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DiDi )~ ~ ~ c c c ubliubli *~~~~Pki J&2t iI .| k ' PP 4 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~ - ~ ~ ~ I - dd ee zz riri oo hh utut AA e e rr uu ss oo clcl ss DiDi c c blibli uu PP Environmentally Sustainable Development Series Proceedings Culture and Developmenti n Africa:P roceedingso f an InternationalC onference ESD Proceedings Series no. 1 (Also in French) Valuing the Environment:P roceedingso f the FirstA nnual InternationalC onference on EnvironmentallyS ustainableD evelopment ESD Proceedings Series no. 2 OvercomingG lobalH unger:P roceedingso f a Conferenceo n Actions to ReduceH unger Worldwide ESD Proceedings Series no. 3 TraditionaKl nowledgea nd SustainableD evelopmentP: roceedingos f a Conference ESD Proceedings Series no. 4 The Human Faceo f the UrbanE nvironment:A Report to the DevelopmentC ommunity ESD Proceedings Series no. 5 The Human Faceo f the UrbanE nvironment:P roceedingos f the SecondA nnual WorldB ank Conference on EnvironmentallyS ustainableD evelopment ESD Proceedings Series no. 6 (Forthcoming) The Businesso f SustainableC ities:P ublic-PrivateP artnerships for CreativeT echnicaal nd Institutional Solutions ESD Proceedings Series no. 7 (Forthcoming) EnablingS ustainableC ommunity Development ESD Proceedings Series no. 8 (Forthcoming) Studies and Monographs (formerly Occasional Papers) The Contributiono f People'sP articipationE: videncef rom 121 Rural WaterS upply Projects ESD Occasional Paper Series no. 1 Making DevelopmentS ustainable:F romC onceptst o Action ESD Occasional Paper Series no. 2 SociologyA, nthropologya, nd DevelopmentA: n Annotated Bibliography of WorldB ank Publications1 975-1993 ESD Studies and Monographs Series no. 3 The World Bank'sS trategyf or ReducingP overtya nd Hunger:A Report to the DevelopmentC ommunity ESD Studies and Monographs Series no. 4 MonitoringE nvironmentalP rogress ESD Studies and Monographs Series no. 5 (Forthcoming) ThneC ontribution of People's Partici'pation Evidence from 121 Rural Water Supply Projects Deep a Narayan ESD ~~~EnvironmentalSlyu stainableD evelopmentO ccasionalP aper SeriesN o. I ESD ~~~~~W~o~r~l~d~ B~aTnhke, Washington,D .C. i) 1995 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing July 1995 This report has been prepared by the staff of the World Bank. The judgments expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the Board of Executive Directors or the governments they represent. The drawing on the cover was prepared to generate discussion around local water problems. Such drawings are used to focus members of a community on what their water problems are and to mobilize them to work together toward solutions. The cover design is by May Eidi. Deepa Narayan is a social scientist in the Environment Department of the World Bank. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Narayan-Parker, Deepa. The contribution of people's participation: evidence from 121 rural water supply projects / by Deepa Narayan. p. cm - (Environmentally sustainable development occasional papers series ; no. 1) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-8213-3043-8 1. Water-supply, Rural-Developing countries-Management-Citizen participation. I. Title. II. Series. HD1702.N37 1994 331.91'009172'4-dc2O 94-34109 CIP Contents Foreword vii Acknowledgments viii Executive Summary 1 CHAPTER 1 Introduction 5 CHAPTER 2 The Concept of Participation 7 What Is Participation? 7 Why Participate? 9 Who Participates? 10 How Do People Participate? 10 Inducing Collective Action 11 CHAPTER 3 Research Methodology and Project Descriptions 13 Methodology 13 Measuring Variables 16 CHAPTER 4 Role of Beneficiary Participation in Project Effectiveness 21 Participation and Project Effectiveness 21 Participation and Other Performance Determinants 23 Participation and Other Project Outcomes 25 How Important Is the "Halo Effect"? 28 Proximate Determinants and Participation 29 Project Experience with Beneficiary Participation 33 Policy Lessons 39 iii iv The Contribution of People's Participation: Evidencefrom 121 Rural Water Supply Projects CHAPTER5 Factors Affecting Beneficiary Participation 41 Degree and Elements of Participation 41 Determinants of Participation 44 Policy Lessons 62 CHAPTER6 Translating Lessons into Design Features 65 Selection Criteria 65 Demand Assessment 67 Institutional Framework 67 Funds and Financial Flow 69 Technology and Choice of Service Level 71 Approaches to Planning: Master Plan or Learning Process? 71 Monitoring and Evaluation 73 CHAPTER7 Conclusions and Recommendations 75 What Do We Know about Participation? 75 Why Hasn't Participation Occurred on a Large Scale? 76 What Can We Do Differently? 79 APPENDIXES IA Participation with Other Direct Inputs into Water Project Effectiveness 83 1B Participation with Eighteen Direct and Indirect Inputs (Model 3) into Project Outcomes 84 2 Projects Rated High in Overall Effectiveness 86 3 Summary of Differences between Blueprint and Learning Process Approaches 98 4 Centre for Social Research: Indicators for Sociological Monitoring System- Karonga Lakeshore Integrated Rural Groundwater Supply Project 99 Notes 101 Bibliography 105 Tables 3.1 Background characteristics of 121 water projects 16 3.2 Measures of performance outcomes and participation 17 3.3 Nonparticipation determinants of outcomes 18 3.4 Determinants of participation 19 4.1 Overall project effectiveness as a function of overall beneficiary participation 23 4.2 Water project performance outcomes as a function of overall beneficiary participation 25 4.3 Relationship of participation to environmental benefits and equality of access 26 4.4 Outcomes not specific to water systems, as a function of overall beneficiary participation 27 4.5 Tests for intercoder "halo effects" in coding project effectiveness and participation 28 4.6 Bivariate correlations between outcomes and proximate determinants 29 4.7 Impact of overall beneficiary participation on the institutional proximate determinants of project performance 30 4.8 Impact of overall beneficiary participation on the physical outputs related to project performance 31 4.9 Proximate determinants of water project outcomes as a function of beneficiary participation in different stages 32 5.1 Correlations of elements of participation with overall beneficiary participation 43 Contents v 5.2 Relationships between demand and participation outcomes and elements 48 5.3 Relationships between beneficiary capacity and participation outcomes and elements 54 5.4 Relationships between client orientation and participation outcomes and elements 62 Figures 3.1 Model of the relationship of participation to outcomes and other factors 19 4.1 Model for testing the relationship of participation to performance outcomes 22 4.2 Cross-tabulation of overall project effectiveness with beneficiary participation by number of projects 23 5.1 Model of relationships between beneficiary participation and its determinants 42 Boxes 4.1 Impact of nonparticipation factors on outcomes for water projects, the environment, and equality outcomes 24 4.2 Paraguay: institutional and fiscal reforms 34 4.3 Kenya: community participation with a parastatal agency 35 4.4 Pakistan: community-based rural water systems 36 4.5 Uganda: decentralizing maintenance 37 5.1 Rwanda: government control over community decisionmaking, or a losing proposition? 44 5.2 Indonesia: evolution of a demand-led strategy 47 5.3 Yemen: role of local leaders in community mobilization 50 5.4 Malawi: water committees 51 5.5 Indonesia: the story of Mutis 52 5.6 Nigeria: difficulties in managing incentives 56 5.7 Tanzania: master plan incompatibility with demand orientation 57 5.8 Tunisia: combining local knowledge with Geographic Information Systems 57 5.9 Togo: investing in capacity building 59 5.10 Kenya: community-managed water utilities 61 6.1 Sri Lanka: guidelines on community preparation and community commitment 66 6.2 Nepal: a new funding mechanism 74 Foreword T his report is the first of a new series of agency problem was reluctance to give up con- Occasional Papers to be issued by the trol or to invest in developing the capacity of Office of the Vice President for Environ- local organizations. mentally Sustainable Development. Since the The results of this study have profound impli- essence of sustainable development is helping cations for the way the World Bank supports its people make their own decisions and take res- partners in planning and implementing develop- ponsibility for their own welfare, I am pleased to ment programs. Among the lessons gleaned from launch this series with a report highlighting the the study are these: obtaining local participation importance of local participation and social orga- in decisionmaking about development is sound nization in the success of rural water supply pro- business practice, and special measures are need- grams. This work clearly establishes the need to ed to ensure that the marginalized are reached in invest in social infrastructure if physical infra- the participatory process. Participation can hap- structure is to be used effectively. pen only in the right policy environment, in which The study is based on systematic quantitative user demand is primary. Even when participation and qualitative analysis of 121 rural water sup- is assured in planning, agencies must listen and ply projects funded by many different agencies learn as projects are implemented. in countries throughout the developing world. These principles are clear, and their implica- The analysis consistently shows that beneficiary tions reach well beyond rural water supply pro- participation was more significant than any jects. The challenge is to act on these principles other factor in achieving functioning water sys- and to place people at the center of development. tems and in building local capacity. The degree of participation depended on local demand and organization, and particularly important were Ismsil Serageldin agency autonomy and the degree to which agen- Vice President cies accepted and monitored the goal of achiev- Environmentally Sustainable Development ing local participation. The most common The World Bank vii Acknowledgments T ^ lhis study began in 1991 as part of the con- * PhaseI -Collection of evaluationr eports:D ouglas tribution of the United Nations Develop- Keh and members of the Program's Regional ment Programme (UNDP)-World Bank Water and Sanitation Groups, particularly Gunnar Water and Sanitation Program to the Bank-wide Schultzberg and Sunita Chakravarty. Participatory Development Learning Group. The * Phase II-Development of coding methodology: study is a collaborative effort between the United Kurt Finsterbusch, assisted by Warren Van Nations Development Programme-World Bank Wicklin and Elhum Haghihat. In addition to Water and Sanitation Program, and the Social undertaking the coding process, Elhum Haghihat Policy and Resettlement Division of the Environ- performed all the statistical work. ment Department of the World Bank. It was * PhaseIll-Modelbuildingandmodeltesting:Lant financed by the Governments of Sweden and Pritchett, with research assistance from Jon Isham, Norway guided the testing process for the model, using Particular thanks to John Blaxall, manager of multivariate regression analysis. Lant Pritchett the UNDP-World Bank Water and Sanitation also helped organize the statistical evidence in Program, and to Aubrey Williams, coordinator of chapters 4 and 5. Ellen Tynan helped develop the the Bank-wide Participatory Development matrix included in appendix 2 and provided Learning Group, for trusting that something use- assistance with analysis of the qualitative aspects ful would come from the merger of methodolog- of the study ical tools from economics and sociology. The document benefited from the comments Several people played important supportive and review of John Blaxall, Norman Uphoff, Lant roles in the early days of the project, when the Pritchett, Jannik Boesen, Kurt Finsterbusch, methodology was still evolving: David Beckman, Warren Van Wicklin, and Aubrey Williams. Grace Michael Cernea, David Howarth, Lawrence Sarin and Lidia Tokuda typed and formatted the Salmen, and Michael Garn. manuscript. The manuscript was edited by Laurie The study developed in three phases. I would Edwards and Donna van Lear, under the overall particularly like to acknowledge the contribu- guidance of Alicia Hetzner, David Kinley, and tions of the following people who played invalu- Virginia Hitchcock. The publication was desk- able roles. topped by American Writing Corporation. viii

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Valuing the Environment: Proceedings of the First Annual International Conference Participation and Other Performance Determinants 23 .. orientation through new institutional arrange- World Bank are now moving forward; . Uphoff 1977; Korten 1980; Paul 1987; and Ghai give people a voice-is
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