+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Oxford Initiative

Oxford Initiative

Date post: 14-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: elie
View: 35 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Initial Research Findings. Oxford Initiative. Overview. The Oxford Initiative is an international collaborative effort to address the often-confusing and ever-shifting dynamics between financial resources and field ministries - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
22
Initial Research Findings
Transcript
Page 1: Oxford Initiative

Initial Research Findings

Page 2: Oxford Initiative

The Oxford Initiative is an international collaborative effort to address the often-confusing and ever-shifting dynamics between financial resources and field ministries

To improve the quality of partnership relationships of those involved in global mission.

Page 3: Oxford Initiative

Leaders from various sectors throughout the body of Christ, including western funders and senior non-western members of the Lausanne movement, have called for a process to bring some semblance of balance and order to the sometimes acrimonious and often confusing interaction between financial resources and missions.

Page 4: Oxford Initiative

Initial meeting in Oxford (November 2006) Lausanne meeting in Budapest (June 2007) Rob Martin and C.B. Samuel were asked to

co-chair a process to develop a “widely-embraced standard”

Global Mapping International conducted initial research to explore the cross-cultural sharing of money in mission partnership

Page 5: Oxford Initiative

The Oxford Initiative seeks to create a widely embraced set of

principles/guidelines for use by donors and implementers

alike to bring about a true unity and

communion of purpose for Kingdom work.

Page 6: Oxford Initiative

To determine: How serious an issue is this within

missions today? What are the key aspects? What, if any, additional localized

research should be conducted? The initial research was designed to

document and understand the problem, not to discover solutions

Page 7: Oxford Initiative

Identify English language works relevant to the topic of sharing money in cross-cultural mission partnership

Compile an annotated bibliography:▪ Books▪ Journal articles▪ Websites▪ Partnership guidelines, MOUs▪ Associations▪ Conference proceedings▪ Research reports and dissertations

Page 8: Oxford Initiative

Online survey to explore perspectives and attitudes of a sample of evangelical leaders around the world

▪ 45% were from in donor organizations ▪ 55% were from in implementing organizations

Participants invited from:▪ 2007 Lausanne international leadership gathering (Budapest)▪ 2008 Lausanne Resource Mobilization Working Group meeting ▪ 2008 COSIM conference

A total of 147 people completed the survey▪ representing 40% of those invited to participate

Page 9: Oxford Initiative
Page 10: Oxford Initiative

The sharing of money in cross-cultural ministry partnership is a substantial issue that warrants serious attention, study, discussion and resources.

While most survey respondents say they are satisfied with their own policies and practices …

The majority say that issues of unity, trust and respect between donors and implementers are serious enough to warrant major attention.

Younger respondents are somewhat more likely than older ones to see monetary partnerships as being challenging.

Page 11: Oxford Initiative

This is a genuinely complex matter that defies simple description or easy solutions.

A great deal of wrestling with missiological issues is going on and the debate about the best strategy for using (or not using) foreign money in mission is far from over. Some have solved the matter to their own

satisfaction and are vigorously promoting one position while warning against others.

It remains to be seen which model will win general acceptance or if there may be several competing models, each appropriate for some settings but not others.

Page 12: Oxford Initiative

Excellent and helpful resources exist and are readily available from the missions community as well as from

the broader non-profit and donor communities including covenants, guidelines and principles.

These existing resources need to be better publicized within missions.

There appears to be few dissertations or theses on money and partnership in mission. It would be beneficial to have more graduate

studies done on this issue from a missiological perspective.

Page 13: Oxford Initiative

Oxford Initiative report provides quick access to the most helpful items

Annotations (to help users decide which resource are most relevant) include: description stance (author’s perspective) value (relevance to OI issues)

Key resources are highlighted

Page 14: Oxford Initiative

Donor perspectives did not differ greatly from implementer perspectives; however… Donors want implementers

to be more careful with documentation to communicate more frequently, openly

and relationally. Implementers wish donors

better understood their local ministry context

relied less on metrics.

Page 15: Oxford Initiative

A slight majority (58%) of respondents agree that codifying principles of cross-cultural financial partnerships would be beneficial.

But nearly 40% are unsure about the potential benefit.

Page 16: Oxford Initiative

The survey identified four attitude segments:

those who feel that partnership is proceeding well given the inherent challenges

those who feel that the root of the issue is spiritual (and therefore unlikely to be solved through a procedural code)

those advocating for changes in structures and policies

those advocating for changes in interpersonal relationships and cultural perspectives

Page 17: Oxford Initiative

These attitude segments can be summed up in two dimensions:The Need to Use Power Wisely

vs.The Need to Use Policy Wisely

The Need to Be Willing to Change Perspective

vs.The Need to Acknowledge Situational

Realities

Page 18: Oxford Initiative

Attitude Segments

Change Your Perspective vs. Acknowledge Your Reality

Use

Po

wer

Wis

ely

vs.

Use

Po

licy

Wis

ely

Change the Game

It's Hard; Keep At It

See the Lord, not theMoney

Walk in the Other'sShoes

Page 19: Oxford Initiative

Survey respondents say that key ingredients for success in cross-cultural partnerships include:

trust mutual respect accountability transparency

Page 20: Oxford Initiative

Both donors and implementers believe that implementers are willing to be held accountable for their use of funds...

But the way that works itself out in practice leaves something to be desired in terms of consistent communication/reporting use of meaningful metrics the temptation to inflate results in

order to leverage additional grants.

Page 21: Oxford Initiative

70% feel that follow-up localized research would produce important insights Focus groups Depth interviews Surveys

The majority feel that this would result in a significant positive impact on collaboration.

A neutral, unbiased team of local researchers, led by social science experts, should engage all stakeholder groups.

Page 22: Oxford Initiative

Next steps are currently being planned in the Oxford Initiative process. We welcome your input and involvement.

Contact InformationOxford Initiative Executive Committee Co-Chairs:

Rob Martin: (949) 720-3774 [email protected]. Samuel: [email protected]

 Oxford Initiative Research

Mike O’Rear: 719-531-3599 [email protected]


Recommended