Let us build a new world. Let us move to a new solar system and build a new way of living. Let us do it all again. Let us think about society, markets, systems thinking, behaviour change, people, philosophy...
Thursday, 29 September 2016
Saturday, 10 September 2016
'The Indian government has shut the door on NGOs'
This piece in the Guardian says that the government in India is trying to push out international NGOs with the specific aim of suppressing human rights abuses in the country.
This article feels tired.
It assumes that international NGOs are inherently altruistic and seek to serve people and those who are very vulnerable. Yet, it is well-known that international organisations serve donor interests and literally have to account for all their actions in rigourous monitoring and evaluation frameworks. So, it is naive to think that NGOs might not also push the donor perspective (see US or UK government or corporate foundation etc) on local people and culture.
Furthermore, the article doesn't dig deep enough into the real problem, which is equity and justice. Yes, we may need NGOs to counterbalance Government and provide an outlet for complaints and enforcement of justice and yes, we may need international ones that are based abroad on outside resources and so are not liable to be captured by local powerful elites but, the real question is who counterbalances the international NGO? Who handles the limits of power that international NGOs have on local communities? In the protection of people, how do we prevent capture by foreign elites? Why do we need international NGOs to protect local communities anyway? Where is the mechanism that helps them do that for themselves?
It would be 'nice' if NGOs were actually people-driven and people-funded but they are not. People can be powerless, marginalised and poor and don't have the resources to have their own powerful NGO. An international donor isn't the only answer to this.
Further thinking:
- What are non-international NGOs in India already doing to address human rights abuses?
- What do Indian actors say is needed in human rights?
- What is the value of international solutions for the human rights issue in India? (Beyond simply... Foreigners do human rights better than Indians)
- What examples do we have of communities already protecting themselves from elite interest?
How Neoliberalism affects people
Thursday, 23 June 2016
Marjorie Kelly on the Emergent Ownership Revolution
- Membership – How can we have the right people forming part of the business? How can they contribute to the running of the business? What roles and authority can they have?
- Purpose – What purpose can a business have beyond profit-making for shareholders? What problems might it solve? How is 'wealth', and value spread within the local community?
- Governance – Who is the board? Who does the board answer to?
- Finance – Where does the money come from? Where does it go? How does it circulate through the business? How does it generate wealth and value?
- Networks – How does the business get access to goods, services, information? How might the exchange be carried out? How might it be non-financial? How might it reach beyond typical boundaries e.g. geography?
Saturday, 2 April 2016
Will Starbucks food donations encourage local restaurants and shops to do the same?
Friday, 1 April 2016
Has anyone applied systems thinking to international development?
Tuesday, 9 February 2016
Tuesday, 26 January 2016
Tuesday, 12 January 2016
Sunday, 20 December 2015
Systems thinking skills

Saturday, 12 December 2015
How might a systems thinker talk about scaling in emerging markets?
- Immerse yourself in the chaos
- Understand the product
- Look at what is going on in the wider environment
- Set up some facts - what is the model, what is the impact
- Figure out what scale will look like
- Set some objectives
- Understand cost and value drivers
- Do market SWOT
- Set up expansion pathways
- Systematise basic processes
- Bring on actors
- Oversee replication scouting and testing mission
- Create and use feedback loop to improve systems
- Systematise complicated processes with expert help
- De-systemiatise processes, unbundle, de-mystify
- Set up network of actors and activities and functions
- Create learning buckets
- Push through learning through the network
- Oversee trickle through of information and action
- Do continuous learning and innovation
- Systematise
- De-systemiatise
- Create networks
- Package learning
- Distribute learning
- Oversee trickle through
- Do continuous learning and innovation
- Systematise
- De-systemiatise
- etc
Wednesday, 9 December 2015
What types of careers are there in international development?
- All skills needed!!
- Fundraising - storytelling, strategy, communications, budgeting, networking, relationship building, research, project management
- Policy - research, communications, legal, institutional development, relationship building, politics
- Institutional development - research, governance, relationship building, politics
- Economic development - economic modelling, industrial development, market systems strategy, welfare
- Social welfare - advocacy, social welfare subsidies, charity work,
- Private sector development - business innovation, enterprise development, enabling environment, entrepreneurship, taxation and legal
- Marketing and retail - commerce, business management, sociology, psychology, policy and/or network development
- Operations - logistics, network management, project management, finance, and/or results measurement
- HRM - sociology, psychology, training and development, and/or team building
- Finance - finance, strategy, M&E, project management, and/or legal
- Results measurement - finance, strategy, project management, and/or research
New Trends (Where you might position yourself!)
- Market-based development
- Socialist market systems
- Social welfare
- Ethical business
- Fintech
- Behaviourial sciences
- Systems change
- Resilience
- Conflict
- Livestock
- Healthcare
- Climate and the natural environment
- Informal sector
- NGO organisational development
- Foundation funding
- Be different - If you have good ideas that seem too out-of-the-box for traditional work, this could be the right time to build a skills around it and offer that skill to the development space
- Look deeper than large institutions - If you want to learn on the job, develop tangible skills and be part of an impactful project, start at the field and work upwards
- Competences are important - teamwork, patience, time management, critical thinking, adaptability, focus and determination
Saturday, 5 December 2015
What does it mean to do ethical business in apparel?
What does it mean to be ethical in fashion ?
What is the business case for ethical fashion?
- Product development that sources and uses raw materials according to sustainability regulations/norms/codes/standards/values in the industry
- Product design that reflects stories from different people and different culture (i.e. non-normative, beyond the Western beauty ideal) and in a way that respects ownership and that protects against cultural appropriation for profit
- Innovation based on participative collaboration that understands power structures and control/equality/equity issues
- Ensuring that wage payments, work health and safety conditions and regulations are observed, external audits and inspections are supported and violence and illegal practices are addressed through a fair justice system (Guardian)
- Working with producers and suppliers in developing countries: meeting regulations and codes and respecting power imbalances in ethical management styles and monitoring systems
- A systemic approach to certification/regulations/norms/codes/standards to bring about sustainability and scale and builds on the successes of supply chain strengthening (multi-stakeholder governance, transparency, independent verification, and third party chain of custody) (Business Fights Poverty)
- Creating a demand for ethical fashion by using multi-channel retail opportunities including pop-ups to showcase the brand the product and the story
- Ensuring that the pricing model allows producers and suppliers to be paid a living/decent wage even when it means charging the retailer or consumer a few pence more. The recent example of dairy farmers in the UK removing milk from supermarket shelves in an attempt to sell it directly to the consumer to get a better price.
- Understanding that in fashion there is economic value to the 'story' in the same way that any brand builds equity - through rational, emotional and behaviourial consumer analysis
- The impact on retail pricing - what is the market willing to pay?
- Businesses that 'work in Africa' do not automatically mean social enterprise or ethical sourcing
- Making your claims of ethical business practices credible and possible to observe and verify. Consumer driven - Mintel found that half of those surveyed said they would only pay more for ethical products if they understood clearly where the extra money went, and 52 per cent said they found information about which foods are ethical confusing (Supplymanagement.com)
- Working on textile waste to minimise, recycle, reuse, upcycle, upgrade, re-configure, re-integrate, and more (The Ethical Fashion Source)
---
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/10/lithuanian-migrants-chicken-catchers-trafficked-uk-egg-farms-sue-worst-gangmaster-ever
http://source.ethicalfashionforum.com/article/recycling-on-the-high-street-3-different-approaches
A systems perspective to supply chain development
Things to remember:
- For real wide-scale change, take a step back and think more systemically and less narrowly and think about the wider impact of any intervention in business operations, pricing and COGS.
- Rather than a focus on cost, price and money, consider gains that bring about long-term growth, such as quality, value and service-driven loyalty
- Yes, eliminating supply chain actors may reduce the cost of goods along the way, but there is no guarantee that this will be passed on to the customer.
- Intermediaries are the backbone of a system and agents, traders, kiosks are ever present in a market - work through them rather than against them or by sidelining them
- Look at where the incentives lie. For a supplier, that wants to shed certain costs, who might be willing to take them on? Who might benefit? Who might see the value in managing this transaction directly? This is essentially the origination of outsourcing.
- Consider how the market could function better. As a supplier, you may be incurring a huge cost getting products to the consumer. However, if a retailer can offer a better coordination function, then it would make more sense to switch to wholesale operations. Many retailers in developing countries do this albeit with need for capacity building around effective management.