Friday Featured Friend -- Groundswell International
We have a wonderful friend to introduce you to this week – Groundswell International. Groundswell International is a worldwide partnership of local non-government organizations and resource individuals actively supporting rural people to transform their communities and to overcome poverty. The positive change that this organization is already affecting is incredible, as you’re about to find out!
Groundswell International was founded on September 1, 2009, with its global coordination office based in the U.S. The organization seeks to strengthen capacity for positive social change in the rural communities of Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Its vision is to help create: "a world where communities learn from and support each other locally and globally and take action to protect their rights and resources, build local economies that generate physical, spiritual and environmental wellbeing for all, and have a voice in the decisions that impact their lives."
Behind Groundswell are like-minded colleagues drawn from Latin America, Africa, Asia, and the U.S. and Canada. These dedicated and talented people have already collaborated together in the past and their knowledge draws together decades of shared experience in how to effectively bring about social change in marginalized rural communities. Driving Groundswell is the belief that positive, holistic changes come about through people-centered development focused principally on community-based organizations. The organization seeks lasting change through community-led processes and continual learning through combining local action with the pursuit of common global goals such as the reduction of poverty. And Groundswell values walking the talk by committing to transparent, grounded actions and maintaining positive, coherent lifestyles that promote the causes they have taken up.
One of the reasons Groundswell has inspired us so much is their ability to get in and actually achieve positive social change. With over one billion people earning less than a dollar a day and 80% of them living in rural areas, investing in these very people as agents of positive change is sound common sense. As Christopher Sacco from Groundswell International explains, it is crucial that developed world/donor countries avoid assuming that that they have all the answers because “imposing solutions does not lead to sustainability. Rather than impose externally based knowledge and technology, Groundswell seeks to mobilize local knowledge, creativity, and initiative in ways that ensure local accountability and relevance of outcomes that nurture and strengthen local capacities.” He says that Groundswell is succeeding where so many others have failed due to its localized attention and "because it focuses on strengthening local leadership and organizations through a practical, ‘learning by doing’ approach to addressing basic needs."
A message that Chris is keen for us to understand is that while the reliance on and nurturing of local communities might seem an obvious solution, unfortunately it’s not a common approach in place with many well-intentioned organizations trying to help out. He says: "Though they mean well, many organizations do more harm than good because their externally imposed solutions erode local initiative and make people dependent." Traditional development models tend to rely too heavily on expecting something back that fits into the donor’s framework, forcing aid recipients to conform to the service delivery mandates of the donors rather than expecting that the people who need help will form their own networks of accountability and sharing of learning. Groundswell prefers to lay the groundwork that relies on locally rooted solutions, promotes local resiliency, nurtures peer accountability and fosters coordinated action on shared priorities. So far Groundswell has undertaken work in Burkina Faso, Ecuador, and Haiti, with the expectation of expanding into 10-15 country partnerships by 2014. You can see just a part of their great efforts in this video:
For each project, Groundswell links with local partners. Chris says: “There are so many great people and organizations working toward similar objectives. We want to bring them together through exchanges that allow them to learn from one another.” He explains just how effective this approach is: “When successful approaches are identified, these are spread among farmers, families and community-based organizations through volunteer promoters and farmer-to-farmer exchanges. Experience has shown that people learn better from their neighbors who have achieved successes while facing similar circumstances, as opposed to from external experts promoting technological packages that may not be accessible or sustainable over the long term.” As a result, Groundswell is now seeking to also do this between countries.
And when it comes to the challenge of externally imposed solutions, Chris isn’t just talking about the situation in developing countries – he explains that the problem of imposing solutions is also of concern in countries like the U.S. He sees our educational systems as being complicit with teaching us to learn what is expected as a one-way process. He says: "Children are often seen just as learners who need to be taught what to do and exactly how they should do it. If we are going to teach children the ways we have been doing things up to now, which do not seem to be working out so well, maybe we will be better off giving the children a chance to teach us and to learn from each other." We’re right with you on the ability for us to learn from children! Indeed, Chris recognizes the fundamental role that children have to play in ensuring effective social change; he says that “it is becoming increasingly accepted in the
development field that children are phenomenal changemakers. When children bring home new ways of doing things, their siblings, parents and other relatives learn from them.” Chris’ passion for the role of children is so evident and so inspiring, that we thought we’d do best by leaving the last word to him:
“I would encourage children everywhere to recognize their role as changemakers, because when they do, it will empower them to become catalysts for the change the world so desperately needs now. We cannot wait until they are grown -- by then it may be too late to save many species and natural places. Children need to become active now and lead the rest of us.”
You can find out more about Groundswell International at their website and contact them here. Thanks especially to Chris for taking the time to share his inspiring thoughts, to select the beautiful photos of children to inspire us even more, and to Groundswell International for sharing your story with us -- we’ll be watching with keen interest as you continue to make an amazing on-the-ground difference for so many deserving people.








