4.2 Article

Grassroots Development and Upwards Accountabilities: Tensions in the Reconstruction of Aceh's Fishing Industry

Journal

DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE
Volume 42, Issue 6, Pages 1349-1377

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2011.01739.x

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This article explores the tensions between aid funding and grassroots development goals in the context of post-disaster fisheries reconstruction in Aceh, Indonesia. We argue that both short- and long-term grassroots goals are distorted by upward accountability requirements which lead to unsatisfactory aid outcomes. Our analysis employs the concept of aid webs and draws on fifty-one formal interviews with stakeholders in Aceh in 2007/2008. The findings initially concentrate on the impacts of upward accountability on project cycles, with a particular focus on the problematic incorporation of private boat-building contractors and commercial values during the implementation phase. We then discuss the more subtle, long-term impacts of upward accountability on the professionalization of community institutions in this case, the Panglima Laot Lhok. We conclude with a few observations about the hybrid institutions combining elements of local and development cultures that are produced within the current political economy of aid.

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