Strengths-based practice: more than being positive

In the image, a woman is wearing a brown dress and a Hijab with papers in one hand and talking to another woman, who is wearing a blue t-shirt, has grey hair and is pointing out into a river, which is also where they cultivate green food crops. In the background are women working the crops.

Women surveying her own community with questions up designed themselves to help them with their WASH project.

In strengths-based approaches to (local and international) community development work, we focus on strengths, aspirations, and potential rather than problems, needs and deficits by, amongst other things:

  • Consciously looking for the strengths and potential of the people and communities we work alongside
  • Adopting a positive, optimistic outlook (focusing on the “half-full part of the glass”)
  • Understanding that the lived expertise of community members is equal to that of thematic specialists

This does NOT mean looking at the world through rose-coloured glasses and ignoring problems, needs and deficits.

In a Participatory Action Research Water, Sanitation and Hygiene project I was leading in Indonesia, I first completed a great deal of research on the WASH issues in the geographic area I would be working in. Based on my desk-based research by ‘global north experts’, the most important WASH issue I identified for the population was access to water. The community annually has droughts (and rainy seasons), and households experiencing low socio-economic positions often had no constant access to water in their homes; many households created solutions by building pipes from bamboo to drip water into their homes from wells and other open water sources when they had water. Due to the water access issues, it also became apparent that people used open water sources as a toilet — obviously, a serious WASH issue for the community.

When I went to the communities and discussed the project with them, I undertook some participatory activities with the various under-represented groups to unpack what water, sanitation and hygiene was, and to better understand how WASH impacted them. Once that was complete, I asked the individual groups I was working with, what WASH issues they think we together should work on.

To use the women’s group as an example, they chose sanitation systems. Not access to drinkable water. When I asked the women’s group why they wanted to work on sanitation issues, they explained the following:

The community has lots of plastic waste. In the rainy season, the rain washes the plastic waste into the town open drains. As the rain continues, the plastic waste blocks the drains which leads to water stagnation, and an increase in mosquitos. The kids play in the water, which increases their risk of mosquito-borne diseases such as malaria. The women explained that they didn’t have the resources reduce or avoid mosquito risks, nor did they have the funds to access to medical services.

As the rains continue, the plastic, oil, and other waste become caught up in the open drains, spill out onto the road, causing minor flooding — sometimes going into people’s homes. After a while, with the build-up of water and waste, the water pushed the waste into the rice paddy fields killing the fish growing in the rice fields, destroying one of the affordable protein sources, and reducing rice cultivation. Rather than rice paddy fields being a food and income source, often there is not enough rice and fish for the families growing it. Instead, they have to buy more in the context of having very little, if any, money. Over the following four years, the community continued to use their lived experience, expertise, and the community to implement and evaluate the WASH project in often creative and unconventional ways. This led to many successes, learning what didn’t work and what to do differently. Within the context of being supported with full confidence, there were no failings, just learnings of what to do differently in the project's next iteration. By the end of the four years, the women had developed the skills to continue the project without me.

Before starting this project, there was no research on the impact of waste in this specific community, especially on poor community members who have historically little access to WASH in general. By supporting the women to build on their strengths and working alongside them authentically in strengths-based ways, the women now lead their own community's development.

Strengths-based practice needs to involve more than being positive, encouraging and hoping for the best. We need to be willing to explore difficult issues, asking challenging questions and do more than working on global north ‘expertise’. This involves developing a range of skills, practicing difficult conversations and critically reflecting on our work.

To find out more about the project, you can view this paper I gave at the Australasian Aid Conference in 2019.

To find out more about my Participatory Action Research work

You can find out more about Community Powered Responses by visiting my website.

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Lana Woolf: Including the Excluded

Founder of Community Powered Responses; Co-founder of Edge Effect, GEDSI specialist in the area of Women; People with Disabilities; People with Diverse SOGIESC