NEWS
A call to uphold the principles of the DAC Recommendation on Enabling Civil Society
Photo by Louise Phiri / Oxfam
JANIC endorsed the statement by DAC-CSO Reference Group, published on 29 April 2024.
A call to uphold the principles of the DAC Recommendation on Enabling Civil Society
As it is now widespread in the development community, in mid-March the Swedish aid agency, Sida, announced abruptly that all contracts with their 17 Strategic Partner Organizations in Sweden´s Civil Society Strategy would come to an end by the end of this year. This decision affects more than 1750 partner organisations in 90 countries. Little information was provided as to future funding modalities, nor consultation was held with affected organizations in Sweden or in the global South.
The DAC-CSO Reference group is aware of these precipitate shifts, in particular, our working group on the DAC Recommendation on Enabling Civil Society in Development Co-operation and Humanitarian Assistance. Following substantive discussions, the group proposed a letter that raises critical issues about the decisions and actions of Sweden in relation to the commitments made in the DAC Recommendation.
The letter is directed to the DAC Chair and the members of the DAC Community of Practice (CoP) on Civil Society. This CoP has responsibility for promoting and implementing the recommendation among all DAC members. It has been signed by 340 organisations from more than 60 countries, showing the impact of the decision and its notoriety for the civil society community. See the Letter below.
April 29, 2024
To: Carsten Staur, Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Chair
CC: Pia Hänni, Co-chair, DAC Community of Practice on Civil Society, Head of Swiss NGO Section, Division Multilateral Affairs and Swiss NGOs, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Caro Krijger, Co-chair, DAC Community of Practice on Civil Society, Head Civil Society Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Netherlands
DAC Members in the DAC Community of Practice on Civil Society
A call to uphold the principles of the DAC Recommendation on Enabling Civil Society
As organizations deeply committed to the implementation of the DAC Recommendation on Enabling Civil Society, we are writing to the DAC and its Community of Practice with alarm about the nature of recent decisions in Sweden that will seriously affect its support for civil society, the quality of these relationships, and access to resources of organisations from more than 90 countries. Many DAC members, including Sweden, played crucial and constructive roles in developing and agreeing to a comprehensive Recommendation. The Recommendation addresses long-standing and critical issues in strengthening all civil society as development actors in their own right and in holding governments to account.
While we recognize that all adherents face challenges in implementing the Recommendation’s 28 key principles and commitments, we are gravely concerned by the signals arising from the abrupt decisions taken in the last month in Sweden, which dramatically affect the following key commitments:
Meaningful and inclusive consultation and due diligence
Among the important goals embedded in the Recommendation is the central role of full and inclusive consultation with civil society in establishing policies or strategies for working with civil society “in both partner countries or territories and provider countries” [Pillar Two, §1]. On March 15, the 17 strategic partner organizations (SPOs) received the abrupt announcement that by December 31st all Sida agreements will be terminated, with no prior consultation. This decision severely affects current and future programming by more than 1,750 civil society organizations in 90 countries, who had no opportunity to engage with Sida in this decision. These organizations across the global south have been working with marginalized populations in countries where civic space is already challenging and often very constrained. There is no evidence that Sida undertook even minimal due diligence or consultation to determine the impact of its March decision on these organizations and their constituencies. Those who have trusted in their Swedish partners and Sida´s consistent and responsive support for many years now face a highly uncertain future at best, in very difficult partner country contexts.
Flexible and predictable programmatic and core support
Adherents to the Recommendation have committed to work through funding modalities for civil society that are “flexible and predictable support, core support and/or programmatic support” [Pillar Two, §3]. Sida has the very unrealistic and unworkable expectation that organizations, from both Sweden and the global south, will now be able to create concept notes or letters of interest for an expected call-for-proposals as early as May, for which at the time of writing there is no information as to the terms, conditions and scope of such proposals. Such a narrow window for alternative funding is deeply disrespectful, to say the least, of the programmatic integrity of CSOs, as development actors in their own right, and for the necessary consultations and engagement with their constituencies and counterparts.
Investing in leadership of local civil society in partner countries
All adherents to the Recommendation shall “promote and invest in the leadership of local civil society in partner countries.” [Pillar Two, §4] While recognizing that a lot of work remains to be done in complex realities for civil society, CSOs in the global south and the global north have been pro-actively engaged in actions that strengthen southern civil society leadership, working towards power shifts within equitable and complementary CSO partnerships, and supporting substantial and meaningful access for direct provider funding for southern CSOs. These are complex processes requiring a stronger commitment to change on the part of civil society, north and south, as well as on the part of provider terms and conditions for funding.
Enabling equitable partnerships
In indicating that all contracts with the 17 Strategic Partner Organizations (SPOs) under the civil society strategy will be terminated, Sida has provided no information on its changing priorities for supporting civil society and the appropriate modalities of support to do so. The Community of Practice’s work on good practice (i.e. the Toolkit on Shifting Power within Partnerships) points to the importance of creating diverse provider funding modalities that enable powershifts and incentivize more equitable partnerships, but also respond to the different and often complex realities within which CSOs work in the global south.
In all provider contexts, including Sweden, significantly increased opportunities for direct support for CSOs in the global south is an essential part of a positive change in funding modalities, with conditions determined through consultation. At the same time, national CSOs in provider countries and/or international CSOs remain essential civil society actors working through specific mutually supportive relationships with partner country CSOs that are formed around shared long term strategic goals, often in very difficult environments.
In fact, Sida’s 2023 Guideline for the Strategic Partner Organizations were recently highlighted by the DAC Community of Practice as a good practice example in responding to these complexities as convenors, connectors, fiscal agents and amplifiers of development issues, while strengthening local ownership and leadership. But these relationships must also be subject to continued and collaborative re-examination of roles, which can call for deep reforms in CSO practices. Sida’s March decision provides no opportunity to do so.
Do no harm
Finally, it is not clear how Sida will effectively and efficiently manage the movement of sub-contracting from the 17 Strategic Partner Organizations into its direct administrative mandate in a matter of months. We understand these management issues are currently under review, but seemingly an abrupt decision was made irrespective of the outcome for Sida’s organizational capacities and its impact on partners and support for civil society going forward.
Importantly, the DAC Recommendation calls on all adherents to take “reasonable steps to do no harm to civic space in partner countries or territories.” [Pillar One, §4] It seems clear that these precipitate actions by Sida will in fact have a significant negative impact on civic space in a range of countries. There is ample evidence from other contexts – including the UK and Canada – of abrupt funding cuts and decisions adversely affecting the lives of those in need.
Upholding the development effectiveness principles
Sweden is currently in a leadership role as a co-chair for the Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation. It has a special responsibility to promote the Partnership’s four development effectiveness principles, not least the essential principle of strengthening local ownership. But equally important are the principles of working through inclusive partnerships and ensuring effective mutual accountability and transparency.
As long-standing friends of Sweden’s development cooperation and its leadership and commitment to enabling civil society, we are deeply concerned that the nature of the decisions of the past month will ultimately undermine leadership by civil society across the global south, disable critical north/south relationships of solidarity, and ignore decades of important collaboration, experiences and knowledge in civil society both north and south.
In conclusion, we encourage all adherents to the Recommendation to take on board all the inter-related commitments in the Recommendation’s three Pillars when undertaking reform in their civil society policies and practices, and to do so in close collaboration with all affected CSOs, north and south.
Sincerely,
11.11.11, Belgium
A 11 – Initiative for Economic and Social Rights, Serbia
ABF BUSOVAČA, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Accountable Now, Global Network
ACODEV, Belgium
APCOB, Bolivia
ACT Alliance, Global Network
ACTing Together Program, Guatemala
Action, Gouvernance, Intégration,Renforcement, Groupe de travail en Santé et Développement en abrégé (AGIR/SD), Burkina Faso
Adad Malore, Albania
ADEL Morazán, El Salvador
ADIC, Sri Lanka
Advocates for Social Change Kenya, Kenya
African Institute of Corporate Citizenship, Malawi
Afrikagrupperna, Sweden
AGIMS, Guatemala
Agora Centre, Bosnia and Herzegovina
AidWatch Canada
AKÜ, Estonia
All Africa Conference of Churches, Regional
Alianza Politica Sector de Mujeres, APSM, Guatemala
Alliance Sud, Switzerland
Ambrela – Platform for Development Organisations, Slovakia
AMSATI, El Salvador
Applied Research Institute ARIJ, West Bank
Artikel2, Sweden
Associação Civil Alternativa Terrazul, Brasil
Associação Civil Escola Sem Muros Grupo Eco – Favela Santa Marta – Rio de Janeiro – Brazil
Asociación de Cooperación para el Desarrollo Rural de Occidente, CDRO, Guatemala
Asociación para el Desarrollo Integral de las Víctimas de la Violencia en las Verapaces Maya Achi (ADIVIMA), Guatemala
Asociación Coordinadora de Comunidades Afectadas por la Construccción de la Hidroeléctrica Chixoy (COCAHICH), Guatemala
ASOCIACION COMUNITARIA PARA EL DESARROLLO SERJUS, Guatemala
Asociación de Culturas Originarias Suma Kawsay – Peru
Asociación de Investigación y Especialización sobre Temas Iberoamericanos (AIETI), Spain
ASOCIACIÓN DE LIDERAZGO Y DESARROLLO EN MADRIZ, Nicaragua
Asociación de Mujeres Ixqanil, Guatemala
Asociación por la Paz y los Derechos Humanos Taula per Mèxic, Spain
Association Tin Tua du Burkina Faso, Burkina Faso
Association des Blogueurs du Burkina, Burkina Faso
Association Monde Rural (AMR), Burkina Faso
Association Nationale d Action pour Développement Intégral (ANADI), Senegal
Association “Nova generacija,” Bosnia and Herzegovina
Australian Council for International Development, Australia
Bahay Tuluyan Foundation, Philippines
Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust (BLAST), Bangladesh
Bangladesh Resource Centre for Indigenous Knowledge (BARCIK), Bangladesh
Belarusian National Youth Council (RADA), Belarus
Bench Marks Foundation, South Africa
Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust (BLAST), Bangladesh
Bond, CSO Platform, United Kingdom
Broederlijk Delen, Belgium
Brot für die Welt, Germany
Building Community Voice (BCV), Cambodia
Cambodian Center for Human Right (CCHR), Cambodia
Cambodian Journalists Alliance Association (Cambo-JA), Cambodia
Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (LICADHO), Cambodia
Censat Agua Viva (Friends of Earth), Colombia
Center for Alliance of Labor and Human Rights (CENTRAL), Cambodia
Center for Civic Cooperation, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Center for Democratic Governance (CDG), Burkina Faso
Center for Youth Advocacy and Networking (CYAN Pilipinas Inc), Philippines
Center for youth education, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Centre d’Etudes et de Recherche Appliquée en Finances Publiques (CERA/FP), Burkina Faso
Centre Delwende de Sakoula, Burkina Faso
Centre for Environmental Justice, Sri Lanka
Centre for Improved Rural Health and Environmental Protection (CIRHEP), India
Center for Migrant Advocacy, Philippines
Centre Internacional Escarré per les Minories Ètniques i les Nacions (CIEMEN), Catalonia
Centre for Research and Advocacy, Manipur, India
Center for Support Organisations, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Centre for Youth Work, Serbia
Centro de Defesa dos Direitos Humanos, Brasil
Centro de Desarrollo Agropecuario (CEDAP), Peru
Centro de Estudios para el Desarrollo Regional (CEDER), Perú
Centro de Tecnologias Alternativas Populares – CETAP, Passo Fundo Rio Grande do Sul – Brazil
Centro Ecológico, Brazil
Centro de Estudios e Investigación sobre Mujeres (CEIM), Spain
CEHPRODEC, Honduras
Civil Society Budget Advocacy Group (CSBAG), Uganda
Civil Society Platform for Peacebuilding and Statebuilding (CSPPS), Netherlands
Civil Society Reference Group, Kenya
Christian Aid, United Kingdom
CIUDADANIA, Bolivia
Clean Clothes Campaign International Office, Netherlands
Clowns without Borders Sweden, Sweden
CNCD-11.11.11, Belgium
Colors Rainbow, Myanmar
COMISION INTERECLESIAL DE JUSTICIA Y PAZ- Colombia
Commerce and Services Trade Union, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (COMFREL), Cambodia
Commission épiscopale Justice et Paix du Burkina Faso (CJP-Burkina), Burkina Faso
Community Development Support Services (CDSS), South Sudan
COMUNA/PBFCC, Bolivia
Comunidad de Juristas Akubadaura, Colombia
CONCORD, European CSO Platform
CONCORD Sweden
CONFRAS, El Salvador
Confederation of Autonomous Trade Unions of Serbia, Serbia
Confederation of Autonomous Trade Unions of Vojvodina, Serbia
Conseil national des organisation de la société civile du Burkina Faso (CNOSC/BF), Burkina Faso
Convention des Organisations de la société civile pour l’Observation Domestique des Élections (CODEL), Burkina Faso
Coop. Comunidad del Sur, Montevideo-Uruguay
Cooperation Committee for Cambodia (CCC), Cambodia
Cooperation Canada, CSO Platform, Canada
Coordinadora Galega de ONG para o Desenvolvemento, Spain
Coordinadora de ONGD de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
Coordinadora de ONGD-España, Spain
Coordinadora Valenciana de ONGD, Spain
COPINH, Honduras
Cordaid, Netherlands
Corporación para el Desarrollo Regional, Colombia
Corporación Serraniagua, Organización Campesina Ambiental Comunitaria, El Cairo – Colombia
Council for People’s Development and Governance (CPDG), Philippines
Council of Churches, Zambia
Conseil National de la Jeunesse du Burkina Faso (CNJ-BF), Burkina Faso
Croatian Platform for International Citizen Solidarity (CROSOL), Croatia
Czech Forum for Development Cooperation (FoRS), Czechia
Nagorik Uddyog (NU), Bangladesh
David Ntseng Director at Church Land Programme, South Africa
DCA, Denmark
Democratic Dialogue Network, Serbia
Diakonia, Sweden
Dóchas, Ireland
East Cape Agricultural Research Project, South Africa
Ecobarrial, Centro de Ecología Social, Chile
ECLOF International, Switzerland
Economic and Social Development Center ESDC, West Bank and Gaza Strip
ECPAT, Philippines
EducommuniK, Burkina Faso
Entrepueblos/Entrepobles/Entrepobos/Herriarte, Spain
Emthonjeni Women’s Forum, Zimbabwe
Equality Myanmar, Myanmar
Equitable Cambodia (EC), Cambodia
ERA-LGBTI Equal Rights Association, Serbia
ERIKS Development Partner, Sweden
Espacio de Cooperación para la Paz, Colombia
EU-LAT Advocacy Network, regional network Europe
Eurodad, Regional Network
Fairtrade Sverige, Sweden
Farmers Union of Malawi, Malawi
Fasocheck Association, Burkina Faso
FECCEG, Guatemala
FEDECARIBE, Colombia
Federación de Centros Awá del Ecuador, Ecuador
Felm, Finland
FESPAD, El Salvador
FIAN Zambia
Fundación San Alonso Rodríguez, FSAR, Honduras
FUNDASAL, El Salvador
Finn Church Aid, Finland
Finnish Development NGOs (Fingo), CSO Platform, Finland
Fishworkers’ Solidarity, Philippines
Friends of the Earth International, International Organization
ForumCiv, Sweden
Forum MNE, Montenegro
Forum of Cotton Producers, FONPA, Mozambique
Framtidsjorden, Sweden
Fundación ALTROPICO, Ecuador
Fundação CEPEMA, Brazil
Fundación de Culturas Indígenas Kawsay-Ecuador
Fundación InteRed, Spain
Fundación Myrna Mack, Guatemala
Fundación para el Desarrollo y Fortalecimiento de las Organizaciones de Base (FUNDEBASE), Guatemala
Fundación Pereyra, Argentina
Gender and Development for Cambodia (GADC), Cambodia
Global Citizen, International Organization
Global Idé, Sweden
Global Interfaith Network For People of All Sexes, Sexual Orientations, Gender Identities and Expressions, South Africa
Grameena Mahila Okkuta, India
groundWork, Friends of the Earth, South Africa
HEKS/EPER Swiss Church Aid, Switzerland
IBON Foundation, Philippines
IBON International, International NGO
ICADE, Honduras
Iglesia Filipina Independiente, Philippines
Iniciativa Mesoamericana de Mujeres Defensoras de Derechos Humanos, regional Latin America
Institute for National and Democracy Studies (INDIES), Indonesia
Institute of Permaculture of Mozambique, IPERMO, Mozambique
Institute of Politics and Governance (IPG), Philippines
Instituto de Comunicación y Desarrollo (ICD), Uruguay
Instituto de Ecología Política, Chile
International Action for Peace (IAP), Spain
International Labour, Research and Information Group, South Africa
International Network Of Religious Leaders Living With or Personally Affected by HIV and AIDS (INERELA+), South Africa
International Office for Human Rights Action on Colombia, OIDHACO, European regional network
International Platform against Impunity, Guatemala
Inter Pares, Canada
IOGT-NTO Movement, Sweden
IPDRS, Bolivia
JA!FOE, Moçambique
JANIC, Japan
Jordens Vänner / Friends of the Earth Sweden, Sweden
Justapaz, Colombia
Justiça Ambiental, JA, Mozambique
KAMP, Kosovo
Kareem Baptist Convention- Social Mission (KBC- SM), Myanmar
Kawsay Bolivia
KCOC Policy Center, Korea
Keystone Foundation, India
Khanya College Johannesburg Trust, South Africa
Klahaan, Cambodia
KUDUMBAM, India
Kvinna till Kvinna Foundation, Sweden
La Coordinadora de ONGD-España
La Plataforma DESCA, Colombia
La Via Campesina Southern and Eastern Africa (LVC SEAf), Regional Organization
Law & Society Trust (LST), Sri Lanka
Lawyers Collective José Alvear Restrepo (CAJAR), Colombia
Labor Education and Research Network (LEARN), Philippines
Labour Resource and Research Institute (LaRRI), Namibia
Ladakh Ecological Development Group, India
Lafede.cat organitzacions per la Justícia Global, Catalonia
Land Research Center (LRC), West Bank
LatFem, Regional Latin America
Legal Assistance Centre, Namibia
Leornard Cheshire Disability, Zimbabwe
Le secrétariat permanent des organisations Non Gouvernementales du Burkina Faso, Burkina Faso
Listeners without Borders, Sweden
Livaningo, Mozambique
Lliga dels Drets dels Pobles, Catalunya, Spain
Lutheran World Federation, Switzerland
Lutheran World Federation / World Service – Central America Programme
Lutheran World Service India Trust, India
Malawi Union of Savings and Credit Cooperation (MUSCCO), Malawi
MECOOVISURH, Honduras
Milieudefensie / Friends of the Earth, Netherlands
Movimiento Agroecológico de América Latina, MAELA, regional Latin America
Mujeres Workers Progressive Alliance, Philippines
Murang’a Avocado Farmers Cooperative Union Ltd, Kenya
Muslim Women’s Research and Action Forum, Sri Lanka
MyRight, Sweden
National Association of Youth Organizations (NAYO), Zimbabwe
National Commission for Human Rights Chile-Sweden, Sweden
National Confederation of Transport Workers Union (NCTU), Philippines
National Council of Churches, Philippines
National council of Swedish children and youth organizations (LSU), Sweden
National Confederation of Transportworkers Union (NCTU), Philippines
National Farmers’ Federation NFF, North Macedonia
NGO Forum on Cambodia, Cambodia
ngo-federatie, the Flemish federation of development CSOs, Belgium
Nicaraguan Network of Community Trade (RENICC), Nicaragua
NIRMAN, India
NOAH Friends of the Earth, Denmark
Norwegian Church Aid (NCA), Norway
Olof Palmes Internationella Center, Sweden
Operation 1325, Sweden
Organic Producers & Processors Association of Zambia, Zambia
Organization for Nonviolence and Development (ONAD), South Sudan
Organization for Women’s Development in Bangladesh, Bangladesh
Organisation pour le Renforcement des Capacités de Développement, Burkina Faso
Oxfam, International CSO
Palestinian Agricultural Cooperative Union (PACU), West Bank
Palestinian Working Women Society for Development (PWWSD), West Bank
Palhaços Sem Fronteiras, Brasil
People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections, Sri Lanka
People’s Process on Housing and Poverty in Zambia (PPHPZ), Zambia
PIANGO, Pacific Region
Plan International, International CSO
Plataforma Colombiana de Derechos Humanos, Democracia y Desarrollo (PCDHDD), Colombia
PMU, Sweden
Portuguese NGDO Platform, Portugal
Positive Vibes, Namibia
Praktisk Solidaritet, Sweden
Promotion of Family Health Association, Laos
Pro Public, Nepal
Reality of Aid Africa Network, Regional Network
Reality of Aid – Asia Pacific, Regional Network
Red de ONGD de Madrid, Spain
Red Jesuita Con Migrantes de Centroamérica (RJM CA), Regional Network
RED MUJER RURAL AREQUIPA, Perú
Redes AT, Uruguay
Red de Trabajadoras Domésticas, Honduras
Rendir Cuentas, Latín America and the Caribbean, Regional Network
RFSL, Sweden
Ruta Pacífica de las Mujeres, Colombia
Safety and Rights Society (SRS), Bangladesh
Sahmakum Teang Tnaut (STT), Cambodia
Save a Life, Sri Lanka
Save the Children, International CSO
Schumacher Centre, India
Self Help Development Foundation, Zimbabwe
SIMCARRD, Philippines
SLOGA, Platform of Slovenian NGOs, Slovenia
Small Producers Development and Transporters Association (SPRODETA), Malawi
SOBREVIVENCIA, Amigos de la Tierra, Paraguay
Social Association for Rural Advancement (SARA), Bangladesh
Social Policy Initiative (SPI), South Africa
SOLIDAR, European CSO Network
Srushtidnyan, India
Students’ Educational and Cultural Movement of Ladakh, India
Suriya Women’s Development Centre, Sri Lanka
Svalorna Latinamerika, Sweden
Swallows India Bangladesh, Sweden
Swedish Association for Sexuality Education (RFSU), Sweden
Swedish Committee for Afghanistan, Sweden
Swedish Development Forum (FUF), Sweden
Swedish Fellowship of Reconciliation, Sweden
Swedish Foundation for Human Rights, Sweden
Swedish Society for Nature Conservation, Sweden
Synergie des Femmes de la Société Civile (SYFES), DRC
Training Education Development Extension Trust, India
Tzuk Kim-pop, Guatemala
Udayankur Seba Sangstha (USS), Bangladesh
Uganda Cooperative Savings and Credit Union (UCSCU), Uganda
Une Gruaja, Albania
Union for Development and Integration of Roma Minority in Albania “Amaro-Drom”, Albania
Union of Agricultural Work Committees (UAWC), West Bank and Gaza Strip
Unite Theatre for Social Action (UTSA), Bangladesh
Vikas Adhyayan Kendra, India
Vive Vene, Bosnia Herzegovina
Warande Advisory Centre, Kenya
Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), Regional Organization
We Effect, Sweden
Wemos, The Netherlands
Women’s Academy For Leadership and Political Excellence (WALPE), Zimbabwe
Women’s Education and Research Centre (WERC), Sri Lanka
Women Empowerment – Action (WE-Action), Ethiopia
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Zimbabwe
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, DR Congo
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Colombia
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Cameroon
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Sweden
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (International Secretariat), Geneva
Women’s Legal Resource Centre, Malawi
WoMIN African Alliance, Sweden
World Concern Myanmar, Myanmar
World Council of Churches, Switzerland
Youth Empowerment and Transformation Trust, Zimbabwe
YMCA, Ghana
YMCA, Madagascar
YWCA, Palestine
YMCA, Senegal
YWCA-YMCA, Sweden
YMCA, Togo
Zambia Alliance of Women (ZAW), Zambia
Zambia Climate Change Network (ZCCN), Zambia
Zambia Homeless and Poor People’s Federation, Zambia
Zambia National Women’s Lobby, Zambia
Zambia Youth Federation, Zambia
