Maxim Shevelev
Moscow
Conflict Transformation, Ngo And Networking
My presentation mainly based on the experience I
gained working as a co-ordinator of the Caucasus NGOs Forum in 1999 - 2000. The Forum
today involves around 50 organisations from all over the Caucasus. Its aims include
promoting peaceful resolution to the Caucasian conflicts, mutual help, fighting
stereotypes of each other, and overcoming isolation of the Caucasian societies from each
other.
The Forum is an example of an NGO network for conflict transformation.
During two and a half years of its existence, it has registered successes as well as
drawbacks. Its two main successes are organising the meeting of former combatants from all
over the Caucasus, and a peace mission to one of the locations where conflict tendencies
are brewing: the Karachay-Cherkessia republic of the Russian Federation.
The Forum experiences also certain difficulties in the process of its
institutionalisation. Some of them are typical to any NGO networks - lack of resources.
This is exacerbated by the fact that the Forum is a cross-conflict, cross-border,
cross-cultural initiative, whereas most of the funders who support NGO work develop
separate programmes for different states and even regions in the former Soviet Union.
Also, the Forum experiences financial difficulties typical for conflict transformation
work in general: as different from the development work or humanitarian assistance in
emergencies, conflict transformation delivers intangible rather than tangible results: it
works on changing attitudes, perceptions, and institutions, and donors are not always
convinced that their investment will deliver significant change in these "soft"
areas.
The Forum is a unique success of networking for conflict transformation
purposes, but its participants may still pursue political rather than conflict
transformation aims. For the organisations from the breakway regions, such as Abkhazia or
Nagorny Karabakh, the Forum provides one of the rare opportunities to present their cause
in an international setting. NGOs from recognised states, on the other hand, have many
more opportunities to communicate internationally, and their interest in joining the Forum
may be different. But the format of the Forum works because all the participants are free
to balance the positions of each other. The Forum is successful insofar as no one its
participant feels excluded or threatened.
The Forum is an open network, and its work can be accessed via the
Coordinator's office as well as the partners. Some time soon it will have a web-site.
However, its openness should be combined with confidentiality when it comes to the matters
of importance to the sides in conflict. Thus the role of the Coordinator increases
substantially, because in the absence of more formal structures and in between the
meetings of the Forum leaders, the Coordinator has to make several decisions a day about
how to present information open to the public, authorities, and the international
community. His work is based on the tenet "do no harm".
The concept of networking may be confusing too, especially when it
comes to the organisational structures and decision-making. For many NGOs in the former
Soviet Union, the most familiar organisational structure is a bureaucratic organisation or
a political party. Democracy for them is voting for every decision, whereby simple
majority wins. They thus influence the networks to acquire strict hierarchical structures
(for instance, they call the Coordinator the Chief Executive), and they believe that only
those decisions that have been made via democratic voting procedures are valid. The soft
consensus-building process and trusting each other in certain matters, which is typical
for informal networks, in this light appear to them sometimes unjust and unfair. The
issues of accountability acquire new significance in this respect. Decision-making in such
environment becomes often conflict-ridden, and those very actors who declare peace as
their aim are unable to avoid unnecessary conflict in their dealings with each other.
However, these are the growing pains of a process which is healthy and
promises in future very different types of human relations and institutions in the places
where bloodshed has been shed or is likely to happen.