Oaxaca Mexico EDPFrom 2004 - 2011, WIEGO co-organized a series of Exposures and Dialogues with Cornell University and the Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) of India. The initiative promoted a dialogue between mainstream economists from Cornell, activists from SEWA, and researchers from the WIEGO Network. At issue were key assumptions of neo-classical economics that trouble ground-level activists and researchers working on issues of employment and labour.

Exposures were held in:

  • Ahmedabad, India (2004 and 2008)
  • Durban, South Africa (2007 and 2011)
  • Oaxaca, Mexico (2009)

Members of the Cornell-SEWA-WIEGO team, accompanied by local facilitators, worked and lived alongside informal workers and their families for two days and nights. In South Africa, for example, group members tried their hand at making cement blocks, stitching clothes, crafting Zulu beadwork bracelets, growing vegetables, raising poultry, cutting hair, and selling newspapers or medicinal herbs.

After most Exposure Dialogues, a policy dialogue or some other public event was held. Policymakers, academics, and activists attended these events. Afterwards, participants reflected, together with the hosts, on their personal experiences, then engaged in a technical dialogue on issues raised. The intent was to deepen understanding among all participants through serious dialogue and, thereby, to avoid the familiar, stylized debates between heterodox thinkers and neo-classical economists.

Head porter carrying workload

Outcomes of the EDP Programme

Conference and Volume on Membership-Based Organizations of the Poor

The most tangible outcome of the Cornell-SEWA-WIEGO Exposure Dialogue Programme was a conference and volume on membership-based organizations of the poor.

Durban EDPIn 2005, the Dialogue Group organized a conference on Membership-Based Organizations of the Poor (MBOPs), where development analysts and activists discussed the role of these organizations. MBOPs are defined as organizations whose governance structures respond to the needs and aspirations of the poor because they are accountable to their members. MBOPs include such things as trade unions, cooperatives, and savings-and-credit groups.

Most of the papers presented at the conference were published by Routledge Press in 2007 in a volume called Membership Based Organizations of the Poor, edited by Marty Chen, Renana Jhabvala, Ravi Kanbur and Carol Richards.

After each Exposure-Dialogue, group participants wrote personal and technical reflections. In 2012, SEWA Academy published a volume of these reflections, along with detailed information on the EDP. Read Bridging Perspectives: The Cornell-SEWA-WIEGO Exposure Dialogue Programme on Labour, Informal Employment and Poverty.

A less tangible but significant outcome has been an improved understanding of the underlying assumptions of neo-classical economists, heterodox economists, as well as other social scientists and practitioners.

In 2009, Tony Addison (WIDER) assessed the impact of the Exposure Dialogue Programme by comparing the programme to building a bridge across the gap between mainstream economics and other social sciences. He concluded the gap had been narrowed. Read the assessment.

Technical Dialogues

Between Exposures Dialogue visits, the Dialogue group met for additional technical dialogues. Topics covered included: minimum wage and other interventions in labour markets; the structure and dynamics of labour markets; social protection for the informal workforce; and the impact of international trade on informal workers. The technical dialogue in South Africa focused on unemployment and barriers to informal self-employment in that country.

Special Events

  • Photo Exhibit on Informal Workers in Durban/eThewini (Durban, 2007) – commissioned and organized by WIEGO colleagues at the University of KwaZulu-Natal
  • Book Launch of Membership-Based Organizations of the Poor (New Delhi, 2008) – co-organized with SEWA and Routledge Press
  • Field Visit to National Employment Guarantee Act site (Gujarat State, India, 2008) – co-organized with SEWA and DISHA (a mass-based organization of informal workers)