Most of us, at some time or another, will try to change how work is done in our organisations. We may work in organisational functions that exist to create change and improvements in performance: evaluation; policy development; training and learning; or strategic planning. We may be a manager or non-managerial staff member who sees how things could be done better and attempts to ‘put them right’. Whatever the starting point, we will often end up in a similar place: frustrated and dissatisfied, with changes incomplete, and facing apathy, confusion and unintended consequences.
This chapter addresses the topic of change in humanitarian organisations. Drawing on the findings of a programme of research conducted between October 2007 and January 2008 (Box 2.1), it questions the efficacy of some of our traditional approaches to change and performance improvement, and suggests alternative principles and approaches developed outside the humanitarian sector. It considers whether these approaches can be introduced into humanitarian agencies, and presents examples of successful organisational change programmes from NGOs, the UN, donor agencies and the Red Cross movement.
What follows is not intended as an instruction booklet or ‘how to’ guide for organisational change. There is great variety among the actors who make up the humanitarian sector, and we would look in vain for a ‘one-size-fits-all’ solution for organisational change (Wheatley and Kellner-Rogers, 1998). Instead, this chapter presents some approaches to thinking about organisations and how they change, and shows how these approaches have been implemented.