Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Foreword by Kemal Dervis
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Not the standard image
- 2 Development and the United Nations
- 3 Institutions for practical solidarity
- 4 Decolonization and economic transformation
- 5 Lewis in Ghana and after
- 6 Capacity, consensus, crisis, and consequences
- 7 Engaging liberation movements and revolutionary states
- 8 A learning organization: women, Latin America, and Africa
- 9 ‘Bottoms up’ development helps make UNDP a mammal
- 10 Working for ‘a holy man’ after the cold war
- 11 ‘Fabian socialists do not make the cut’
- 12 ‘Ploughing the sea’? UNDP and the future of global governance
- Index
10 - Working for ‘a holy man’ after the cold war
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Foreword by Kemal Dervis
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Not the standard image
- 2 Development and the United Nations
- 3 Institutions for practical solidarity
- 4 Decolonization and economic transformation
- 5 Lewis in Ghana and after
- 6 Capacity, consensus, crisis, and consequences
- 7 Engaging liberation movements and revolutionary states
- 8 A learning organization: women, Latin America, and Africa
- 9 ‘Bottoms up’ development helps make UNDP a mammal
- 10 Working for ‘a holy man’ after the cold war
- 11 ‘Fabian socialists do not make the cut’
- 12 ‘Ploughing the sea’? UNDP and the future of global governance
- Index
Summary
So what kind of mammal did UNDP become?
Shortly after Ukraine's Orange Revolution, Klavdia Maksimenko, one of the people in the Kiev offce working late each night to backstop the new government, pulls up a photograph on her computer screen. It is of a drawing made by a group of young UNDP offcers from around the world gathered together at a management retreat. They had been asked to imagine UNDP as an animal. The Programme was long-lived, gregarious, and compassionate; ‘It had to be an elephant.’ The glasses are ‘because it is wise’. Cesar Silang-Cruz from the Bureau of Crisis Prevention and Recovery, who held the pen, gave it the face of Gandhi, or maybe that of the favourite of Hindu deities, Ganesh, ‘the remover of obstacles’. Of course, the elephant is also doing the impossible. It is flying, or at least attempting to.
I showed the drawing to a friend, a professor of international environmental policy, who instantly recognized it, ‘Oh, it's Gus Speth!’
‘Speth’, Önder Yücer says of the man who became Administrator after Bill Draper, ‘to me, he's like a holy man, very shy, very cerebral … with an innocent soul … very different from Draper.’
Yet it was Draper who recommended that his old friend, the US president George H. W. Bush, nominate Speth. As it turned out Bush lost his 1992 bid for a second term as US president, and Bill Clinton was the one who nominated his fellow ‘New South’ Democrat.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The United Nations Development ProgrammeA Better Way?, pp. 263 - 295Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006