DEVELOPMENT-AFRICA: Putting Researchers and Policy Makers on the Same Page Evelyn Kiapi Matsamura KAMPALA, Mar 1 (IPS) - Reports. They gather dust on the desks of journalists
and bureaucrats - after having been opened with reluctance, and closed with
speed. Months of work may have gone into their production; but all too
often, the only use for these weighty tomes seems to be as doorstops.
Even worse, the findings contained in reports are often disregarded by
those who draw up policies on various social and economic issues.
Now, the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), an independent think-tank
based in the United Kingdom, is turning its attention to this and other
mismatches between research and policy formation.
"ODI is now working on the interface between research and policy. We are
trying to find out why some research feeds into the policy processes and why
some doesn't," says Naved Chowdhury, a project officer at the ODI's Research
and Policy in Development Programme.
"For various reasons policy makers do not use it (research) while making
policy. We are trying to bridge up that gap," he told IPS at a workshop held
in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, recently to discuss this issue. Similar
meetings are being scheduled for Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Ghana,
Nigeria and Uganda.
Chowdhury's words were echoed by Julius Court, a research fellow at ODI.
"In many...parts of Africa and other parts of the developing world, this
capacity (to link research and policy) really does not exist," he noted,
while in other regions it had "become worse during the last few years".
Many participants at the Kampala workshop noted that officials frequently
distrust the research findings presented to them, and are hence reluctant to
incorporate these into policies.
In certain instances, there also appear to be differing priorities
between researchers and policy makers.
"Our experience is that most of the research is not linked to policy,"
says Chowdhury. "Content is a big issue. Of course it needs to
be...thoroughly researched. But also, I think it has to be relevant to the
interest of the policy makers."
Presentation of research findings can, in its turn, be problematic.
Policy makers typically want the findings presented to them in a way that is
concise and easy to understand. However, what they sometimes get are reams
of information, larded with jargon, graphs and tables that make it even more
difficult to digest.
"The main point of research should be communicated in a brief, short,
precise and direct form," observes Chowdhury.
While the internet has doubtless been hailed in the past as something
that could make the volume of research information easier to store and
manage, it too has its limitations - particularly in developing nations that
are still labouring with slow connections to the World Wide Web.
But, not everyone blames bulky reports or a laggardly service provider
for the disconnect between research and policy formation.
Francis Byekwaso, project and evaluation manager at Uganda's National
Agricultural Advisory Services, said certain non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) were short on skills for implementing policies. Even if these groups
are aware of innovative research findings, they may lack the ability to
translate them into practice.
In this regard, Byekwaso pointed to the situation of certain NGOs
involved in agricultural development in Uganda.
"They are normally not efficient in the area of business development.
Although we trust them to develop farmer groups, by and large their capacity
in rural development is still very weak," he noted.
Participants at the Kampala workshop highlighted instances where research
had fed into policy development with beneficial effect.
Michael Wandukwa, project coordinator at FARM-Africa, a British-based NGO
which helps poor farmers and herders, said research into the needs of
poultry and goat farmers in the eastern Mbale and Sironko districts of
Uganda had improved the lives of 375 individuals.
"There is now increasing demand for project activity in the area," he
added.
However, delegates also noted that the failure to link research to policy
could prove catastrophic. Court said this had been the case with the AIDS
pandemic: "It highlights that when things go right, they can go right. But
when they go wrong, they can actually get disastrous."
"HIV is such a problematic policy issue because if you don't really
understand the science early, by the time a large number of people are
beginning to suffer and to die, the disease can be widespread throughout the
population," he added.
Uganda is one of Africa's success stories in the fight against AIDS,
having reduced its HIV prevalence from 30 percent in the early 1990s to six
percent today.
However, Southern Africa has become the epicentre of the pandemic, with
one of the countries in the sub-region - Swaziland - registering the world's
highest prevalence rate of almost 40 percent.
(END/2005) Send your comments to the editor
|