What is `Sustainable Livelihoods'?
Sustainable livelihoods (SL) is a way of
thinking about the objectives, scope and priorities
for development in order to enhance progress in
poverty elimination. It is a holistic approach that
tries to capture, and provide, a means of
understanding the vital causes and dimensions of
poverty without collapsing the focus onto just a
few factors (economic issues, food security, etc.).
It also tries to sketch out the relationships
between the different aspects (causes,
manifestations) of poverty, allowing for more
effective prioritization of action at an
operational level.
The SL approach (or approaches - given
that there is no set way of doing things) aims to
help people achieve lasting livelihood improvements
measured using poverty indicators that they,
themselves, define. This, in turn helps to combat
exclusion. It is people-centred. It recognises that
people have certain rights but also certain
responsibilities to each other and to society more
generally. It recognizes the enormous diversity
amongst the 1.3 billion extremely poor people in
the world, and stresses the strengths of these
people. If we want to make a difference we must
build on these strengths, helping people to move in
the directions that they want to move.
SL approaches rest on core principles that
prioritise people-centred, responsive, and
multi-level approaches to development. These are
backed up with a set of tools, including the SL
framework developed by the British Department for
International Development (DFID).
Sustainable livelihoods principles
Sustainable Livelihoods principles hold that
poverty-focused development activity should be:
- people-centred: sustainable poverty
elimination will be achieved only if external
support focuses on what matters to people's
lives, understands the differences between
people and works with them in a way that is
congruent with their current livelihood
strategies, social environments and ability to
adapt;
- responsive and participatory: poor people
themselves must be key actors in identifying and
addressing livelihood priorities, and
'outsiders' need to adopt processes that ensure
they listen and respond;
- multi-level: the scale of the challenge of
poverty elimination is enormous, and can only be
achieved by working at multiple levels, ensuring
that micro level activity informs the
development of policy and an effective enabling
environment and that macro level structures and
processes support people to build upon their own
strengths;
- conducted in partnership: with both the
public and the private sector (including civil
society/ non-governmental organisations);
- sustainable: there are four key dimensions
to sustainability - economic, institutional,
social and environmental sustainability. All are
important - a balance must be found between
them; and
- dynamic: external support must recognise the
dynamic nature of livelihood strategies, respond
flexibly to changes in people's situation, and
develop longer-term commitments of support.
For DFID, SL approaches must be underpinned by a
commitment to poverty eradication. Although they
can, in theory, be applied to work with any
stakeholder group, an implicit principle for DFID
is that activities should be designed to maximise
livelihood benefits for the poor.
The Sustainable Livelihoods
framework
DFID's sustainable livelihoods framework - which
builds on various concept roots - provides an
analytical structure for building an understanding
of livelihoods. It encourages users to think about
existing livelihood patterns as a basis for
planning development activities and spending. Using
various existing tools such as social and
stakeholder analysis, economic and rapid appraisal
methods, this entails analysis of:
- the context in which (different groups of)
people live, including the effects upon them of
external trends (economic, technological,
population growth etc.), shocks (whether natural
or manmade) and seasonality;
- people's access to different types of assets
(physical, human, financial, natural and social)
and their ability to put these to productive
use;
- the institutions, policies and organisations
which shape their livelihoods; and
- the different strategies that they adopt in
pursuit of their goals.
DFID's SL framework avoids laying down any
explicit definition of what exactly poverty is
(indeed, the framework is says nothing about
poverty per se. It can be used to help understand
the livelihoods of both rich and poor.) The
`outcomes' in the box below are `suggestions' of
the type of objectives that people may be pursuing,
but the `real' meaning of poverty remains
context-specific, something to be investigated on a
case-by-case basis with different groups.
The SL framework helps to 'organise' various
factors that constrain or enhance livelihood
opportunities, and to show how they relate to each
other. It is not intended to be an exact model of
reality, but to provide a way of thinking about
livelihoods that is representative of a complex,
holistic reality, but is also manageable. There is
no real beginning, middle or end to the framework.
The entire `picture' endeavours to represent
`whole' livelihood systems, and these do not have a
fixed organisational structures but are
characterised by repeated patters of connections
and influences. Arrows in the framework do not
represent any strict causality; the longer ones
show important feedback (amongst the multiple
feedback loops that occur) while the shorter ones
denote an even looser idea (something like
`existing within and environment that is influenced
by
'). The asset pentagon in the middle
represents a graphical way of thinking through
combined asset portfolios.
The value of a framework such as this is that it
encourages users to take a broad and systematic
view of the factors that cause poverty - whether
these are shocks and adverse trends, poorly
functioning institutions and policies or a basic
lack of assets - and to investigate the relations
between them. It does not take a `sectoral' view of
poverty, but tries to recognise the contribution
made by all the sectors to building up the stocks
of assets upon which people draw to sustain their
livelihoods. The aim is to do away with
pre-conceptions about what exactly people seek and
how they are most likely to achieve their goals and
to develop an accurate and dynamic picture of how
different groups of people operate within their
environment. This provides the basis for the
identification of constraints to livelihood
development and poverty reduction. Such constraints
can lie at local level or in the broader economic
and policy environment. They may relate to the
agricultural sector - the main focus of donor
activity in rural areas - or they may be more to do
with social conditions, health, education or rural
infrastructure.
DFID's SL framework is just one of a number of
tools available to assist users in implementing SL
approaches. It is frequently used in livelihoods
analysis and the planning of development activity
to ensure that important factors are not neglected.
But the framework cannot - and does not attempt to
- capture everything that is important to poverty
elimination. Users must therefore employ a range of
other tools, including stakeholder analysis, social
analysis, gender analysis, and economic and
institutional analysis, to gain a full
understanding of livelihoods and how external
activities can best support these. Work is now in
progress within DFID and with partners to provide a
clearer guide to which methods are useful at which
point and how they can best be combined and adapted
for use in the SL context.
Origins of the approaches
SL approaches draw on three decades of changing
views of poverty (which is now recognised to go
well beyond income, and to have multi-dimensional
characteristics and causes). In particular,
participatory approaches to development have
highlighted great diversity in the goals to which
people aspire, and in the livelihood strategies
they adopt to achieve them. Poverty analysis has
highlighted the importance of assets, including
social capital, in determining well-being. The
importance of the policy framework and governance,
which have dominated much development thinking
since the early 1980s, are also reflected in SL, as
is a core focus on the community. Community-level
institutions and processes have been a prominent
feature of approaches to natural resource
management and are strongly emphasised in SL
approaches, though in SL the stress is on
understanding and facilitating the link through
from the micro to the macro, rather than working
only at community level.
SL approaches also stem from concerns about the
effectiveness of development interventions. While
professing a commitment to poverty reduction, the
immediate focus of much donor and government effort
has been on resources and facilities (water, land,
clinics, infrastructure) or on structures that
provide services (education ministries, livestock
services, NGOs), rather than people themselves. SL
approaches place people firmly as the starting
point for development activity; the benchmark for
success is whether sustainable improvements in
people's livelihoods have taken place. It is
anticipated that this refocusing on the poor will
make a significant difference to the achievement of
poverty elimination goals.
Other concerns about development effectiveness
that have fed into SL approaches include that: many
activities are unsustainable (environmentally,
economically and in other ways); isolated sectoral
initiatives have limited value while complex
cross-sectoral programmes become unmanageable; and
success can only be achieved if a good
understanding of the household economy is combined
with attention to the policy context. It may be
ambitious but SL approaches try to address all
these concerns and thereby to improve the
effectiveness of development spending.
Using the approaches
SL approaches have already been used in DFID for
identifying, designing and assessing new
initiatives (projects and programmes), for
re-assessing existing activities, for informing
strategic thinking and discussion, and for
research. One of the key features of the approach
is its flexibility and applicability to a wide
range of situations, across the various sectors and
activities in which DFID works.
DFID is not the only agency working with such
approaches. NGOs such as CARE and Oxfam have
explicitly adopted livelihoods approaches as
guiding principles of their development activity,
and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
employs SL approaches as one means of achieving
sustainable human development. Discussions with
various other NGOs, donors and domestic governments
have shown that they are adopting similar
approaches, or elements of SL approaches, even if
they do not explicitly use the SL terminology.
Working with partners
The development and strengthening of
partnerships is a priority for DFID. In developing
thinking around the SL approach, DFID has consulted
widely with partners in the UK and beyond. Its aim
has been to ensure that SL thinking builds on and
incorporates the ideas and accumulated experience
of partners. It is also important to ensure that
the ideas are widely shared by partners, as without
partnerships we cannot hope to achieve success. The
challenges of development are just too great.
Partnerships operate at many levels, between
donors, with the governments of the countries in
which we work, with civil society organisations
and, increasingly, with the private sector. SL
approaches embrace and stress the need to develop
multiple partnerships. DFID is therefore engaged in
a process of discussing with partners what the
approach is, how its underlying principles can be
honoured and how it `fits' with other existing
development approaches and ideas. Through this
process, it is hoped that ownership of SL ideas and
principles can be extended, as to be effective any
development approach must have wide ownership.
Early lessons
Although SL approaches are relatively new within
DFID, there has already been substantial progress
in applying them in a variety of ways and
circumstances. DFID recognises the need to learn
about the application of SL approaches from very
early on. Only in this way will the contribution to
poverty elimination be maximised. It is therefore
supporting an active dialogue and learning process
and has established a dedicated SL Support Office
that is charged with synthesising lessons and
facilitating the flow of information.
The following are just some of the early lessons
that have been learnt:
- Project focus Holistic livelihoods
analysis does not have to lead to holistic or
multi-disciplinary livelihoods projects. What is
important is the holistic perspective, but this
can very easily translate into sharply focussed
sectoral projects. The difference will be the
way in which these projects are conceived and
their overall objective: a contribution to
livelihoods rather than a narrow sectoral goal
(e.g. km of road built, increase in yield,
etc.). Establishing dedicated SL projects (as
opposed to `SL guided projects') can encourage
over-ambitious projects and prove to be
off-putting to partners.
- Tools and methods A variety of
methods and tools is required to operationalise
SL approaches (and particularly to prioritise
amongst a range of possible `entry points' for
development activity). The SL framework provides
a useful checklist but may not be appropriate in
all circumstances (e.g. if partners find that it
is too complex). The approach tries to build on
learning from all areas of development, which
means employing a wide variety of tools. There
may be a need to develop new tools over time.
However, it is generally more important to
ensure a commitment to the underlying principles
of the SL approach, than it is to worry about
particular tools.
- Monitoring and evaluation Monitoring
and evaluation of SL-guided projects is a
challenge, but cannot be ignored if ongoing
learning is to be effective. The SL framework
and principles provide something of a checklist
when considering the impacts of projects on the
poor, but they do not make it any easier to
measure changes in livelihoods that result. It
will be important to negotiate indicators with
various stakeholders, and there is much to be
learnt from existing work on participatory
monitoring and evaluation. At the same time, it
is important to avoid undue complexity, spending
too much time/money on monitoring and requiring
project-level staff to take responsibility for
outcomes that are well beyond their control.
This will be counter-productive in the long
run.
- Micro-macro links SL approaches are
useful for highlighting the importance of
micro-macro links and the need for policy
change. They demonstrate how policies can have a
profound effect on livelihoods and highlight the
need for policy and institutional reform -
whether in sector programmes or other forms - to
be informed by people-centred goals. There is,
however, a need to employ other methods to gain
an adequate understanding of the nature and
operation of policies, institutions,
organisations and governance. This is an area in
which work is currently underway.
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