Opinion: A necessary operating model for equity in global development

Humentum’s Dr. Christine Sow explains that we must shift power toward an equity-centered model of development to ensure fair, meaningful, and lasting change. Photo by: Coopia77

The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the way the global development sector had worked for decades. While the end of travel as we knew it was an immediate challenge to the sector, the pandemic’s disruption also provided a unique and longer-term opportunity to talk, explore, and listen to and with our colleagues, peers, and stakeholders. And new voices were amplified, thanks to the remote convening platforms that did away with the need for travel budgets and visas and lowered the cost of participation.

Humentum, the organization that I lead, has held more than 300 consultations over the past 18 months. We have been facilitating discussions that ranged from the new world of work to the growing acceptance that we must shift power toward an equity-centered model of development to ensure fair, meaningful, and lasting change.

Equity must be explicitly built into the operating model of any organization committed to shifting power toward locally-led development.

We heard from funders, international NGOs, and local practitioners alike that they are all struggling to translate intentions and aspirations into practical action, or in other words, to “operationalize equity” in their organizations. People spoke of their desire to see an authentic shift toward locally-led development but identified the many frustrating internal, external and systemic barriers that they regularly encounter when trying to work differently within a system of policies, rules, and regulations established for an outdated paradigm.

The need for an equity response

Humentum’s own recent research with more than 80 national NGOs clearly demonstrated the negative effect of these misaligned policies. For example, we found that 63% of funding agreements failed to adequately cover the cost of doing business (“administrative costs”), with impacts ranging from local staff being asked to “work on trust” or periodically forgo salary payments. This is not equity.

We drew four major conclusions from this consultative process:

Equitable, resilient, and accountable operating models

At Humentum we are promoting equitable, resilient, and accountable, or ERA, operating models to move organizations from talk to action. To achieve equitable development, we believe that an ERA lens must be applied to four key operating model components:

By integrating an equity approach into each of these components, organizations become better able to address underlying structural barriers such as inequitable overhead and indirect coverage rates, burdensome due diligence processes, and restrictive personnel requirements for project staff. Examples of how Humentum is advancing ERA operating models include:

The system in which most global development practitioners function is one historically driven by funder requirements that have dictated or influenced how organizations are structured, and how they manage fundraising, staffing, and compliance. Previous calls for change in our sector have not led to tangible results, due in large part to the failure to acknowledge how tightly the status quo has locked us into this way of working. We believe, however, that the new emphasis on shifting power to create equity-centered development, supported by ERA operating models, may provide the leverage needed to break away from traditional constructs. This, in turn, will create momentum for change that will extend throughout the sector from global to local entities. While the specifics of how an operating model needs to change will depend on whether you are a funder, INGO, or local practitioner, unless decision-making around institutional architecture, funding, people, and risk moves from where and how it works now — flowing from the funder level down — power will not shift either.

More reading:

Opinion: Locally led development — what it means to me

Blind spots: What COVID-19 revealed about global development's biggest gaps

How funders are trapping local NGOs in a ‘starvation cycle’