The material that follows has been provided by New Internationalist
From this month's editor
I should have known better. When I set to work on this topic I thought I was
dealing with a foregone conclusion. Of course the NI has always advocated
more and better aid to the 'Third World'. Naturally you, our subscribers, would
feel much the same way. Logically, now aid is in serious trouble, we would put
our backs to the wall and join in the campaign to support it.So it was with some confidence that I set about the research; the usual round of telephone calls, meetings with experts, visits to libraries and bookshops, trawls through the continuous stream of paper that arrives at our office from every corner of the earth. These days there's the Internet to consider too, though for me it's still more a question of surfing in hope than arriving at any decipherable destination.
Before too long I was ready to go with the magazine itself. I outlined a few of
the usual points about 'good' and 'bad' aid, sharpened them a little with references
to the latest 'crisis', blunted them again - the byways and distractions of a
discussion are an irresistible attraction for me - and set off. Perhaps I felt
less sense of adventure than I sometimes do, but at least I had firm ground beneath
my feet.
What I had forgotten was that if you start off with a foregone conclusion
you're liable to go astray. I'd decided to compile a feature for the magazine
based on interviews with a cross-section of informed opinion, from Mexico
to Ghana, Zimbabwe to India. Such calls still don't come cheap; time differences,
language problems and the quality of the line can have a deterrent effect.
In drawing up my original plans, I had not fully tested out my ideas at
the receiving end of aid, in the South. Spurred on by the fact that it was
now high summer in the North and everyone was on holiday, I made a point
of trying to put this right. And before very long I had, I felt, little
alternative but to change my ideas and produce a different magazine altogether.
I realized that I had made a fairly basic initial mistake. I had been carried
away by all the theories of aid and development, the plans, the projects,
the prescriptions. What I should have been thinking about was not theories
and things, but people. That's easy to say and extremely difficult to translate
into practice. One then has to begin somewhere else, with a sense of equity
and solidarity between people. This, in the long term, is the only solid
ground we all have beneath our feet.

David Ransom
for the New Internationalist Co-operative
©Copyright: New Internationalist 1996

