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The OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) and the German Ministry
for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) co-sponsored this workshop
as a forum for representatives from both South and North to vet their
opinions openly on the mportance of capacity development as a priority
theme for the Accra High Level Forum.
The workshop was organised in Bonn, Germany and used the facilities of
the BMZ. It was co-chaired by Dr. Talaat Abdel-Malek (core member of the
Accra ?Contact Group?) and Mr. Richard Manning (former chair of the DAC
and co-chair of the Accra Round Table 9 on ?aid architecture?). It took
place over two days (15-16 May 2008). To assist in workshop meeting
management, a ?steering group was created, composed of a small number of
activists in the CD field who played an active role in conceiving and
managing the event with substantive facilitation by LenCD.
The workshop brought together both a strong Southern voice and a wide
spectrum of interested capacity development specialists. It succeeded in
assembling 68 participants and an additional 25 part-time or special
observers. They included experts and practitioners of capacity
development from developing countries, the donor community, specialised
institutions and networks. The total number of participants was equally
divided between South and North.Workshop presenters, chairs, facilitators
and rapporteurs focussed on two sets of questions: (i) Which concrete and
actionable propositions (What, Why and How) should inform the Round Table
processes and shape the AAA? (ii) What are the strategic priorities and
steps to be taken during the triennium following Accra?
Round Table organizers and interested participants used the individual
Round Table break-out groups to derive specific messages in capacity
development for their own Round Table processes leading to Accra. The
Steering Group distilled these messages on the evening of the first day
into a more succinct and prioritized list of messages for the AAA. That
result was debated, adopted unanimously by the participants and dubbed
the — Bonn Workshop Consensus by the co-chairs.
The Consensus first makes clear the resolve of both South and North to
pursue common efforts towards enhanced capacity in the developing
countries as a significant integrating force for the development
cooperation agenda. Participants highlighted the importance of capacity
development as the ?other side of the coin? of partner country ownership.
The full report is available at
www.oecd.org/dac/governance/capacitydevelopment
| THE BONN WORKSHOP CONSENSUS |
We recognize that capacity development is critical for sustainable development and
national ownership. It is primarily a developing country responsibility.
Capacity development is a fundamental change process requiring that:
- Developing countries commit to the capacity development of their human resources, systems and institutions at all levels, and
- External partners commit to strengthen their own capacity and adapt their approaches to deliver responsive support for capacity development.
Six areas of action:
- Developing countries agree to integrate capacity development as a core element of national, sector and thematic development efforts.
- Developing countries will take the lead in addressing key systemic issues that undermine capacity development, with support from external partners as required.
- To enable developing countries to exercise ownership of capacity development through technical cooperation, external partners agree to a) the joint selection and management of technical cooperation to support local priorities and b) expand the choice of technical cooperation providers to ensure access to sources of local and South-South expertise.
- Developing countries and external partners also jointly commit to enable the capacity development of civil society and the private sector to play their development roles more fully.
- In situations of fragility, notably in post conflict, external partners will provide tailored and coordinated capacity development support for core state functions earlier and for a longer period. Interim measures should be appropriately sequenced and lead to sustainable capacities and local institutions.
- Beyond Accra, developing countries and external partners jointly agree to a strengthened and consolidated international effort to expand capacity development knowledge and apply resulting good practice.
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