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Introduction:
Community development projects that intend to benefit
target populations often fail to consider that there are likely to be parties who benefit
from the status quo and whose interests are threatened by these projects. Brad Hayes,
Research Professor at the Naval War College, talks about ways to deal with these potential
spoilers.
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This rough transcript provides a text alternative to audio. We apologize for occasional errors and unintelligible sections (which are marked with ???).
Development Projects
Brad Hayes
Research Professor at the Naval War College
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Q: Brad Hayes, who are you and what do you do?
A: I am a research professor at the Naval War College in Newport, RI.
Q: Tell me about spoilers in development projects, in peace settlements,
negotiations, and so on, and if you could illustrate that with a couple of
examples for context, that would be useful.
A: When people go into set up development projects they almost always look at
what are the benefits. They seldom look at if these benefits actually accrue,
for example if you set up a well, people have been getting water for a millennia,
and how have they been doing it and is any body hurting that process?
For example in Somalia, they went in and built a well and the man who had
been bringing water to the city with his fifty mules was put out of business, so
if the well goes down one of the first places you might want to look at the man
who still has fifty mules and is out of work, he could be a spoiler.
In Bosnia after the war the developers came in to try to rebuild the
communities, houses needed to be rebuilt. Most of those houses were Muslim
houses that had been destroyed so most of the money went to that community. The
Slavs saw that and felt that it was unfair that all of this international money
was coming in and none of it was coming to their community so therefore they
made things very difficult for the people there, they were in that spoiler role.
The international development community said, "Well what can we do?"
They went into the Slavic community and found municipal projects that could be
done so they were able to hire local people, buy local materials, and get
projects done that actually helped the community. As a result they took them
away as spoilers because the work in the Muslim community still needed to be
done to get them their homes and to help them to go on. Those are examples of
people who can be spoilers in situations where you think people are going to be
benefited. There is always somebody who says this isn't going to work out for
me.
Q: In a complex social system where there are so many people acting
in so many different ways how can you predict who is going to be the spoiler.
What questions do you ask to try and find those people?
A: The first question you ask is who is benefiting from this situation as it
is right now? If you are going to go and change something, somebody has been
making money in that community and even though you are going to benefit a great
amount of people there is probably some group that has been making money because
the system has been bad, those people are the ones who are going to be the
spoilers, that is where you need to look.
Q: Thanks.
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