Building State Capability provides anyone interested in promoting development with practical advice on how to proceed--not by copying imported theoretical models, but through an iterative learning process that takes into account the messy reality of the society in question. The authors draw on their collective years of real-world experience as well as abundant data and get to what is truly the essence of the development problem.
Francis Fukuyama, Stanford University; author of State-Building: Governance and World Order in the 21st Century
Feedback from course participants using material from Building State Capability:
The course was terrific from both a theoretical and practical standpoint. I was amazed about how accurately the issues addressed in the course related to my day-to-day experiences working in development. In fact, I have incorporated many of the ideas taught in this course in my own development work!
David Levy, Team Leader, Asian Development Bank, Dili, Timor-Leste
The PDIA course has been for me the learning highlight of this year. The course has given me the knowledge of a process and tools that I was looking since traditional approaches to projects with best practices from elsewhere, solution-based, blueprint-based, with fixed plan, aiming always at system change, etc. do not work in most cases. I have now a set of steps and, more importantly, questions that can guide me in the work with colleagues and partners to understand the context in which we try to introduce change, identify concrete problems that people want to solve, and try to solve them, one at a time.
Arnaldo Pellini, Research Fellow, Overseas Development Institute
As a Project Manager and Solutions Consultant in Nigeria, taking [the PDIA course] opened paths to new possibilities for finding and fitting solutions that are based on specific contexts and current realities, by working with clients, communities and policy drivers. At the heart of these possibilities is the realization that no matter what the problem is or how complex it seems, we can start acting immediately. Most importantly, the interactions with peers and access to a growing PDIA Community of Practice provide unlimited potential for the future.
Abubakar Abdullahi, Managing Principal, The Front Office NG, Nigeria
Though not everyone will embrace the PDIA approach, everyone should read this book. It is the clearest articulation following in the traditions of Dewey, Lindblom, and other skeptics of synoptic public policy and management of a pragmatic method of development and public management.
Archon Fung, Building State Capability