UNDP Capacity Development
UNDP Capacity Development
Capacity Development
PRACTICE NOTE
CONTENTS
Page
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3
I. Introduction 4
ANNEXES 28
1. Capacity Development – Case Experiences
2. Bibliography
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This Practice Note provides UNDP staff and other development practitioners with a basic understanding
of core capacity issues to focus on in a development context, why such capacities are important, and how
external partners can support countries’ efforts to further deepen and effectively utilise such capacities to
achieve their development goals. It also proposes default principles for supporting capacity development
and pointers for mainstreaming capacity development into programming and operations.
The audience for this Note includes UNDP practitioners and domestic and external partners engaged in
country-level collaboration on capacity development and provides a common point of reference for those
parties. The Practice Note is kept concise, as it is complementary to the OECD/DAC Good Practice
Paper on Capacity Development1 which UNDP was actively engaged in preparing.
The Premise
UNDP defines capacity as “the ability of individuals, institutions and societies to perform functions, solve
problems, and set and achieve objectives in a sustainable manner.”2 Capacity development (CD) is
thereby the process through which the abilities to do so are obtained, strengthened, adapted and
maintained over time. Capacity development is seen by UNDP as a primarily endogenous and
domestically driven process. It is an inherently political and complex process that cannot be rushed, and
outcomes cannot be expected to evolve in a controlled and linear fashion.
UNDP recognizes that a country’s capacity resides at three levels: the enabling environment,
organisational and individual. Within all three levels there are five types of cross-cutting capacities which
involve the capacity to: 1) engage in multi-stakeholder dialogue; 2) analyse a situation and create a
vision; 3) formulate policy and strategy; 4) budget, manage, and implement; and 5) monitor and evaluate.
The UNDP capacity assessment framework3 calls for evaluating these capacities from a human
development perspective. This Note also details the CD strategies that follow. These CD strategies may
be applied to address needs in a variety of sectors, and are predicated on integrated approaches to
development:
Section I of this Practice Note provides an introduction to the key concepts in capacity development.
Section II explores the issue and its dimensions introducing basic notions of capacity development.
Section III considers operational implications structured around cross-cutting capacity areas. Section IV
identifies main entry points for UNDP to promote capacity development. Users of this Practice Note will
find key resources in Section V and the accompanying Annexes. Likewise, links are made to other UNDP
Practice Notes that relate closely to this issue, such as those on capacity assessments, leadership
development and a human rights-based approach to development.
1
OECD/DAC, The Challenge of Capacity Development – Working Towards Good Practice, 2006
2
OECD/DAC definition: Capacity is the ability of people, organisations and society as a whole to manage their affairs
successfully.
3
Please see UNDP Capacity Assessment Practice Note, April 2006 for more information.
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
I. INTRODUCTION
The United Nation’s Development Programme is the UN's global development network. It
advocates for change and connects countries to knowledge, experience and resources to
help people build a better life. We are on the ground in 166 countries, working with them
on their own solutions to global and national development challenges. As they develop
local capacity, they draw on the people of UNDP and our wide range of partners.
UNDP mission statement
Capacity development (CD) is vital to development effectiveness and the achievement of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs). More generally, the development of a country’s capacity to formulate,
implement and review policies and programmes is critical for long-term economic and societal
development. Against the background of a global commitment to fighting poverty, and pledges to
increase the volume of aid, the capacities to negotiate, manage, oversee and effectively utilise
development finance for human development ends has acquired even greater urgency. The Millennium
Summit Declaration, Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness and the Outcome Document of the World
Summit reflect this prominence.
UNDP recognizes that a country’s capacity resides at the enabling environment, organisational and
individual levels, and its policy, programme and implementation support addresses capacity assets and
needs at all three levels. These in turn are embedded within a global framework and influenced by global
trends. Experience shows that attempts to address capacity issues at any one level, without taking into
account the others, are likely to result in developments that are skewed, inefficient, and in the end,
unsustainable. Existing on all three levels are cross-cutting capacities, such as those relating to multi-
stakeholder dialogue, situation analysis, policy formulation, programme implementation and results
monitoring. These capacities, vital to development effectiveness, span the public, private and civil society
sectors and complement technical or sector-focused capacities.
Support of capacity development requires more than attending to its “supply side;” it must also address
the “demand side:” political, economic and social incentives that relate to mindsets, norms and values, as
well as to issues of participation, voice and gender accountability. A set of core issues has been
identified and any given capacity assessment may analyze some but not necessarily all of these. There
are several additional areas for analysis that any capacity assessment should include; for example,
globalization, and specifically aid effectiveness, is a function of capacity – without local institutions that
perform efficiently, there is little external resources can do to fight poverty in a sustainable manner and to
reduce country dependency on aid.
Over the last few years, it has become evident that a more rigorous approach to capacity development is
required. Work in this area must be more evidence-based and systematic in application, and this
includes taking concrete steps to mainstream capacity diagnostics throughout UNDP operations and into
national processes, such as the preparation and monitoring of PRSs and national development plans,
and translation of the results into practical capacity development strategies and resourced programmes
for public sector reform, private sector development, education and other priority areas. UN agencies can
“drill down” into sector-specific technical areas using the default UNDP Capacity Diagnostic Framework4
as a starting point and complement with their own diagnostic tools.
A capacity development approach pays particular attention to the organisations, incentive systems,
education and learning opportunities, leadership and management measures and investments that need
to come together to deliver on a country’s development agenda over the long term. It links closely to
UNDP’s support for democratic governance, gender equality and a rights-based approach to
development that promotes improvements in the quality of life of all citizens in an equitable and fair
manner. UNDP is committed to enhancing the quality of its support to capacity development and to
remain a source of knowledge and leading practice in this domain.
4
See UNDP Capacity Assessment Practice Note, April 2006, for a fuller discussion of the default UNDP Capacity Diagnostic
Framework.
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A capable and accountable state supported by an effective civil society and private sector is essential for
achieving the MDGs, as well as other national development objectives. It is fundamental to long-term
sustainable development, and hence also critical to aid effectiveness. Without well functioning
organisations and a well performing human resource base in both public and private sectors, there is little
that financial resources alone—including ODA—can do to address poverty in a sustainable manner.
Meeting the collective commitments to aid effectiveness and, most important, improved development
results means putting the development of capacity at the heart of development co-operation.
This section spells out key notions for understanding capacity development as an endogenous process
that is systemic in nature.
Capacity clearly resides within individuals and organisations: at the individual level, capacities are the
skills and knowledge vested in people; and organisations provide a framework for individual capacities to
connect and achieve collective goals. In human rights-based language, it is the capacity of duty bearers
to guarantee rights and services and of rights holders to claim and use them. While capacity at these
levels has been widely acknowledged and the prime subject of capacity development efforts in the past, a
more difficult notion to grasp and address is capacity as it resides within larger systems or the enabling
environment.5 Capacity at this level includes overall policies, rules and norms, values governing the
mandates, priorities, modes of operation, civic engagement, etc. within and across sectors. These factors
determine the “rules of the game” for interaction between and among organisations. Interdependencies
tend to be more complex and less tangible, but a well functioning system or enabling environment is
critical for individuals and organisations to perform and can be an important point of entry for
understanding capacity challenges and addressing them.
It is important to note that, whatever the focus of analysis or action, all levels come into play. For
instance, what may be an individual-level issue, such as the leadership of the Economics Minister, turns
into an issue of enabling environment once looked at from the perspective of a sector organisation.
Regulations for the economy, which are part of the enabling environment for the private sector, are also
an organisational and perhaps even an individual capacity issue when administration of economy and
finance is the focus. This implies that any effort to analyze or develop capacity necessarily needs to take
into account capacities at these different levels, otherwise efforts risk becoming skewed or ineffective.
Furthermore, a country’s capacities on these three levels are embedded within a global framework and
are influenced by global trends. Some trends greatly undercut capacity, such as migration of the highly
skilled or the under-provision of global public goods, for example, antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) in the case
of HIV/AIDS. Other trends have more potential to foster capacity. ICT, for example, has revolutionized
access to knowledge, and some trade agreements serve human development, global conventions and
standards reinforce local governance and new aid architectures emerge. Also, these global conditions
shape incentive structures that influence performance and strengthen or diminish country capacities
accordingly.
5
The literature distinguishes the levels by adding different emphasis and detail. There is general agreement that individual
is the first level, followed by various combinations of organisation, inter-organisational, institutional, societal and enabling
environment. The important point is to recognise that the levels, regardless of terminology, form a system in which they are
interdependent. UNDP has chosen to use the term “organisational” to refer specifically to entity, and “enabling environment”
to indicate the system beyond the single entity.
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Timing is everything. Windows of opportunity for change open and close with changes in leadership,
which could bring with it a new look at development priorities, partnerships and resource availability.
Sometimes, it is important to secure “quick wins” at the outset to mobilise political support and
commitment to longer-term capacity investments. The ability of a country, an organisation or a
community to avail of opportunities to better their human development depends on the capacity base it
has built that enables adaptability and flexibility to manage risks and changes. The challenges in investing
in capacities are often about managing trade-offs: making an investment that has an immediate return, or
investing in initiatives that have a 5-10 year or longer gestation period, for example, investing in primary
and secondary education for girls.
Political Economy
Addressing capacity needs by putting in place skills, systems and processes will not hold the promise of
sustainable results if the process does not take into account the inherently political and complex realities
in the environment. Political, economic and social incentives relate to mindsets, norms and values.
Sustainable results require effective participation, public access to information that leads to voice of the
people (particularly women and disadvantaged sections of society), civic engagement and accountability
for capacity results. The change processes related to capacity development come with changes in roles
and responsibilities that can be most unsettling to vested interests and established power structures.
External partners inevitably become part of this process and the political economy.
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capacities may be in place, but appropriate incentives need to be present to put them in high gear and in
motion toward the desired development destination.
Sound governance practice is a critical enabler in any environment. Countries are more likely to develop
and make use of available capacities when there is strong political ownership and commitment at the
highest levels, wide participation, transparency and clear accountability. In turn, capacity development
processes can contribute to enhancing participation and accountability and thus strengthen governance.
An institution needs a supportive policy and legal framework, access to resources and the goods and
services of other institutions, and the support of stakeholders in order to succeed. Similarly, a staff is
motivated to apply its skills when it is adequately compensated for its efforts and when achievement is
acknowledged and rewarded.
It is difficult to generalize about roles external partners may play, given that what is needed is contingent
on the task at hand. External partners may play more facilitative roles related to the management of
change processes, or more interventionist roles including gap-filling. The focus might be on knowledge
enhancement, but equally it might require provision of financial resources, or the procurement of
equipment and particular expertise. “Process facilitation”—an approach that is consistent with the idea of
capacity development as an endogenous process—can help avoid disempowering local actors by
ensuring that local partners remain in the driver’s seat while donors reinforces local ownership and
commitment.
6
On the notion of vicious and virtuous dynamics see “Ownership, Leadership and Transformation,” Chapter 1.4, p. 41ff.
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fundamental rights are a powerful incentive. Degree of “rule of law”, equality of citizens, access
to justice
Reduction in overall PIUs; changes in functioning of
7. Integrate external inputs into national
implementation structures from the parallel to the
priorities, processes and systems:
organically integrated and accountable type
External inputs need to correspond to real
Increase in budget support and pooling
demand and need to be flexible to respond
arrangements, incl. pooling of TC that allows
effectively to national needs and possibilities.
broader choice by primary clients
Where such systems are not strong enough
Focus on collective outcomes & reduction in
they need to be reformed and strengthened,
attribution to individuals
not bypassed.
Clear establishment of existing assets as standard
8. Build on existing capacities rather than
step in any diagnostics
creating new ones. This implies the use of
Relative size and quality of a domestic consulting
national expertise as prime option,
sector
resuscitation and strengthening of national
Collaboration with national universities and
institutions, and protecting social and cultural
research institutions rather than expertise and
capital.
analysis from outside
Share of finance going through legitimate domestic
institutions
A country’s collective capacity for development7 combines a complex web of capacities residing across
government, the private sector and civil society. A basic distinction can be made between cross-cutting
capacities and more technical capacities.
Cross-Cutting Capacities
7
Capacity as such is a neutral term. It can be used for development or misused to destroy or undermine development. What
is implicitly meant in this Practice Note is capacity that serves pro-poor development. A human rights-based approach helps
define “for what” capacity should be used.
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Cross-cutting capacities are relevant within and across enabling environments, organisations and sectors.
UNDP focuses primarily on supporting the emergence of such cross-cutting capacities that are less easy
to define, less embedded within established disciplines, and which often depend on much broader,
society-wide rules, norms and values. They can be systematized in various ways. The following
categorisation offers a useful and robust basis for analysis and operational focus.
Cross-Cutting Capacities:
Technical Capacities
Technical capacities are associated with particular areas of professional expertise or knowledge, such as
fiscal management, agriculture, education, etc. Technical capacities vary and are closely related to the
sector or organisational context in focus.
5. Core Issues
For UNDP, within each cross-cutting and technical capacity mentioned above, there are several core
issues that can and should be explored from a human development perspective. Not all of these issues
will necessarily be analyzed in any given assessment, but they provide a mapping of critical areas of
capacity common to any country, to which a capacity diagnostic could be applied. The selection of core
issues defines scope and content of a capacity diagnostic exercise. The core issues in the UNDP
Capacity Assessment Framework are: 1) leadership; 2) policy and legal framework; 3) mutual
accountability mechanisms; 4) public engagement; 5) human resources; 6) financial resources; 7)
physical resources; and 8) environmental resources.8 Additional areas of analysis to be explored in any
capacity assessment are 9) globalisation and international relations; 10) crisis prevention and recovery;
11) gender equality; and 12) human rights.9
8
For further definition of the core issues, refer to the UNDP Capacity Assessment Practice Note, April 2006.
9
For further definition of the additional areas of analysis, refer to the UNDP Capacity Assessment Practice Note, March
2006.
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This section identifies ways in which UNDP can address capacity development across its various practice
areas. It seeks to answer the questions: What needs doing differently? How can capacity development
be mainstreamed in practice? How can we better support capacity development as an endogenous
process?
Experience and research have yielded fairly clear insights on what is conducive or detrimental to capacity
development. This leads to a “best fit” rather than the “best practice” approach. Because there is no one-
size-fits-all formula that could represent an operational recipe or blueprint, a number of action-oriented
default principles for capacity development10 can serve as signposts and safeguards to help keep
development efforts focused on capacity outcomes. The principles would apply to all conceivable
situations, bearing in mind that specific country situations vary widely. Operational variations are likely to
be most pronounced at both ends of what effectively constitutes a continuum, from the particularly
vulnerable and fragile states to countries in transition.11
This section further explores opportunities for mainstreaming and supporting capacity development with
respect to the five cross-cutting capacities presented in Section II and provides illustrative areas of
programme support under each cross-cutting capacity. In doing so, it provides a number of pointers for
capacity development, taking into account both “process” aspects (how external agents can engage in
local capacity development processes) and “substantive” aspects (identification of potential areas of
capacity development intervention).
This category relates to capacity to engage and build consensus among all stakeholders. It pertains to all
relevant public and societal agents, as well as external partners. It includes the skills to perform the
following: identify, motivate and mobilize stakeholders; create partnerships and networks; raise
awareness; develop an enabling environment that engages civil society and the private sector; manage
large group processes and open dialogue; mediate divergent interests; and establish collaborative
mechanisms.
• This may involve a PRSP, a national development plan or some equivalent that can facilitate country
leadership and ownership of the development agenda while providing a common reference point for a
mutual review of results. At sector or thematic level, programme-based approaches such as Sector-
wide Approaches (SWAps) offer an equivalent framework for harmonising and aligning host country
and external partner policy positions. While donors may play a role in instituting such national
frameworks, it is important to avoid parallel decision-making and consultative forums that bind
governments to donor agendas and reinforce upward and outward accountability at the expense of
local processes and downward accountability.
A Capacity 2015 Small Innovation Grants supports an initiative for “Promoting and Nurturing
an Environment that is responsive to the Needs of Smallholder Farmers’ in Uganda”. It
10
For an elaboration of some of the operational implications of the default principles, see the Executive Summary of the
UNDP publication: Ownership, Leadership and Transformation – Can we do better for Capacity Development?
11
Characteristics of fragility, such as weak systems of governance, political instability and insecurity, are not restricted to
least developed and fragile countries but can also be found in more economically advanced countries including those in
transition.
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facilitates a forum where key advocacy issues may be articulated and acted upon, helps
develop relationships with regional, national and international stakeholders (farmer
organisations, farmer networks, NGOs and government institutions) and increase farmers
options by through access to information and capacity building.
In Eritrea UNDP and Capacity 21 assisted the Government in the preparation of the Interim
Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper and the Food Security Strategy. Currently, UNDP is
carrying out a further assessment, which would facilitate the dialogue for formulation of
national development programmes. UNDP has been involved in the support and facilitation of
policy dialogue between national stakeholders in a number of areas, especially energy and
environment.
• This serves as a basis for forging effective and equitable partnerships. Dialogue can help uphold
principles of transparency and accountability, and forge relationships built on trust and mutual
responsibility. The quality of dialogue also has a strong bearing on the aid relationship. Grounded in
transparency, frank discussion and mutual accountability, it should serve to build a solid basis of trust,
clarify misperceptions and even tackle sensitive issues that may upset or undermine any serious
development effort. Efforts to promote multi-stakeholder consultations within the country will generally
be useful steps. Examples include national development forums that can replace donor-oriented
ones, consultative groups and round tables. The reality is that many groups do not have a seat at the
table, because opening up the dialogue could lead to questions and criticisms over the rules and
norms imposed to benefit only those in charge. Sensitivity to political realities is especially important,
as is the ability to broker engagement between groups that may not usually sit together.
In Mongolia UNDP supported a National Policy Dialogue Workshop on “Access to Water and
Sanitation Services in Mongolia”, bringing together decision makers, representatives from
private sector and civil society. The workshop addressed gaps in water policy and developed
recommendations.
In Sudan, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and Operation Lifeline Sudan (OLS)
employed a future search to help imagine a vision of peace for the children in the south of the
country, where war has raged for many years. UNICEF hoped this would help place
consideration for the lives of children outside the context of political disagreements and
inspire everyone to contribute to improving their future.
• This involves the identification of needs and the formulation of development objectives since these
are more likely to foster broad-based ownership of development choices than those determined in
narrower circles. In the process, it is more likely that the winners and losers, as well as intended and
unintended beneficiaries of particular interventions/policy choices, will be identified.
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In Yemen, the process of preparing PRSPs has served as an opportunity for enhancing
participation and civic engagement in national policy-making processes. In some cases, the
process has helped develop other capacities due to its rigour and requirements. PRSP
preparation called for the government to upgrade its capabilities in a number of areas. In the
process, it seeded a new, more inclusive culture of policy-making, and helped donors to fine-
tune their coordination, monitoring and reporting.
This category pertains to the abilities to effectively access, gather, analyze and synthesize data and
information, and translate it into a vision. It focuses on the ability to assess current capacity levels
against desired capacity levels, thus articulating the capacity needs that can lead to capacity
development strategies.
Facilitating a proper and shared understanding of the nature and magnitude of capacity
development challenges amongst partners
• This has traditionally been an area of weakness, yet is critical to the formulation of appropriate
interventions, and to avoiding “false starts” based on inappropriate diagnosis. In particular, capacity
assessments can help identify the nature of capacity needs and the factors that might constrain or
facilitate change. While these may focus on immediate needs at the sector/organisation/function
level, attention should equally focus on broader system-wide change, such as policy and legislative
reform, civil service reform and decentralisation. They can also be used to establish baseline data for
subsequent monitoring and review. Development partners can use various tools and techniques.
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Capacity assessments of public institutions will be carried out in Timor-Leste and Afghanistan in 2006
using the enabling environment and organisational capacity assessment framework described in the
Capacity Assessment Practice Note. A capacity assessment of public sector management in Sierra
Leone carried out by UNDP identifies particular capacity gaps in the public service, while at the same
time makes broader recommendations on national strategy for public sector reform and decentralisation
policy.
• Contextual analysis using a variety of tools, such as political risk analysis or drivers of change
analysis, may need to be considered to support general country analytical work. An analysis of the
drivers of change can help incorporate a better appreciation of cultural, political, social and historical
aspects that define the context within which capacity development can take place. Similarly,
stakeholder analyses can help determine who has a legitimate interest in an intervention, identifying
intended and unintended beneficiaries, as well as those who are negatively affected.
• This will ensure that they are treated as an integral part of any contextual problem analysis and can
be utilized at different levels of specificity depending on the scale of the development challenge at
hand. International experts should not monopolize such work. On the contrary, opportunities for
drawing on locally available knowledge and expertise to support analytic work of this nature should be
encouraged.
• National, local government and non-state statistical and analytical capacities for policy and planning
produce and implement MDG-based national and local development and poverty reduction strategies.
Getting the data right, and reading it right are essential to well-informed policy making, as is the
constant review of policy options that best fit a given country situation at a point in time.
UNDP and DFID designed a project, “Statistical Literacy and Capacity Building for MDG
Monitoring at Country Level,” to be implemented across five regions by as many partner
organisations. The project aims at providing support to countries in the following areas: 1)
Making data more accessible; enhance the capacity of national statistical offices to maintain
a central repository of data; 2) Enhancing statistical capacity and literacy; improving ability to
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UNDP Capacity Assessment Practice Note, 2006.
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make better use of data and interpret indicators to monitor progress, tailor country-specific
policies and foster better-informed advocacy.
Conceptualizing and formulating policies, legislations, strategies, and programmes require analyzing a
range of development parameters that may affect needs and performance in a given area; exploring
different perspectives; long-term strategizing; and setting objectives. At the enabling environment level, it
may also include conceptualizing sectoral and cross-sectoral policies, legislative and regulatory
frameworks, inter-ministerial/inter-sectoral coordination mechanisms, participatory planning and
budgeting and other arrangements for prioritization, planning and formulation of programmes and
projects.
• The issue of capacity can be systematically put on the dialogue agenda in order to come up with
country-led strategies that link to the wider development agenda. Such strategies can also be
periodically reviewed as part of monitoring the implementation of the Rome and Paris declarations.
The dialogue process moreover offers a key opportunity to put into practice the very principles of
harmonisation and alignment by avoiding working through parallel and multiple dialogue processes.
In the process, external partners must be mindful of the fine line between legitimate advocacy and
agenda setting. This line between advocating and selling is not always easy to draw, but the inter-
personal dynamics are most important in particular in environments where leadership is weak and
ownership easily destroyed starting with the very ideas.
Helping to develop appropriate skills and attitudes, as well as methodologies, to support dialogue
processes among stakeholder groups
• This might include developing brokerage and process facilitation skills. Visioning and mediation
techniques may also be required in certain situations. Support might also include information
dissemination and exchange, or providing resources to strengthen policy analysis capacity among
domestic stakeholders. Situations of uncertainty and hostility may require the creation of a neutral
and protected space for exchange. Governance capacities that reinforce the involvement of state and
non-state organisations and community groups include greater legislative and civic engagement in
monitoring development strategy and results. Capacities within the enabling environment and at the
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organisational and individual levels are also critical in addressing the challenges of racism, corruption,
gender bias and violence in society through dialogue, leadership transformation and conflict
resolution mechanisms.
In Mauritius, the project on Capacity Building for the Independent Commission Against
Corruption provides support to the Independent Commission Against Corruption to combat
corruption and money laundering in a most effective manner and serve as a lever to enhance
the image of the Commission. The project strengthens the capacity of the Commission to
respond effectively to the increasing sophistication of corruption and helps in the
implementation of the Strategy for corruption prevention by system enhancement and public
awareness and education.
In Honduras, the Democracy Trust was conceived as a policy advocacy tool to encourage
commitment to the PRSP process among political parties. By ensuring that political parties
publicly back policies of development and poverty eradication, the trust has granted the
Honduran population a mechanism to hold elected officials to their obligations, and to
demand their right to improved and sustainable services. Thus, commitments to development
have become state policies and no longer belong solely to the government of the day.
• This involves the ability to effectively negotiate, coordinate and manage the resources required to
finance the MDGs, including fiscal reforms, domestic borrowing, market access, direct budget
support, sustainable debt management and the effective use of remittances. Ensuring that finance
coordination mechanisms are led and managed nationally is essential to this effort. Developing
capacities for negotiation and coordination of development finance goes beyond foreign aid
management. An integrated approach to external and internal financing should promote public
finance reform, which would enable the government to implement its strategic objectives. This
requires improving budget execution to deliver resources predictably and linking budget planning and
implementation to the policy priorities.
Bangladesh represents a case of unutilized aid over the past two decades, with some
exceptional years where the trend was reversed. As one attempt to increase disbursements,
health and education, SWAp have been negotatiated as aid modalities in recent years. A
SWAp for the Health and Population Sector Programme (HPSP) was approved in
1998.Resistance to this approach from both the donor and government sides has been
growing, On the government side, there is concern over moving all ODA for health under a
single controlling unit, subject to donor oversight and conditionalities. On the other hand,
donors express no confidence in the Ministry of Health’s capacity to manage and monitor the
programme. More public scrutiny is required over the use of resources, simplified procedures
and incentives to administer and monitor programmes effectively. The rural infrastructure
SWAp in Nepal has helped coordinate domestic and external aid to this sector, which would
have been rife with donor-driven individual projects and overlapping line ministry initiatives
otherwise. Current empirical evidence demonstrates that SWAps work best when it provides
a unifying policy and budget platform for programme support to a given field, irrespective of
funding source. It also works best when managed through national mechanisms that have
developed the necessary capacities for accountable management, transparent budgeting and
open and participatory planning and monitoring processes that involve the constituency it
serves.
Encouraging harmonisation of analytical work that donors carry out as part of their programme
formulation processes
• Joint analytical work, carried out under partner country leadership, can facilitate greater sharing of
information and insights and strengthen local ownership of proposed programmes. It can also
contribute to reducing the duplication of efforts that easily over-burden local systems with demands
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on staff time and data collection, while encouraging the identification of common programmes that
can be co-funded.
Aligning UNDP development resources, as much as possible, with national planning and
budgeting processes
UNDP support in Afghanistan facilitated transition to a locally owned aid management system
housed in the Ministry of Finance that included merit-based recruitment and training of
personnel, contracting aid tracking expertise to private sector partners, and establishing a
government website.
• These involve functions such as planning and budgeting—as well as of other development actions.
As a shift is made to programme-based approaches and budget support and volumes of aid increase,
such strengthening of national systems becomes an even greater priority.
In Libya UNDP has worked to strengthen the Capacity of Provincial Planning Officials on
Integrating the MDGs into Local Development Planning; Raising awareness on the MDGs
and enhancing the capacity of local government officials and the department of statistics to
integrate MDG targets into local development planning
In Cambodia, UNDP supported the Public Expenditure Management Reform, using capacity
building to mainstream pro-poor objectives into the policy framework. The measures included
building capacity to conduct revenue and expenditure incidence analysis of the government’s
fiscal policies in the short- and medium-term and using this analytical capacity to enhance the
quality of pro-poor budget formulation and implementation in Cambodia.
UNDPs experience of support to the security and justice sector in Mozambique provides
insights on capacity development in general, highlighting the importance of adopting a holistic
approach and making operational linkages with other broad-based initiatives, such as public
sector reform. Additional lessons include understanding the dynamics of change, building
capacity on the basis of existing knowledge and systems, and being willing to commit to long-
term engagement.
• While the long-term objective of sustainable capacity needs to remain paramount, it will generally be
possible to identify sensible opportunities for achieving tangible impact in the short-term that can
serve as stepping stones or catalysts, help mobilize and maintain commitment and accelerate
progress towards the MDGs. At the World Summit in September 2005, one of the key areas the
world’s leaders agreed to take action on was in the area of "Quick Impacts," 13 and the Millennium
Project report provides a number of criteria.
13
The MDG 5 year review summit Outcome Document, Paragraph 34 states: "Given the need to accelerate progress
immediately in countries where current trends make the achievement of the internationally agreed development goals
unlikely, we resolve to urgently identify and implement country-led initiatives with adequate international support, consistent
with long-term national development strategies, that promise immediate and durable improvements in the lives of people
and renewed hope for the achievement of the development goals. …"
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
This category includes process management capacities that are essential in the implementation of any
type of policy, legislation, strategy and programme. It also includes execution aspects of programme and
project implementation; costing of capacity development activities; mobilization and management of
human, material and financial resources; and selection of technologies and procurement of equipment.
Core management functions, such as public financial management and procurement are the main focus,
as well as other conditions that facilitate the implementation of policies, strategies and programmes and
effective service delivery.
Implementing programme activities through national structures and systems and mobilising local
capacity as a matter of principle
• In so doing, a balance needs to be struck between seeking to achieve physical results on the ground
as quickly as possible, while at the same time ensuring that capacity development of national
systems and processes remains a clear priority. This also forces critical thinking about absorptive
capacity—an issue central to the realization of the Millennium Development Goals, but also about
creating the incentives and opportunities for local organisations (private and non-profit) to participate
more actively in the supply of services, including those for capacity development.
• By favouring domestic institutions, PBAs establish a tight link with the capacity development agenda.
In particular, because PBAs succeed to the extent that local organisations have the capacity to
deliver, the incentive for all parties to promote capacity development processes in those institutions is
raised. PBAs can also guide capacity-strengthening activities to address needs at all levels and
across all stakeholder groups, thus providing a more strategic context for examining capacity
constraints. By channeling external financial and technical resources through national organisations
and systems, the multiplication of funding sources and management arrangements is avoided.
Diversion of scarce human resources to diverse donor-driven priorities is also avoided. They can also
be used to promote public-private partnerships.
Paying attention to demand-side constraints, not only to supply-side constraints, such as lack of
appropriate skills or inefficient business processes
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
Tanzania institutionalized a nationally owned system of incentives within the public service.
The Selective Accelerated Salary Enhancement scheme (SASE) exemplifies a possible
solution to addressing salary incentive problems within the wider context of pay reform and is
part of the overall government’s Public Service Reform Programme.
In Timor Leste, UNDP implements the project on Capacity Development for Human Resource
Management in the Civil Service. Among other things, the project includes support in drafting
the Civil Service Act, which guides the work ethics and performance of civil servants. The
project improves the systems of the staff selection and also mobilizes a pay and
compensation specialist to review and propose the salary structure and reward and
promotion system. For more information see John Vong “Integrating Civil Service Reform into
Sustainable Capacity Development Framework in Timor-Leste”.
The National Institute of Public Administration (INTAN) in Malaysia revised its civil service
training for the public service in the early 1990s, introducing more analytical skills,
introduction of case study materials from across countries, more problem solving techniques
and less emphasis on lectures, and a focus on new management techniques. In-service
training was also upgraded and more scholarships provided for select overseas training for
middle and senior public managers. The Code of Conduct and Client Charter for Public
Service was introduced in 1993 and the New Remuneration Policy in 1994 (under the
Malaysia Incorporated policy), which then provided increased civil service salaries in line with
the business sector and introduced service innovation awards to the top public sector entities,
based on performance criteria. Performance of the public sector administration, as measured
through increased efficiency of work practice, coverage in the delivery of services and
customer satisfaction, has risen since.
• Globalization and the ICT revolution have created unprecedented opportunities to harness knowledge
through networks and partnerships that bring together communities of practice from across the world,
and for accessing information over the Internet and for distance learning. Harnessing the expertise
and knowledge of diasporas through formation of knowledge networks, or through reward schemes
that attract skilled personnel can also be considered. These can be a powerful resource of global
14
UNDP’s Practice Note on the PIU Dilemma: How to Address Project Implementation Units.
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
expertise for developing countries as experience in every region shows the crucial role that members
of the diasporas have played in enhancing capacity. Tapping into their experience and networks and
engaging them in their own countries are important considerations for capacity strategies. South-
south cooperation, as a sharing mechanism of expertise between developing countries in the context
of development cooperation, offers the potential for even greater transfers of knowledge, skills and
lessons of development practice. This is evident in the increasing quality and quantity of exchanges
between developing countries, within and across regions, as demonstrated in the RBLAC Knowledge
Fair. Understanding and supporting the capacity needs of these emerging south-south alignments
and partnerships in international development and trade are a key part of the new challenge.
In Kosovo, the Capacity Building Fund supported by UNDP and the OSI provides a variety of
flexible and tailor made support initiatives to strengthen the capacity of central and local
government agencies. Focusing on hands-on learning and mentoring to senior and mid-level
civil servants, the facility has drawn on the expertise of the Kosovan diaspora that offers
know-how, modern management techniques, positive workplace attitudes, and a commitment
to cooperation and team work.
Brazil, South Africa and India have formed a trade group (IBSA) to share learning and
practices on trade and intellectual property rights, particularly in relation to generic drugs and
the service industry.
Thailand provides technical and management training for Laotian and Vietnamese state and
non-state sector agencies to help improve marketing and business skills development in the
two countries. China and India provide multiple scholarships a year to the two countries for
higher education. These technical cooperation programmes have been underway for over 50
years, albeit little is documented and their impact is not systematically measured.
During 2005, a Knowledge Fair was organized by RBLAC´s local governance group in
Rosario, Argentina. The City of Rosario was used as a good example for: (a) public health,
(b) primary school education, (c) local employment, and (d) tending for children in a systemic
way.
This pertains to the monitoring of progress, measuring of results and codification of lessons, for learning
and feedback to ensure accountability to partners and the ultimate beneficiaries of development. It also
covers results-based management and monitoring and evaluation systems, as a means of reporting to
donors. It naturally links back to policy dialogue, planning and improved management of implementation
through drawing lessons from experience.
• This enables stakeholders and ultimate beneficiaries (intended clients or end-users) to participate in
reviewing progress and expressing their level of satisfaction with participation in decision-making; the
scope, access and quality of service provision; and service delivery. This is fundamental to dialogue
processes and to creating the envisaged partnerships. Transparent M&E systems provide an
important upward pressure to perform, while creating a stronger sense of civic responsibility within
society at large. It is important to understand that results-based management systems can easily
distort capacity development objectives towards quickly measurable impacts. On the other hand they
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
can encourage performance improvement, transparency and accountability and offer development
stakeholders opportunities for alignment as well as a framework for strengthening national capacities
for monitoring and reporting. With the expansion of various forms of programme aid, Public
Expenditure Reviews (PERs) are becoming an important instrument.
In the Philippines, the three-point Strategic Governance Agenda supported by UNDP has led
it to play a major role in strengthening the capacity of the new NGO, “Procurement Watch”, to
carry out its important training and monitoring activities and to help it influence the future
course of procurement reforms in the Philippines, showing among other things, that the
CSOs have a role to play in procurement management.
Citizens grading government agencies on their performance and publishing the results in the
mass media—this is the essence of the report card methodology initiated by the Public Affairs
Centre in Bangalore. The centre conducts client satisfaction surveys among lower income
groups, assessing their approval of public service providers, such as electricity and water
supply departments. The findings are publicly shared as report cards, setting new standards
of public accountability. A credible methodology of surveying, tabulation and quantitative
analysis underpins the approach, and the report card experience has now been replicated
worldwide.
Working toward a single reporting framework that satisfies both host country and donor
requirements
• PBAs again offer a testing ground for making progress here by establishing a common reporting
framework that responds to a policy and operational framework that is country-led and for which there
is shared and mutual accountability for results. Equally, it creates the incentive to strengthen national
systems—whether in terms of enhancing internal systems of performance measurement (e.g., RBM
type systems focusing on results), or in terms of strengthening the oversight function of parliamentary
committees and civil society. Shifts toward a common monitoring and reporting system help avoid
fragmentation of effort and information that so easily undermines local capacity, ownership and
opportunities for learning, while placing the ultimate responsibility in the hands of national
authorities/stakeholders.
UNDP supports the production of the annual Development Cooperation Report (DCR) in
many countries. The DCRs provide one of the main sources of consolidated information on
donor funding and activities. UNDP’s service of compiling the report is especially useful
where it is difficult to access information from the government in an aggregated, user-friendly
format. Government, international donors and other stakeholders engaged in the dialogue on
aid effectiveness use these reports. In Egypt, UNDP provided capacity development support
for aid coordination to the Ministry of International Cooperation, which currently produces the
report on development cooperation.
Following the floods and cyclones of 2000 and 2001 in Mozambique, the government set in
motion a post-flood reconstruction programme, quickly revealing its leadership, as well as its
ability to rally the international community and perform a number of functions efficiently and
transparently. Strong government commitment to programme goals provided the incentive for
donors to pledge significant resources and agree to work largely through the national system,
including the government’s budget. In turn, this helped strengthen accountability and
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
transparency, while avoiding complex and multiple funding arrangements. The establishment
of a parliamentary task force to oversee the programme further ensured that the government
was not only held to account by its external partners, but also by the country’s legislators.
• The very principle of partnership assumes a mutual commitment to the realization of common
objectives, as well as a shared responsibility for results. Common reporting systems should
be promoted as a way to build a balanced partnership, thus doing away with artificial
attribution of results and the use of reporting systems that respond to the needs of only one
party. Independent monitoring of the development partnership could be considered as an
innovative way to level the playing field between donor and recipient and hold both sides
accountable in terms of processes and results. It helps both partner countries and donors
achieve desired results by establishing clear and objective benchmarks. It also helps
overcome the inherent imbalance between donors and recipients and the sensitive nature of
issues that need to be tackled. The example of Tanzania shows that significant added value
can be derived from regular, independent monitoring of existing commitments.
• By its nature, capacity is less easy to measure than conventional development results. Progress and
results in capacity development are about attitude and behavioral change, about shifts in roles and
responsibilities, and over time, about widening opportunities and choices for a greater number of
people. In the interim, one could expect reversals in some capacities and growth in others. Greater
efficiency in management practice, increased participation of civil society in decision making, greater
public access to budget and policy information—these are not always easy to measure, and proxy
indicators would often benchmark progress and results. What kinds of indicators are therefore
appropriate for tracking progress in capacity development, and what are the implications for results-
based management? Development partners are challenged to identify appropriate indicators for
benchmarking capacity development and related process outcomes that can be used for tracking
progress and for fiduciary control. Equally, the use of monitoring and reporting promotes
organisational and system learning. Monitoring and evaluation are also primary tools for learning and
adjusting to evolving conditions, and therefore have great potential as a management tool to promote
internal learning that is fundamental to capacity development. The challenge is to balance the needs
for external monitoring and reporting with the potential role in internal learning.
The UNDP project “Strengthening the capacities of the National Assembly and People’s
Councils in Viet Nam in examination, decision and oversight of the State Budget” developed
a set of indicators for benchmarking capacity development.
One of the institutionalized mechanisms for South-South exchange and learning is the
African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM), an initiative of NEPAD. The APRM is the mutually
agreed instrument for self-monitoring by the participating member governments. Within the
APRM framework, members are subject to scrutiny by other African countries, accessing the
conformity of policies and practices to the agreed norms. One of the objectives of APRM is
self-reliance and building capacity for self-sustaining development.
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
Capacity development is a central dimension in all of UNDP’s functions and cuts across all practice areas.
As such it is everybody’s business and responsibility to support it effectively. UNDP is institutionalizing its
global experience and available instruments to promote a more systematic approach to capacity
development across practices and programmes. The UN system can be a key partner to support the
strengthening of national systems and tools in the priority areas identified in-country, and in helping to
integrate and cost capacity objectives into any national, sector or thematic strategy.
The following capacity development strategies may be applied to address capacity development needs in
a variety of sectors that speak to integrated approaches to development. Selection of capacity
development strategies should be predicated upon findings from a capacity assessment exercise:
Incentive Systems:
Salary supplements, non monetary benefits, pay and compensation…
Leadership Development:
One-on-one coaching, mentoring, management skills development…
Capacity Diagnostics:
Needs and capacity assessments, measurement and monitoring, advisory services, local R&D...
UNDP can apply a combination of these strategies, or elements and instruments of them (on-the-job skills
transfer, process facilitation, etc.) to provide capacity development services in the following areas, where
it has a comparative advantage through its policy expertise, knowledge base and on-the-ground
programme experience. The following applications are not intended to represent an exhaustive list, but
areas of UNDP focus and expertise.
Strengthening national and local government and non-state actor capacities for statistical literacy
and policy analysis to provide policy options to government, NGOs and the legislature (in areas,
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
such as pro poor macro policy and fiscal space, access to energy and water services; HD impact of
HIV/AIDS, trade, employment).
Developing more effective national aid policy and management capacities to access, negotiate,
coordinate and manage the needed development finance in order to reach the MDGs, including
through direct budget support, private sector investments, sustainable debt management and
remittances. This includes promotion of dialogue between domestic and external partners and
facilitation of independent monitoring and peer review mechanisms, as relevant. UNDP supports the
establishment of locally owned aid coordination and management systems and tools, and
strengthening government capacities to follow up on the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness.
Strengthening democratic governance capacities by reinforcing the capacity of societal/local
change agents to effectively engage and demand more equity based development choices and
services. UNDP’s role as an impartial partner in engaging on issues of key governance reform and
deepening democracy remains an area of highest priority. Support to human rights institutions, rule of
law and anti-corruption mechanisms, judiciary and legislative bodies, office of the ombudsman,
capacity strengthening of the electoral and political party systems, and to local governance remain
high on the agenda. This work focuses on domestic and international accountability, of a government
to its people, and of a country to its international obligations.
Supporting the inclusion of short- and long-term capacity development strategies into MDG-based
national plans and PRSs. This includes long-term visioning, medium-term development planning,
sector strategy development and review, development target-setting, MDG needs assessment,
capacity assessments and monitoring of development results. UNDP support in the area of MDG
assessments and target setting includes helping governments reconcile various regional and
international commitments made with their own national priorities and targets (MDGs, PRSPs, EU
accession criteria, NEPAD commitments, global environment conventions, etc.).
Strengthening national procurement capacities to deliver essential development services, including
those financed through new aid modalities, such as the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria and
capacities for supply chain management for generic drugs and ARVs. Assistance to governments in
implementation service capacities, at both central and sub-national levels is a key area for UNDP
support. This is critical for the scaling up of development finance and its utilisation for MDG-based
results. Both state and non-state entities can be supported through a package of services offering
capacity development and direct service support to overcome delivery obstacles in the short and long
run. This includes support to the operational areas of procurement standards, fund management and
contracts administration. It also includes reviewing supply chain management constraints and
facilitating the opening up of supply bottlenecks. Such an Offer of Service, as conducted in Sierra
Leone15, Sudan and Angola, would include on-time capacity development in each of these areas,
such as on-the-job skills training, exchange of experiences with other countries, and operational
knowledge transfer on project management, monitoring systems and procurement procedures. Exit
strategies for support to such implementation services must be agreed upon on the outset by both the
government and donors. Ongoing work in the Latin America and Africa regions (ARMADA initiative)
attest to UNDP’s valued role in assessing and strengthening national procurement services,
legislation and oversight systems, while providing direct procurement services where such still
remains under required standards.16
Promoting local-level integrated development through MDG target setting, integrated planning,
strengthening local administration and public-private partnerships for service delivery. The Capacity
2015 programme and trust fund is a key component of UNDP’s work in capacity development and
focuses directly on local capacity development by working with partners in scaling up and sustaining
capacity development investments and results at the community and sub national levels, with linkages
to national policy and strategic frameworks. Capacity 2015 offers services under 4 main objectives:
1) Empowering local communities through participatory policy dialogue and strategy options on the
MDGs; 2) Strengthening local capacities for integrated planning and MDG strategies for local
15
Refer Support Services for Improved Efficiency of Project Implementation in Sierra Leone, UNDP 2005.
16
A current UNDP initiative, with IAPSO as implementing partner, is analyzing the value added roles and practice on procurement
capacity development across region. ‘Procurement Capacity for Development’, BDP/UNDP. March 2005
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
For the above to be effective and with a sustained level of commitment and engagement from all parts of
the organisation, capacity development policies and measures must be well mainstreamed into all UNDP
core practice areas, with priority in the substantive areas mentioned above, as well as into UNDG
harmonisation efforts and procedures. To mobilize UNDP’s potential impact on capacity development, it
is necessary to focus attention and resources horizontally and vertically. Horizontally means across
regions and practices and involves: a common capacity development focus on diagnostics, overall
strategies for learning and skills development, common approaches to incentive systems, and indicators
for monitoring capacity development. “Default” capacity development methodologies and tools to support
much of the above are becoming more available, including on capacity diagnostics. These
methodologies and tools vertically cover specific capacity development interventions required within the
needs of each programme and policy and resources area; based on the horizontal common ground, each
service line can better define what capacity development means in that context to attain the required
results.
Similarly, this requires that the relevant partnerships be brokered and supported, with development
partners, twinning arrangements among southern and northern institutes, information and learning
platforms that include CSOs, donors and government agencies, to support capacity development
investments and knowledge-sharing on a regular basis. This includes specific partnership platforms, such
as Capacity 2015, the Southern Africa Capacity Initiative (SACI), the GEF national capacity self-
assessments, UN efforts on procurement standards and capacity development, to name a few.
The analysis of capacity constraints and opportunities and the identification of appropriate responses
need to be embedded in the UN system’s mainstream programme and advisory support at country level.
In December 2004, the General Assembly, in its resolution (A/RES/59/250) on the Triennial
Comprehensive Policy Review (TCPR) on operational activities, reinforced the importance of “national
capacity development” as the central development cooperation goal of the United Nations system.
UNDP’s own multi-year funding framework (MYFF) fully recognizes that the development of national
capacities is a key driver of UNDP assistance. The immediate challenge for UNDP and for the UN
development system is to ensure its support to programme countries’ priorities and successfully address
the underlying cross-sectoral national capacity conditions that impede or offer opportunities for progress
on the MDGs.
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
This will also contribute toward positioning not only UNDP, but the wider UN development system, as a
major substantive partner in the national articulation of MDG-framed poverty reduction strategies, with a
focus on the national capacity development strategies that must be embedded within them. Particularly at
a time when budget support and sector-wide approaches (SWAps), WTO and EU accession, peace and
security increasingly dominate national and donor efforts toward reform at the country level, the role of
UNDP will increasingly be to support national leadership, policy making and implementation capacity in
this changing development finance environment.
The following table details some of the components of capacity development strategies and the
corresponding categories of CD knowledge products that CDG is working on.
← CD PRODUCTS →
CD CD CD CD CD
CD STRATEGIES POLICY RESOURCE EXPERT WEBSITES RESEARCH
↓ NOTES GUIDES ROSTERS & & CASE
AND TOOLS NETWORKS STUDIES
17
This figure reflects work in progress. As products and services come online, this will be further populated.
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
These sites and references provide access to many more capacity development resources available
within UNDP and outside for knowledge sharing, diagnostics, programme design, monitoring and so on.
UNDP Capacity Development Website The content focus of the UNDP Capacity Development website
carries the latest documentation on CD issues, produced by UNDP with links also to other development
agencies, think tanks, etc. The website provides an overview of the main global programmes operated by
the BDP’s Capacity Development Group, including CD policy; capacity diagnostics; aid effectiveness;
operational policies and procedures; Capacity 2015; PPPUE; and private sector development.
UNDP Capacity Development Expert Roster This is UNDP’s capacity development expert roster, which is
a compendium of the CVs and profiles of potential consultants who are experts in various areas of
capacity development issues. They link to expert sources ands referrals from each region. The expert
profiles in this roster are organized by expertise area. When doing a search for an expert, relevant
professional information about the expert will be displayed, as well as a link to the expert’s CV.
Development Gateway Site on Capacity Development for the MDGs The topic page "Capacity
Development for MDGs,” co-managed by UNDP, WBI and the Global Development Gateway, aims to
provide information on the capacities and tools that developing countries need to achieve the MDGs. This
site is a clearinghouse of information on CD. A regular service informs about new postings.
Capacity.org is a quarterly journal on capacity development that connects practitioners to ongoing policy
debates, and shares good practice and insights on cutting edge topics. Started some six years ago by the
European Centre for Development Policy Management, Capacity.Org is now jointly published as an
expanded web and print magazine by ECDPM, SNV Netherlands and UNDP. The print journal will have
twice as many pages, and is going to be more easily accessible both in design and in the level of
abstraction of the content. The current website will be replaced by a built on open-source software, in
English, French and Spanish.
CIDA CD Extranet The purpose of the capacity development (CD) extranet site is to share information
and analysis on capacity development in development cooperation. The audience includes CIDA's CD
network, other CIDA personnel, and CIDA's partners in development in Canada and abroad. Requires
user registration.
Capacity Development Resource Centre – World Bank Institute The Capacity Development Resource
Center provides an overview of case studies, lessons learned, "how to" approaches, and good practices
pertaining to capacity development. It also includes links to international and local capacity development
agencies and other knowledge sources including working papers, recent books, strategy notes, and
diagnostics.
Impact Alliance The Impact Alliance is the first global capacity building network committed to bringing the
know-how of hundreds of leading organisations from all sectors of development to your door. This
initiative is hosted by PACT. Sign in to access high quality technical assistance, collaborate with peers, or
exchange ideas, tools, training curricula and publications on capacity building.
Devaid Devaid is a new UNDP website focusing on aid coordination and management. It is designed to
support the implementation of the Rome Declaration on Harmonisation and follow-up on the findings of
the Millennium Project in a very pragmatic way. The website aims to facilitate the sharing of knowledge,
learning and cross-country fertilization of experiences, concepts and activities. In this way we intend to
develop a community of practice.
Intrac - Praxis The PRAXIS Programme is about enabling Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) to become
more effective by linking theory and practice—researchers and practitioners—in the field of organisational
capacity building. In particular, Praxis is about giving practitioners with "hands-on experience" in different
cultures and contexts, an opportunity to share the solutions they develop in the course of their work.
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
ANNEX 1
A portfolio of capacity development case experiences from around the world can be viewed at
www.capacity.undp.org with particular attention to the cases in the following 3 books produced by UNDP:
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
29
UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
ANNEX 2
Bibliography
Below is the bibliography for this Practice Note. For more resources on capacity development, please
consult the online resource library at www.capacity.undp.org. It may be also helpful to consult the UNDP
Navigation Guide to Capacity Development Resources as a way of navigating key capacity development
websites. In addition, the UNDP Resource Catalogue on Capacity Development contains a compendium
of various capacity development resources, including books, journals, guides, etc.
UN/UNDP Publications
Berg, Elliot, and the United Nations Development Programme (1993). Rethinking Technical Cooperation:
Reforms for Capacity-Building in Africa. New York: UNDP and Development Alternatives International.
Browne, Stephen [Editor] (2002) and UNDP. Developing Capacity through Technical Cooperation:
Country Experiences. UNDP/Earthscan.
Fukuda-Parr, Sakiko, Carlos Lopes, and Khalid Malik (Editors) and UNDP (2002). Capacity for
Development: New Solutions to Old Problems. UNDP/Earthscan.
Hauge, Arild (2002). “Accountability – to What End?” UNDP Development Policy Journal vol. 2, 73-94.
New York: UNDP.
Hilderbrand, Mary E. and Merilee S. Grindle (1994). Building Sustainable Capacity: Challenges for The
Public Sector. Management Development and Governance Division. New York: UNDP.
Lopes, Carlos, Thomas Theisohn and UNDP (2003). Ownership, Leadership and Transformation; Can we
do better for Capacity Development? UNDP/Earthscan.
Morgan, Peter (2002). “Technical Assistance: Correcting the Precedents.” UNDP Development Policy
Journal vol. 2, 1-22. New York: UNDP.
United Nations (2000). General Assembly Resolution 55/2. United Nations Millennium Declaration.
A/RES/55/2. United Nations, New York.
United Nations (2000). Millennium Development Compact.
United Nations (2002). Operational Activities of the United Nations for International Development
Cooperation: United Nations System Support to Capacity Building, Report of the Secretary-General,
United Nations-Economic and Social Council, E/2002/58, New York.
United Nations (2002). Monterrey Consensus.
UNDP (1998). Capacity Assessment and Development in a Systems and Strategic Management Context
(Technical Advisory Paper No. 3, Management Development and Governance Division, UNDP).
UNDP (2000). Development Effectiveness: Review of Evaluative Evidence. New York: UNDP.
UNDP (2004). Human Development Viewpoint – Taking a Default Position for Capacity Development.
UNDP (2003). The PIU Dilemma: How to Address Project Implementation Units.
UNDP (2005). Human Rights Based Approach. Capacity Development Resource Guide.
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UNDP Practice Note: Capacity Development
Other Publications
DAC/OECD (2006). The Challenge of Capacity Development: Working Toward Good Practice
DFID (2001). Making Government Work for Poor People – Building State Capability.
DFID (Undated). Promoting Institutional and Organisational Development – A Source Book of Tools and
Techniques.
European Commission (2005). Institutional Assessment and Capacity Development: Why, what and
how? Aid Delivery Methods Concept Paper.
Fukuyama, F. (2004). State Building: Governance and World Order in the 21st Century. Cornell University
Press.
IDS (2005). Signposts To More Effective States: Responding To Governance Challenges In Developing
Countries.
ODI (2005). Scaling Up Versus Absorptive Capacity: Challenges And Opportunities For Reaching The
MDGs In Africa. Briefing Paper.
Schacter, M. (2000). Capacity Building – A new way of Doing Business for Development Assistance
Organisations Policy Brief No. 6.
UNFPA (2004). UNFPA's Support to National Capacity Development Achievements and Challenges.
Boesen, N. (2004). Enhancing Public Sector Capacity - What Works, What Doesn't and Why?
World Bank (2005). Building State Capacity in Africa: New Approaches, Emerging Lessons.
World Bank (2005). Capacity Building in Africa – An OED Evaluation of World Bank Support
31