I am quite serious about development work and have led projects in over
twenty countries and from HQ. Focusing on economic
development for the most part, I have a broad and deep interest in all aspects of international development, and the essays on these pages touch on a wide range of
topics and lessons from my experience.
The work is important.
The average income of a woman in our program is about fifty-five cents a day. Our
objective is to raise her income to a dollar a day. Current enrollment is over 50,000 women in eight countries.
Four years ago, this program had only modest job skills classes and rights awareness
workshops. The rights aspect had been the center piece of the organization for many years, but economic development is
the heart of it now-- numeracy programs,
classes in basic business topics, market-oriented vocational skills training, support for cooperatives, and nearly two
dozen job creation projects & social enterprises.
In building this program-- designing, launching, and guiding implementation in eight countries-- I have drawn on twenty years' experience delivering international development
assistance. That experience ranges from strategic planning for regional economic development to firm-level assistance,
from program concept & design to micro-enterprise support in the poorest village. I have done a lot of work in a
lot of countries.
Islamic Economics-- I lead the design and implementation of significant economic development programs in eight countries, six of which have significant
Muslim populations. It is a serious, twelve month program which delivers
sustained support to the poorest of the poor via market-oriented micro-enterprise support.
It's all about entrepreneurship, rational decision makers, and self-interest-- based on liberal
democracy and free market thinking.
The economic principles inherent in Islam are quite different, however, so there are some basic issues to address.
To make efforts like this more likely to succeed one must understand how people make decisions, and economics does that
by examining exchanges. This well-received essay illuminates a
number of the values and practices of Muslim societies in theory and practice.
Credit in economic development --
One aspect of almost all economic development programs is
"access to credit". I have sat on the board of
directors of a bank and sat in association meetings, pleaded
with central bank officials and heard the pleas of poor
farmers. I started one lending operation, oversaw loan programs
in a couple of places, and organized more bank fairs and
borrower training than I can remember.
Experience is a teacher, and some of my thoughts have gone into
this examination of micro-credit.
As a strong supporter of savings perhaps I come off as too
critical in this essay, but I think we need to be as realistic
as possible about development programming.
Community-based development -- Local economic development works best
through broad community involvement. I've done it in three countries.
It was particularly successful in Bosnia where we had good working groups, broad stakeholder groups, and
support from local governments. A basic strategic planning process over about eight to ten months delivered plans so
well received that the local governments changed their budgets and public hearing rules.
A similar effort for an island in the Bahamas never took off because we couldn't overcome a
general feeling that an idyllic island should "be developed" and never got the needed buy-in. You
can read about the bad one in this introductory piece.
Starting a project -- Before we
can put the plan into action we need to get it organized. I've
been the director of several projects and discovered that
bringing a project plan to life and making it work is a
demanding task in itself. This essay describes a dynamic, quick
start approach to a complicated multi-task project you should
consider.
Several essays -- This is an assortment
of short pieces visitors to the site seem to like-- a few of the columns
I did for a Kiev newspaper, research results, travelogues, and some cross-cultural stuff.
Reading -- Development
assistance is a very complicated field, and I try to improve
my understanding and knowledge continuously by reading
everything I can find related to the subject. 15-18 titles
are reviewed here.
For fun, a fictional short story I
wrote about what life as an expatriate development professional
could be if you wanted it so, or if you weren't careful.
Showing over 25 years' experience in the field and HQ, my resume outlines work in over twenty countries on a wide range of programs with a focus on economic development.
For more on the program I lead now you can go here, and a major agribusiness project I led is described on this page.
Good fortune is not as blind as it is generally
thought to be. It is often nothing more than the result of
sound, consistent actions that go unnoticed by the crowd but
nonetheless make a particular event possible. Still more often,
it is the result of an individual's characteristics, nature,
and behavior.