Understanding the motivations and roles of national development experts in Ghana: ‘We do all the donkey work and they take the glory’
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
National development experts (NDEs) play unique roles as knowledge
brokers, translators and gatekeepers between governments, intended
beneficiaries and donors on various development policies and practices.
Due to their local contextual knowledge, they influence development
activities at national levels by engaging in formulation and implementation of development policies. However, discussion of their motivations
and roles has been particularly limited in the existing development
literature. Drawing on 25 semi-structured interviews with the local staff
of donor agencies and non-governmental organisations, independent
consultants, civil servants and academics in Ghana, this article presents
findings on their motivations and roles within Ghana’s development
landscape. We argue that while the motivations and roles of NDEs are
similar in many ways to those of Western development experts, except
their contextual understanding of national development issues, their
contributions to development are so far excluded within the development literature. This article contributes to the emerging aid ethnography literature by providing a more comprehensive perspective on NDEs
and deepens the scholarship by asking whether the exclusion of this
group is a deliberate choice or unintended mistake. The article further
highlights the perspectives of NDEs on their engagement with foreign
experts and its implications for national development and future
research.
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Research Article