Civic Engagement

Last Updated on Wednesday, 9 May 2012 10:40

Promoting ‘good governance’ is an overarching strategy of many government and donor agencies. To daye, the focus of most governance programmes has been on public sector reform, aiming to improve accountability and management of public resources. Development is, however, fundamentally a political process; a concept that underlies the Drivers of Change analysis undertaken in Vanuatu to assess the interaction among structural features (economic, social and cultural systems), institutions (formal and informal rules and incentives) and actors (individuals and organisations).
At PiPP we understand civic engagement to be a central component of improving governance. In doing so we seek to engage political actors in a systematic partnership. Investing in such an understanding of the nuances of the political context is a relatively new approach to development in the Pacific. It paves the way to build on existing public sector reform to foster a stronger and broader culture of democracy by supporting the functioning of robust and accountable political parties.


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PiPP is pleased to present its latest tool in understanding the state of mobile phone and internet use in Vanuatu. This infographic encapsulates the key findings from our 2011 study of social and economic effects of telecoms in Vanuatu. Please contact us for a printed copy or click here for the downloadable graphic.

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"We need to protect the next 50 years (with action) in the next five years. Thats the urgency" - Tony de Brum

We were not taught to have constructive dialogue in our homes...the real “culprit” is our communal ways. - Semi Pauu

Whilst we're part of the Pacific regional solution for asylum seekers/refugees, we are more and more becoming asylums and refugees in our own region because of climate change. - Jacinta Manua

By talking abt it won't help anyone it is time to do something about environmental issues. - Zoya Rahiman