Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern Uganda

In humanitarian action, localization can be characterized by high hopes, many disillusions, and only limited progress. This is partly because traditional humanitarian action focuses mostly on short-term action and is supply-oriented, with decisions on the set-up and evaluation of aid activities bein...

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Main Author: Dennis Dijkzeul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Political Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2021.716287/full
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spelling doaj-6a0ed16e780e4181957c2d035a189d682021-10-06T13:35:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Political Science2673-31452021-10-01310.3389/fpos.2021.716287716287Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern UgandaDennis DijkzeulIn humanitarian action, localization can be characterized by high hopes, many disillusions, and only limited progress. This is partly because traditional humanitarian action focuses mostly on short-term action and is supply-oriented, with decisions on the set-up and evaluation of aid activities being made by outside donors and organizations, instead of by the beneficiaries/target groups themselves. After a theoretical overview of localization and its problems, this article describes how two South Sudanese NGOs, Mary Help Association and Bishop Gassis Relief and Rescue Foundation (BGRRF), and a Ugandan NGO, Caritas Gulu, work on food security. It describes how they are implementing a 3-year program with support from Caritas Germany. The article analyzes the importance of their long-term interaction to foster trust over time through capacity development. Such capacity development includes capacity building (e.g., training, joint workshops, regular evaluations, and audits) and capacity sharing in the form of South-South cooperation. This analysis also shows that localization can be strengthened when the involved organizations agree on goals, and establish a process to reinforce their cooperation by strengthening the activities on the ground to achieve those goals. It also indicates the role of religion within capacity-development, as well as the structural problems in the context of localization that cannot easily be overcome. A conceptual model summarizes the analysis and explains the degree to which localization can be successful. Finally, the conclusions summarize the main arguments and indicate issues for further research.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2021.716287/fulllocalizationUgandaSouth Sudanfood securityCaritaseveryday practice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dennis Dijkzeul
spellingShingle Dennis Dijkzeul
Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern Uganda
Frontiers in Political Science
localization
Uganda
South Sudan
food security
Caritas
everyday practice
author_facet Dennis Dijkzeul
author_sort Dennis Dijkzeul
title Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern Uganda
title_short Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern Uganda
title_full Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern Uganda
title_fullStr Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Making Localization Work: The Everyday Practice of Three NGOs in South Sudan and Northern Uganda
title_sort making localization work: the everyday practice of three ngos in south sudan and northern uganda
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Political Science
issn 2673-3145
publishDate 2021-10-01
description In humanitarian action, localization can be characterized by high hopes, many disillusions, and only limited progress. This is partly because traditional humanitarian action focuses mostly on short-term action and is supply-oriented, with decisions on the set-up and evaluation of aid activities being made by outside donors and organizations, instead of by the beneficiaries/target groups themselves. After a theoretical overview of localization and its problems, this article describes how two South Sudanese NGOs, Mary Help Association and Bishop Gassis Relief and Rescue Foundation (BGRRF), and a Ugandan NGO, Caritas Gulu, work on food security. It describes how they are implementing a 3-year program with support from Caritas Germany. The article analyzes the importance of their long-term interaction to foster trust over time through capacity development. Such capacity development includes capacity building (e.g., training, joint workshops, regular evaluations, and audits) and capacity sharing in the form of South-South cooperation. This analysis also shows that localization can be strengthened when the involved organizations agree on goals, and establish a process to reinforce their cooperation by strengthening the activities on the ground to achieve those goals. It also indicates the role of religion within capacity-development, as well as the structural problems in the context of localization that cannot easily be overcome. A conceptual model summarizes the analysis and explains the degree to which localization can be successful. Finally, the conclusions summarize the main arguments and indicate issues for further research.
topic localization
Uganda
South Sudan
food security
Caritas
everyday practice
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2021.716287/full
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