Content area

Abstract

This dissertation interrogates "community participation" as an international, national, and local discourse and diagnoses the consequences of this discourse for the people living in rural Ethiopia. The analysis proceeds in two steps. First, I critically investigate "community participation" discourses of two purposely selected intergovernmental donors (the UN and the World Bank) and two international NGOs working in Ethiopia, namely Oxfam Great Britain and World Vision. Second, I study grassroots interactions between NGO staffs and the Ethiopian communities they serve. I conducted in-depth interviews with sixty-four members of communities, NGO staff and government officials to understand their experiences and local practices of public deliberation. Additionally, I observed nine NGO-community joint meetings on development issues. Findings of the study suggest different parties have different reasons for embracing "community participation." Adopting a postcolonial lens and employing ideographic criticism helped me illuminate how the rhetoric of "community participation" warrants Western organizations to do development in ways that advance their interests while still appearing to promote grassroots democracy.

Findings of the study suggest that the communities I studied appear to be the least influential group, denied a real chance of discussing their own situations and influencing decisions. The results are discussed in terms of practical implications for dealing with multiple stakeholders and conducting grassroots deliberations that empower participants and seek collaborative solutions for development challenges. The study also has theoretical implications for communication-based theorization of participation, voice, empowerment and grassroots democracy.

Details

Title
The rhetoric of community participation: NGOs' discourses and deliberative practices with communities in Ethiopia
Author
Godana, Getachew Dinku
Year
2014
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations Publishing
ISBN
978-1-321-39115-2
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1640889019
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.