services
for the poor is the result of the fact that they are locked into a system
of dependence at the local and national levels. The dependenceParticipatory Development Praxis 85
of individual members of poor village communities originates in
the fact that they are fragmented and alone. They have neither
the skills nor the resources to increase their productivity, nor the
organizational strength through which to acquire resources from
governments, donors and the market. Participatory Development
paradigm by contrast aims to enable the poor to organize, acquire
new skills, increase productivity, achieve savings, and develop the
ability to access training, technical support and credit from a variety
of institutional sources.
Table 5.1 Counterposed Approaches to
Leadership/Management/Teaching
Messianic Prophetic
Leader/manager/teacher claims to
embody the truth and if his followers
want to be something, they can only
be his shadows.
Leader/manager/teacher abnegates
his own exceptionality and recognizes
each individual as the unique origin of
change.
Organizational structure is
hierarchical in which space for
thinking is restricted.
Organizational structure is collegial
(non-hierarchical), designed to provide
space for thought and action by
autonomous individuals.
Work procedure involves issuing
instructions or thoughtless
implementation.
Work procedures designed for mutuallyfertilizing
dialogues, action and
collective reflection.
PARTICIPATORY DEVELOPMENT PARADIGM
Elements of the Participatory Development Paradigm
Participatory Development (Hussain 1994) is a process that involves
the participation of the poor at the village level to build their human,
natural and economic resource base for breaking out of the poverty
nexus. It specifically aims at achieving a localized capital accumulation
process based on the progressive development of group
identity, development of skills and generation of local resources. The
essential feature of Participatory Development is social mobilization
or the formation of group identity. This is done by initiating a
series of dialogues with rural communities that can result in the 86 Akmal Hussain
formation of community organizations. The beginning of the process
is therefore the emergence of a nascent form of community
consciousness. This is then deepened as the community identifies
and implements projects for increasing income, acquiring new skills
and begins to engage in collective savings.
As the sense of group identity is deepened, it gives a new selfconfidence
through which the community can engage in more ambitious
projects involving collective action and management.
The concept of Participatory Development has three key elements:
1. Process: It is a process whose moving forces are the growth of
consciousness and group identity and the realization in practice
of the creative potential of the poor.
2. Empowerment: The process of reconstructing a group identity,
of raising consciousness, of acquiring new skills and of
upgrading their knowledge base, progressively imparts to the
poor a new power over the economic and social forces that
fashion their daily lives. It is through this power that the poor shift
out of the perception of being passive victims of the process
that perpetuates their poverty. They become active forces
in initiating interventions that progressively im-prove their
economic and social condition, and help overcome poverty.
3. Participation: The acquisition of the power to break the vicious
circle of poverty is based on participation within an organization,
in a series of projects. This participation is not through
‘representatives’ who act on their behalf but rather, the actual
involvement of each member of the organization in project
identification, formulation, implementation and evaluation.
Decisions are collectively taken in open meetings of ordinary
members at the village/mohalla-level organization and work
responsibilities assigned on issues such as income generation
projects, fund savings, conservation practices in land use, infrastructure
construction and asset creation.
The Dynamics of Participatory Development
The process of participatory development proceeds through a dynamic
interaction between the achievement of specific objectives for Participatory Development Praxis 87
improving the resource position of the local community and the inculcation
of a sense of community identity. Collective actions for specific
objectives such as a small irrigation project, building a school,
provision of clean drinking water or agricultural production activities
can be entry points for a localized capital accumulation process.
This is associated with group savings schemes, reinvestment and
asset creation. The dynamics of rticipatory development are based on
the possibility that with the achievement of such specific objectives
for an improved resource position, the community would acquire
greater self-confidence and strengthen its group identity.
The Implementation Mechanism
A rural support system that enables:
1. Organizing village communities and rediscovery of community
consciousness.
2. Access to credit.
3. Access to skill training.
4. Access to technical support from:
(i) Government departments
(ii) Donors
(iii) Other NGOs
(iv) Autonomous bodies
AIM
To overcome poverty in rural Punjab within a decade by actualizing
the potential of the poor through a regional support system. This system
shall be designed to enable organization of poor village communities
through rediscovery of community consciousness, and to
provide access to skill training, credit and technical support. The purpose
of such a support system is to initiate and sustain a process of
diversified growth of income and the human, natural and economic
resources of the poor.88 Akmal Hussain
OBJECTIVES OF THE PROGRAM
1. To organize approximately 1.63 million households into approximately
29,681 community organizations with around half
of them being women’s COs, in 13,629 villages to achieve 100 per
cent coverage of the poor population in the target regions.
2. On the basis of a series of dialogues with COs, identify a portfolio
of diversified income generation projects in agriculture,
livestock, micro enterprises and small scale infrastructure.
Through implementation of these projects, achieve a 50 per cent
increase in income levels of the poor population in the target
region in five years on a sustainable basis.
3. Enable the provision of training to 107,372 men and women
amongst the poor population in the target districts over the fiveyear
period, in the following fields:
(i) Community Management
(ii) Livestock, Agriculture and Forestry
(iii) Poultry
(iv) Technical/Industrial Training
(v) Micro-enterprise Development
4. On the basis of social mobilization, skill training and provision
of technical support, provide credit of PKR 6.66 billion to PKR
486,240 beneficiaries over a five-year period, and achieve
95 per cent repayment.
5. Achieve a total savings fund of COs of approximately PKR
428.51 million in the target regions.
VERIFIABLE INDICATORS
In a programme whose defining feature is to enable the formation of
community organizations and the development of community consciousness,
the most important verifiable indicator is the number of
community organizations formed. A CO is deemed to have been
formed only when it has acquired the ability to hold regular meetings
(at least three) with proper documentation of the meetings
and has opened a savings account with contributions from each of
its members.Participatory Development Praxis 89
The number of CO meetings held (with over 60 per cent attendance)
becomes the second indicator and the amount of CO savings
is the third indicator of programme performance.
Household level portfolio of investment is developed by the regional
teams through detailed dialogues with communities. These
portfolios of investment indicate the income generating activities that
households wish to undertake. The obstacles to undertaking such
projects and successfully completing them are identified. The number
of investment projects completed successfully thus becomes the
fourth indicator of programme performance.
The basis of the credit appraisal of portfolios of investment is
the assessment of their viability—first by the CO and then by programme
staff members. Credit disbursements therefore represent
collective evaluation of individual projects and become the fifth indicator
of programme performance.
Training needs in the context of both household level projects and
collective projects are identified as essential elements in the process
of localized capital accumulation. Training needs are identified
on the basis of dialogues between programme personnel and COs.
The number of persons trained in various fields thus becomes the
sixth indicator of programme performance.
Last, credit repayment performance indicates not only the success
of income generation projects but also the capacity of the CO to
bring to bear its collective identity in ensuring timely payback of borrowed
money by the individual households.
In the long run, the ability of COs to design and implement collective
projects and to resolve social conflicts at the CO level would
become an important indicator of programme performance.
PROGRAMME PERFORMANCE
Programme Performance Dimensions
The Quantitative Dimension
In the period July to October 1998, we have, by the Grace of God, not
only established eight regional teams in our target divisions, but have 90 Akmal Hussain
also formed 764 community organizations with a collective savings
fund of PKR 2.578 million. We have disbursed PKR 22.41 million
of credit to 1,403 beneficiaries in a wide range of fields including
agriculture, livestock and micro-enterprises. The credit repayment is
100 per cent. We have trained 782 village level activists in fields such
as community management, livestock, agriculture, poultry, public
health and light engineering.
The Qualitative Dimension
A change is beginning to take place in the quality of life of the rural
poor in the areas of our operation. I have had occasion to talk with
communities in all the eight regions. The hope that we have kindled
and the love that I have received from them has deeply moved me.
Across the eight regions, the organization of poor village communities
and the start-up of income generation projects have not only
given a new confidence and collective purpose in many cases but
have also significantly increased their individual incomes. Beyond the
income dimension I have noticed, for example, in Multan a village
community reported that they are beginning to settle their disputes
within the CO and have even resolved amicably the disputes, which
they had earlier registered at the local police station. A women’s
CO in the same area have set up a girls school indicating the beginning
of collective action for the collective benefit of the community.
Linkages For Technical Support
The Department of Livestock and Dairy Development has been mobilized
by our Regional General Manager (RGMs) to provide training
to village activists in improved livestock management. The Department
of Agriculture has been mobilized to give advice on pesticide
use and the Department of Health has been mobilized to provide their
expertise at a community managed health camp. Private sector firms
such as AEFFCO have been linked up with PRSP, to conduct workshops
with COs for training in soil testing and use of composite fertilizers
for the precise nutrient requirements of each field. Similarly,
Nestlé Milkpak has been approached to provide information on increasing
yields of milch animals.Participatory Development Praxis 91
Programme Performance and Verifi able Indicators
Table 1 shows programme progress in terms of verifiable indicators
specified in Section VII. A total of 764 COs were formed during the
period July–October 1998, including 542 men’s COs, 211 women’s
COs and 11 mixed COs.
An indication of the management capability and early state of community
identity formation is the fact that collective savings amounting
to PKR 2.578 million were achieved, including PKR 2.397 million
savings amongst male COs and PKR 0.18 million savings amongst
women’s COs. Repayment of credit so far is 100 per cent.
A total of 1,838 CO meetings were held with over 60 per cent
attendance. Credit amounting to PKR 22.141 million was disbursed
during the period, including PKR 20.878 million to male COs and
PKR 1.263 million to female COs.
Totally 782 persons were trained in a variety of fields such as
Community Management Skill Training (CMST), livestock, agriculture,
industrial and technical.
Software Development for PRSP
At PRSP, the importance of using Information Technology in financial
and credit operations was felt at a very early stage. Under the
guidance of the honorary Chief Executive Officer Dr Akmal Hussain,
a computer specialist was appointed who was supported by the Computer
Systems Department of Sayyed Engineers (Private) Limited2
on
a gratis basis., to cater to the specific features of PRSP operations.
A decentralized accounting system in which social mobilization, CO
formation and a wide range of individual and collective activities
were important elements.
The Financial Accounting System has been installed in all regional
offices. The development of a credit control system has been completed
and trial run of this system is taking place. This system was
installed in the regional offices in October 1998. A brief description
of these systems follows.
Financial Accounting System
The Financial Accounting System of PRSP was installed at all regional
offices in October 98. Financial data is being fed into this system92 Akmal Hussain
on a daily basis. This system is running free of errors since we received
the computerized monthly Trial Balance report from all regional
offices.
Three important reports will be generated from Financial Accounting
System:
1. Trial Balance
2. Comparison of budgeted versus actual expenses.
3. Month-wise comparison of actual expenses
Credit Monitoring and Information System
Credit control system is a core system for PRSP because it will not
only help to record and maintain data, but it will also help in analyzing
the information like technical appraisals and the sources of incomes
of the borrowers. The scope of this system is very wide since
it is linked with financial accounting as well as social mobilization.
A significant advantage of this system is the ease with which loan
repayment schedules can be prepared specifically catering to the gestation
period of each project. Moreover, credit control officers will be
able to inform and remind social organizers and subsequently COs
about dates of their repayments a week ahead.
Technically, this system will consist of master databases of borrowers,
COs where credit has been disbursed and two transaction
files to record the disbursements and recoveries. The system will generate
reports to summarize the loan information by types of loans,
by COs, by social organizers, by field units or by regional offices. On
the other hand, it will take care of the most complex jobs of the
credit control officers like bank reconciliation, preparation of income
statement and preparation of loanee ledger.
CONCLUSIONS
In the period July–October 1998, we established, by the grace of God,
not only eight regional teams in our target divisions but have also
formed 764 community organizations with a collective savings fund
of PKR 2.578 million. We have disbursed PKR 22.41 million of credit
to 1,403 beneficiaries in a wide range of fields including agriculture,
livestock and micro-enterprises. The recovery rate of credit so Participatory Development Praxis 93
far is 100 per cent. Training has been imparted to 782 village activists
in community management skills, agriculture and livestock.
Underlying the quantitative dimension in terms of verifiable indicators
was the fact that a perceptible change in the quality of life of
the rural poor had occurred in the areas of our operations. Individuals,
who previously felt isolated, helpless and incapable of taking
initiatives were organized, acquired new skills, increased incomes
and access to both markets and government departments. This qualitative
change following community organization and collective economic
initiatives gave a sense of empowerment to the poor.
Having achieved improved access over both the market and the
local state and having embarked on a process of income generation,
savings and investment, the poor achieved a new confidence in themselves
and a new hope in their future. For example, small household
durri (hand-woven cloth carpet) producers in one region were
locked into an exploitative relationship of dependence on arhtis (intermediary
between the individual producer, craftsman and the market.
In the context of this paper, the arhti conducts a ‘putting out’
system whereby he provides to the durri producers the thread, the
weaving equipment and subsistence rashans [subsistence items] and
in return appropriates, at a predetermined price, the durris from
the producers, and then sells the durris at a much higher price in the
market). The durri manufacturers were provided with raw materials
at higher than the market prices by the arhtis and durris were
acquired by the arhtis at less than market prices. After PRSP intervention,
these durri manufacturers now buy raw materials and sell
durris independently leading to an increase in their incomes typically
from about PKR 2,500/- per month previously to about PKR
4,500/- per month now. Similarly, in other regions, poor households
set up small village retail shops, acquired buffaloes, small goats, set
up bicycle repair shops and chikkh (screen used as protection against
the sun and made from stitching together thin slivers of bamboo)
producing units. A total of 1,403 households benefited from such
interventions. Beyond the income dimension I noticed, for example,
in Multan a village community reported that they were beginning
to settle their disputes within the CO and even resolved amicably
the disputes, which they had earlier registered at the local police
station. A women’s CO in the same area set up a girls school, indicating
the beginning of collective action for the collective benefit
of the community.
We have also succeeded by the grace of God, in establishing linkages
with government line departments and the private sector to bring 94 Akmal Hussain
their expertise to bear for poverty alleviation at the village level. Beyond
the income dimension I have noticed, for example, in Multan,
a village community reported that they are beginning to settle their
disputes within the CO and have even resolved amicably the disputes
that they had earlier registered at the local police station. A women’s
CO in the same area has set up a girls school indicating the beginning
of collective action for the collective benefit of the community.
In short, across the eight regions of Punjab, the seeds of community
organization, improvement in incomes, skills, systematic provision
of technical support at the village level, and a change in social
consciousness have been planted. We may be witnessing the
tentative beginning of a silent revolution in the lives of the rural
poor in Punjab.
NOTES
1. This case study is based on a report to the Board of Directors on the performance
of the first four months of the Punjab Rural Support Programme, an institution
I had volunteered to establish as its first Honorary Chief Executive Officer,
during the period May to November 1998. The programme involved social mobilization
for poverty alleviation amongst rural communities in eight districts of
Punjab, using the Participatory Development methodology.
2. The support of Mr Irfan Saeed and his team of Software Experts at Sayyed
Engineers (Private) Limited for the development of customized software for PRSP
is gratefully acknowledged.
REFERENCES
Cooper, David. 1971. The Death of the Family. New York: Pantheon Books.
Hussain, Akmal. 1974. ‘The End of Teaching’, Weekly Viewpoint, Lahore.
———. 1994. Poverty Alleviation in Pakistan. Lahore: Vanguard Books (Private)
Limited.
———. 2004. ‘Institutions, Economic Structure and Poverty in Pakistan’, South Asia
Economic Journal, 5(1), January–June 2004. New Delhi and London: Sage
Publications.
Hussain, Akmal. 2003. With inputs from A.R. Kemal, A.I. Hamid, Imran Ali, and
Khawar Mumtaz. Poverty, Growth and Governance. UNDP-Pakistan National Human
Development Report 2003, chapter 3. Karachi: Oxford University Press.
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