We are happy to share the following blog—How We Approach Inclusion with Our Partners in Nigeria—with our readers. EnCompass carried out this study to support the MacArthur Foundation; it is a great example of how we support our clients in using evidence to identify lessons and take action to strengthen equity and social inclusion in their programming. We are excited about our ongoing partnership with the MacArthur Foundation and look forward to continuing to support their gender equality and social inclusion (GESI) journey. Thank you to the EnCompass team members who contributed to the report: Karmjeet Kaur, Randi Rumbold, Ted Rizzo, Gayatri Malhotra, Michael Moses, and Lynne Franco.
This piece was originally posted on the MacArthur Foundation blog and written by Chantell Johnson and Amina Salihu from the MacArthur Foundation.
Our Commitment to Diversity and Inclusion in Nigeria
We are a global foundation that aims to center Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, especially racial and ethnic equity, in everything we do. We live this through our values and our commitment to the Just Imperative. We recognize the need to contextualize the Just Imperative throughout the different offices and localities in which we work. While systemic inequity and injustice exist everywhere, the path to building structural equity and justice is not the same worldwide. Instead, it must be tailored to meet the needs of specific marginalized groups in particular contexts.
MacArthur has been grounded in Nigeria for over 30 years and first opened our office in Abuja in 1994. Over time, we have established relationships of trust between the Foundation Staff and grantees by working in close consultation and solidarity with our Nigerian organizational partners. It is based upon this trust that we are focusing on a lens of Gender Equality and Social Inclusion, or GESI, in our anti-corruption work. GESI includes the intersections of various dimensions of identity: gender, ability, generation, faith, geography, and ethnicity. A GESI lens can ensure equitable opportunities for more Nigerians, and, as we shared in a Perspectives piece, address the disproportionate harms corruption has on marginalized groups, especially women.
Many of our grantees have centered GESI in their work for years, ensuring all people have access to the resources they need to thrive. We have worked with our grantee partners to learn how to integrate their wisdom and perspectives into our understanding of GESI, including the ways in which it shows up in our program. With our evaluation and learning partner EnCompass, we then set out to assess the state of our grantee partners’ GESI efforts and the landscape for GESI in Nigeria.
What is the GESI landscape now?
When there is diversity in the people doing the work—ourselves and our grantees—it leads to greater credibility overall. This inclusiveness helps our work. So, we must begin by reflecting on what our grantees’ teams and communities look like. Who has access to opportunities, who has a voice, and who has decision-making power? Who do they represent? Are teams equitable? How are they practicing inclusion?
We worked with EnCompass to survey grantee partners and conduct key informant interviews to explore the extent to which they represent and serve marginalized communities. The core questions we wanted to explore included:
- How do our partners define GESI, diversity, and social inclusion?
- How diverse and inclusive are grantees’ staff and communities served?
- What strategies are grantees using to advance GESI goals in their work?
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