Leave No One Behind in Times of Change: Navigating Crisis, Sustaining Inclusion

27th June 2025 by Claudemir da Silva

Civil society is facing one of its most critical moments in recent history. Major cuts to Official Development Assistance (ODA), agreed simultaneously by some of the world’s biggest ODA donors, as well as an increasing resistance to put issues like the inclusion or marginalised groups into the focus of development efforts, caused problems for many organisations in our sector. These changes are not just another cycle of budget tightening; they seem to represent a bigger change in how international aid is organised, with profound consequences for development actors – particularly for smaller CSOs who largely depended on foreign aid. The US government’s recent decision to publicly renounce the Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals, shows just how profound these changes are, leading into concerns that this is the start of a “post-aid world” in which prior agreed global development priorities no longer count, being replaced by a “my country first” philosophy. Considering this, the Centre’s Leave No One Behind partnership (LNOB), coordinated by the International Civil Society Centre, started a series of partner interviews earlier this year, to better understand the implications of this crisis, what it means for marginalised communities, and how best to deal with these challenges collaboratively. 

Women sitting in a circle at a focus group discussion in Nepal
Focus group discussion in Nepal lead by VSO International

The underlining competing pressures  

The conversations with country coalitions from Bangladesh, India, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal, Nigeria and Vietnam, alongside several international civil society organisations such as CBM Global, BRAC, Plan International, and Islamic Relief, revealed a distressing situation where there is a lot of uncertainty and far too few resources to manage it. Many partners said they had less money, fewer staff, and more pressure to compete for a smaller amount of money from donors. Several country partners said that although they do not depend on aid from the US or the UK, recent cuts have had a big effect on their planning and programming. Partners are worried about their organisations going bust, losing staff, and the increasing break down of long-term working relationships. Another worrying trend perceived is that issues like inclusion, diversity, and equality meet significantly less interest in politics and the media, at times even phasing open resentment. Some partners bemoaned that they see an increasing tendency from actors within and outside government to belittle the work of CSOs, or even openly discredit them. This makes it much harder for CSOs to do their work properly and safely and continue with their mission to support marginalised and underserviced populations.

Understanding right from wrong 

Despite these challenges, there was a strong commitment to continue supporting marginalised communities, and a certain sense of urgency and clarity about what is the right thing to dowith declining support and solidarity for groups that are already under pressure, inclusion work is now more important than ever. Partners emphasised that it is very important for governments to listen to what citizens are saying, especially when people’s freedom to speak and be heard is limited. This approach, created and improved through the partnership’s work to promote and support voices being heard and counted, was often described as a lifeline for keeping the partnership relevant and impactful. 

When persons with disabilities lead data collection, the solutions reflect their realities—and drive real change.

Vietnam Project Partner– Digital Voices: Ensuring Inclusive Digital Transformation for People with Disabilities in Viet Nam 

Focus on direct support 

In response to the current challenges facing our sector, the Centre’s Leave No One Behind partnership has shifted its priorities in 2025 to focus more directly on supporting our national partners. The Centre is now providing financial backing to coalitions in India, Nepal, Vietnam, and Palestine, through various projects enabling them to continue their vital work with citizen data and maintain their engagement with marginalised communities. These projects have a specific focus on the economic empowerment of marginalised communities, aiming to strengthen local advocacy, support inclusive policy dialogue, and ensure that the voices of those too often left out are made heard. We are continuing our efforts to mobilise additional resources and plan to extend support to more countries over the course of the year. 

Building on this support, the partnership is placing a strong focus in 2025 on exploring how citizen data can help advance the economic inclusion of marginalised communities. The newly funded projects in India, Nepal, Vietnam, and Palestine, are already engaging with this theme, aiming to identify barriers to economic participation and co-develop solutions that are grounded in lived experiences, relevant to local contexts. By connecting this work to national development priorities and social protection strategies, we aim to create opportunities for more inclusive policy dialogue and practical change. Alongside this, the Centre is prioritising knowledge exchange and capacity building to help national coalitions strengthen their financial resilience, including peer learning on local fundraising, alternative operational models, and solidarity mechanisms inspired by other programmatic initiatives led by the Centre.  

Data is power and in Nepal’s most marginalised provinces, we are using citizen evidence to demand equity, accountability, and real change.

LNOB Nepal Project Partner– Making Voices heard and Count: Social Rights & Economic Empowerment of Youths in Nepal 

Fostering exchange to find joint solutions 

This commitment to resilience and innovation was further reflected in a virtual strategic exchange hosted by the International Civil Society Centre in May, which brought together members of the Centre’s Solidarity Action Network (SANE) and LNOB. The event examined the ways in which civil society organisations are coping with mounting political and financial pressures, including shifts in donor funding and shrinking civic space. Participants shared their experiences and insights during breakout discussions on funding cuts, localisation and restrictions to civic space. Key takeaways included the need for greater solidarity, a rethink of power dynamics and the advancement of locally led, participatory approaches to civil society work in an increasingly challenging global landscape. A follow-up event focusing on alternative finance mechanisms and partnership models is planned for September. 

People sitting at a table with cards and pens writing ideas
Citizen Generated Data group discussion with participants from the Project on Supporting Women-led Green Initiatives (PWG), Vietnam

Making everyone heard and count  

Looking ahead, the partnership will remain focused on supporting country partners directly, both technically and financially; concentrating on delivering practical tools, guidance, establishing contacts with potential donors directly at the national level, and provide transitional funding that can help ensure that the local partners are capable of continuing some of their inclusion work while going through a slump. The Centre will continue to convene donors and partners through virtual platforms to jointly explore alternative financing mechanisms. While the context has shifted dramatically, the mission of the partnership remains unchanged. If anything, the current crisis has reaffirmed the need for our work and the importance of standing together in solidarity. In the words of one partner, “Inclusion is not a luxury, it is a necessity.”

In these times of uncertainty, the Centre’s Leave No One Behind partnership continues to hold a space for community voices to work towards a future where everyone counts. 


Find out more about LNOB and the benefits of joining as a partner in our new brochure

Leave No One Behind_Benefits of becoming a member

Find out more about the partnership in general in our new ‘About us’ brochure

Leave No One Behind – About us 

 

Claudemir da Silva

Executive Assistant

International Civil Society Centre

Claudemir, Executive Assistant at the Centre since December 2023, holds a Bachelor’s degree in International Relations from the Federal University of Santa Catarina. He was awarded the DAAD Helmut Schmidt Scholarship in 2020, which led to a Master’s degree in Democratic Governance and Civil Society at the University of Osnabrück. His master’s thesis focused on water policy and the SDGs in Brazil. Before joining the Centre, Claudemir contributed to the education sector in Brazil and worked in international cooperation with the UN and GIZ.


Turning words into action: Why International NGOs should prioritise sustainability through localisation and self-governance

20th June 2025 by Dr. Dereje Wordofa

International non-governmental organisations (INGOs) are often headquartered in the Global North and operating from a position of superiority despite funds raised in the name of communities in need. These top-down models, however well-meaning, often side-lined local realities, leadership and joint stewardship of resources. Now, with aid receding, the limits of this approach are increasingly exposed. The INGOs that failed to develop national capacity are leaving communities unprepared and vulnerable.

Localisation in humanitarian action and social development has been a focal point of global discourse for over a decade, yet substantive progress remains limited. Initiatives like the Grand Bargain have sought to drive ‘power shifts’ within the humanitarian aid system, but “localisation” often remains a vague buzzword. The approach —whether it prioritises shifting power, enhancing accountability, or balancing incremental versus transformative change—remains a critical challenge.

Genuine self-governance demand empowering national actors to lead, requiring INGOs to relinquish control over resources and decision-making while encouraging trust and humility to support context-specific solutions. Despite the push by the most senior leaders of some of the largest INGOs  through projects like Pledge for Change, scepticism about the financial and programmatic capacities of national actors often perpetuates power imbalances, undermining the spirit of the initiative.

Why localisation?

The lessons suggest that localisation strengthens local capacity, reduces dependency, and ensures more relevant, effective responses while redirecting resources to support national systems with intent of long-term sustainability. Localisation must evolve as an independent agenda, unshackled from being a means to bridging financing austerity. The agenda requires experimental spaces where national actors can innovate, fail, and learn without excessive oversight or a focus solely on cost efficiency.

By embracing brave, context-driven approaches, anchored in local jurisdictions and de-emphasising perceived risks, international and national actors jointly can co-create a transformative framework that prioritises local leadership and build genuine partnerships. In this regard, the experience of SOS Children’s Villages which is the world’s largest NGO focused on supporting children and young people without parental care, or at risk of losing it, offers a path to localisation, self-governance and sustainability.

Founded 76 years ago in post-war Austria, it now operates in 137 countries and territories. The impact of its work worldwide is well documented. Recognising the heavy financial dependence on European donors, SOS Children’s Villages began a significant shift in 2012, launching Sustainable Path Initiative (SPI). This involved localising governance with more responsibilities, building domestic fundraising infrastructure, and gradually reducing dependency on international transfer of funds.

Without casting divergent views on theory and practice, the SPI was not cosmetic. It required structural reform, direct investment, patience, and committed leadership from European members, especially the largest funders, the 18 Promoting and Supporting Associations.

Today, all national management positions worldwide are held by citizens of the nation in which SOS Children’s Villages operate. Expatriates are no longer appointed and deployed to national leadership roles. National governance structures now exist in 110 countries to provide oversights and accountability. While national governance practices have a varied degree of effectiveness, those self-governing members enjoy full rights, including voting rights at the General Assembly of the global federation.

Image of participants in a lecture hall at the 2023 General Assembly of SOS Children's Villages International
2023 General Assembly of SOS Children’s Villages International

Transitioning to self-governance and localisation

The transition to self-governance has been uneven, and daunting particularly in Africa, where institutional weaknesses, legal constraints, and entrenched aid dependency persist. Of the 137 associations, 24 have yet to localise their governance systems. The federation and its Secretariat are committed to advancing the financial self-sufficiency and self-governance of all its members. At least 12 national associations are currently developing local governance frameworks to be finalised within the coming two years.

Over the last decade, over 33 national associations have reached financial self-sufficiency, including a recent one that now raises its own funds through local donors, partnerships, and collaborations with local government. These associations remain part of the global federation, bound by a shared vision, brand and commitment to promote, protect and defend the rights of children and young people. They operate with autonomy but commit to collective accountability to the federation’s norms and standards.

Development ideals like inclusion, equity and empowerment must be matched by concrete reforms. Ambitions alone are not enough; sustainability must be treated as a moral and strategic imperative. To remain relevant, INGOs must therefore undergo a profound transformation. This is not about organisational survival. It is about doing development differently, and better. At the core of this systemic reform are three imperatives:

  • Shift power: Genuinely transferring ownership of programs, decision-making, and leadership to national actors is essential. This includes relinquishing control, reforming governance structures, and embracing accountability to those closest to the challenges.
  • Build financial self-sufficiency: This needs investing in helping local partners cultivate domestic resource mobilisation; through philanthropy, corporate partnerships, social enterprises, and government collaboration. National fundraising ecosystems, though nascent in many contexts.
  • Foster local resilience: Self-sufficiency is not the absence of support; it is the presence of capacity. INGOs should serve as facilitators of knowledge exchange, skill-building, and systems strengthening. This requires time, patience, partnership, and humility.

It is essential that this shift is planned, paced, and participatory. Replacing financial subsidies overnight is neither feasible nor just. But failing to begin the transition is a negligence of responsibility. Localisation and financial sustainability are not just valuable; they are strategic necessities.

Why SPI?

The SPI case of SOS Children’s Villages demonstrates what’s possible when INGOs invest in local leadership and trust national capacity. It recognises Global South actors as co-architects of sustainability, not mere implementers of agreed projects. Most members, though some struggle, increase income and reserves for financial stability. Localisation shifts mindsets, redefines relationships, builds local confidence, and enhances resource use with local stewardship. It nurtures trust with communities, governments, donors, and partners who value empowerment.

By strategically cultivating national capacity for self-governance and prioritising community interests, humanitarian and development actors can move from aid to agency, charity to empowerment, and dependency to dignity, strengthening a global solidarity based not on transaction, but on trust.


This article is being published on behalf of SOS Children’s Villages International. The Centre would like to thank Dr. Dereje Wordofa for his valuable insights and contribution. 

All images courtesy of SOS Children’s Villages International. Pictured in the blog banner: Illustrative map showing the 138 countries and territories where SOS Children’s Villages operates (last updated 2022).  

    Dr. Dereje Wordofa

    President

    SOS Children’s Villages International

    Dr. Dereje Wordofa is the President of SOS Children’s Villages International. Previously he served as assistant secretary-general and deputy executive director of the United Nations Population Fund; as head of regional policy at Oxfam; and as deputy program director of Save the Children UK.


    Navigating CEO Success and Collaboration in Challenging Times: Vision Works 2025

    18th June 2025 by Wolfgang Jamann

    It was summit time, again.  

    At the end of May, our community of CEOs came together for their annual retreat ‘Vision Works’, to find inspiration, room for peer exchange, and opportunities for collaboration. Hosted by the ‘Initiatives of Change’ – about 20 Civil Society leaders spent three intense days together at Caux, Switzerland, to better understand the current challenges for the sector and to strategise for appropriate responses to counter the attacks on Civil Society values, operations, and institutions.  

    Group photo of attendees at Vision Works, in Caux Switzerland, May 2025
    Group photo of attendees at Vision Works, in Caux Switzerland, May 2025

    We were inspired by new perspectives from leaders of allies to the Centre, such as Article 19, CIVICUS, Helvetas and our affiliates at WACSI and the Cyberpeace Institute. Further to our core shareholders and allies, external expertise was also provided by Philea, the ‘Observatory on Information and Democracy’, the Shadowserver Foundation, CTIN and ‘Globethics’.  

    A special session focused on the success patterns for CEOs in the Sector was supported by the expertise of Conner Advisory, which brought good reflection on how one can be an impactful Civil Society leader in critical times. This topic is further explored in a preliminary joint report recently published by the Centre and Conner Advisory on success patterns and challenges for CEOs in the sector. You can download the report here. 

    The Vision Works retreat was a much-needed opportunity to move out of the daily operational pressures and find room for necessary strategising to develop and co-create ideas for sectoral resilience and impact. For many, it was the first opportunity to find the headspace for longer-term thinking and openup to innovative ideas, challenges, and opportunities that can help Civil Society thrive.  

    It’s a wonderful community [the Centre’s shareholder organisations], where CEOs can come together for mutual support and ideas sharing, to understand what’s going on in one another’s organisations. It [Vision Works] is a really unique forum for that.

    There’s so much happening in the world, that it [the Centre] is probably more valuable now, than it’s ever been…

    Caroline Harper, CEO of Sightsavers and outgoing Board Chair 

    The Centre took the opportunity to thank its outgoing Chair for the past four years, Caroline Harper, of Sightsavers International for her outstanding leadership, and welcome in its new Chair, Amitabh Behar, Executive Director of Oxfam International. Amitabh inspired us by pushing for more collective action and developing a movement mindset, in light of the necessary solidaric action for the sector.  

    The International Civil Society Centre – I must say – has been an exciting idea. It is a dream that I think several generations of civil society leaders often have – of coming together and recognising that civil society is not about competing – it’s about collaborating. …This is that space we have created together – but now we need to harness it.

    Amitabh Behar, Executive Director of Oxfam International and Board Chair 

    Picture of Wolfgang Jamann, Caroline Harper and Amitabh Behar at Vision Works 2025
    Wolfgang Jamann, Caroline Harper and Amitabh Behar pictured at Vision Works 2025

     


     

    The Centre is uniquely owned and supported by 18 International Civil Society Organisations who have committed to collaboration across the sector.  Since 2008, Vision Works has provided a unique space for CEOs from this shareholder community, to step out of their pressurised positions and come together to collectively discuss sectoral issues, define goals, and co-create strategies for the future of their organisations and civil society as a whole.   

    Wolfgang Jamann

    Executive Director

    International Civil Society Centre

    Dr. Wolfgang Jamann is Executive Director of the International Civil Society Centre. Until January 2018 he was Secretary General and CEO of CARE International (Geneva). Before that he led NGO Deutsche Welthungerhilfe and the Alliance 2015, a partnership of 7 European aid organisations. From 2004-2009 he was CEO & Board member of CARE Deutschland-Luxemburg and President of the CARE Foundation. Previously, he worked for World Vision International as a regional representative in East Africa (Kenya) & Head of Humanitarian Assistance at WV Germany. After his Ph.D. dissertation in 1990 he started his career in development work at the German Foundation for International Development, later for the UNDP in Zambia. As a researcher and academic, he has published books and articles on East & Southeast Asia contributing to international studies on complex humanitarian emergencies and conflict management.


    Civil Society at Crossroads: Shaping Tomorrow with Unity and Vision

    16th June 2025 by Alexandra Schlegel

    It is clear that the current global shifts are creating unprecedented pressure on civil society. A pressure that is increasingly felt by the sector at large and further civil society actors.  

    At the International Civil Society Centre, we are tackling these pressures and sector-wide issues through our dedicated leadership support and collaborative meetings of our various networks and communities. Recently, the Centre’s  Solidarity Action Network (SANE) Working Group met for their annual meeting in London (pictured below), while the Scanning the Horizon community met for the second time this year, both with a strong focus around deepening our understanding of the current crisis and its implications on the sector.  

    Our meetings and conversations with organisations and partners show us that this moment demands not only reinvention, but long-term strategies that help civil society navigate the complexities of uncertainty. For example, some organisations are seeking to turn disruptions into strategic opportunitiesparticularly through localisation and partnership-based modelswhile working towards a clearer collective direction. 

    Shifting from reactive to proactive 

    To become more crisis-resilient, it is critical for ICSOs to look at strategic foresight tools like scenario building and trends analysis to add to their core planning processes. Whilst reacting to crises and preparing for possible futures, civil society must also mitigate the impacts of worst-case scenarios and find ways to proactively envision – and work towards – preferable futures. There is no doubt, this must happen together through shared learning and joint initiatives. The ultimate strength of ICSOs lies in collaborative action to tackle the global challenges we are currently facing. Working in silos undermines collective potential, so today and into the future, the focus must be on collective action– rather than competitive activities. Through collective learning, ICSOs can build up shared capacity, and create stronger resilience. Together with strategic foresight, exchanging knowledge and practice across organisations can enhance adaptability, which is a key skill to have in the current state of the world. ICSOs not only need to move away from working in silos, but as well shift away from centralised roles to approaches that are partner-led, invested in joint action, and alongside working with grassroots actors. As it was raised in one of our sessions, the guiding principle to become future-ready must be:  

    As local as possible, as international as necessary.” 

    Working together, strategically  

    Building strategic alliances are required to tackle today’s complex issues, including mis- and disinformation, and to mitigate the complex digital threats that are emerging. Strategic alliances can be built by working in collaboration with, for example, academia, media organisations, and the private sector, to foster long-term impact and help achieve strategic goal. During our sessions, we welcomed some external inputs from BBC Media Action and Internews, to explore how crucial partnerships across sectors are – here for example – between journalism and civil society. Colleagues from these organisations explained how co-creating responses, reframing narratives toward positive, future-oriented storytelling, and shaping public discourse together is essential to having a stronger voice to defend progressive, democratic values. This is about more than just damage control after a disinformation campaign – it is about proactively telling stories that reflect values, inspire engagement, and align with our future goals. 

    Solidarity must become part of the strategy. It should be evident in how decisions are made, power is shared, and resources are distributed. Civil society organisations need to ask: How can we collectively prepare for multiple futures and do so in a way that empowers all affected stakeholders? Mutual learning and exchange build the kind of shared intelligence that makes solidarity tangible and strategic. 

    Showing resilience towards crises 

    The civil society of the future must be more resilient and unified; hence, foresight can now be used to anticipate change, enabling the sector to act together for a future-ready civil society. Thus, integrating foresight tools like scenario planning into organisational practices becomes imperative in preparing to work towards preferable futures. The Centre’s key takeaways from engaging with our stakeholders to become future-ready and more resilient towards crises, so far are: 

    • Be open to shared learning through collaborative exchange across sectors and regions; 
    • Become financially diverse, explore alternative funding models and ways of working, community-rooted strategies, and joint initiatives; 
    • Become non-competitive, by working in complementarity to amplify impact; 
    • Be narrative-driven, through telling positive, future-oriented stories that reclaim space and inspire; 
    • Stay mission-led connected to progressive values; 
    • Be proactively people-powered through taking civil society as a whole into consideration. 

              As we see through the current challenges and shifts in the sector, the time for futures thinking and looking ahead is now. The interlinked crises civil society faces are not temporary – they demand transformation. By embracing strategic foresight through the Centre’s Scanning the Horizon and SANE communities, and exploring further innovative tools and mechanisms, civil society can build adaptive capacity, make smarter decisions, and lead systemic change within the sector and beyond. The challenge is clear – and so is the opportunity: to actively shape a better future through unity, vision, and collaborative innovation. 

              If you’d like to engage in the Solidarity Action Network to tackle civic space issues together or in the Scanning the Horizon community to explore strategic foresight and shape the future of civil society, get in touch with us. 


              Further reading

              Download the ‘Toolkit for Tomorrow: Anticipating Civil Society Futures’  

              This toolkit provides tools, strategies, and resources to strengthen your ability to anticipate future challenges and opportunities, practice foresight, and build resilience in the face of rapid change. 

              Available in English, Spanish and French 


              About the Centre’s programmatic initiatives. 

              The Centre has several programmatic initiatives that work collaboratively to tackle the critical issues affecting the sector. These are focused on our core strategic ambitions: The futures of ICSOs; protecting and safeguarding civic space; and the empowerment of marginalised communities through citizen-led data and localisation. 

              • The Solidarity Action Network (SANE) aims to strengthen resilience and solidarity among civil society actors when faced with civic space restrictions or changing operating conditions. Within the network, we share experience, lessons learned and best practices and encourage joint actions.  
              • The Scanning the Horizon platform and community address the need for collaborative trend analysis in the sector. Futurists, strategists, trend analysts and organisational learning and research specialists form a cross-sector community of experts and practitioners to share insights, explore key trends and develop relevant strategies. 

              Alexandra Schlegel

              Programme Officer

              International Civil Society Centre

              Alexandra is working as Programme Officer in the Solidarity Action Network and Scanning the Horizon projects of the Centre. She joined the Centre in January 2022 as the Executive Assistant and changed into the Programme Team in December 2023. Her role at the Centre involves addressing anti-rights actors, overseeing futures and foresight initiatives within the Scanning community, managing the SANE Resource Hub, and organising events. She is strongly engaged in voluntary work with different international as well as local organisations with a background in Political Science and International Relations. She holds a MA in International Relations from Leiden University next to her BA in Political Science and History from the University of Tübingen. She has lived in Germany, the UK, the Netherlands as well as Jordan and is currently living in Berlin.