Liliana Alvarado<\/a> spoke about how think tanks are shifting away from their traditional roles into becoming more engaged in communities. At its core, I will admit that IDEAS is a think tank that still primarily engages with the elite circles, targeting our policy advocacy at members of Parliament, policymakers and the business circle. It is true that a large part of our activities have been concentrated within the urban centres and in the English language. We are certainly not a community organiser or grassroots organisation at the outset.<\/span><\/p>\nBut building networks, partnerships and coalitions have been fundamental to our recent years\u2019 impact. As a think tank, we have collaborated and built partnerships with other civil society organisations because they are the ones that have a deeper connection with the grassroots. One very good example is a coalition of anti-corruption groups that we partner with that represents a large Malay majority \u2013 many of which are Islamic NGOs whose focus is primarily on religious matters, whom we would never have been able to reach otherwise. Another is a coalition that IDEAS set up to work on political financing, working with other more vocal anti-corruption NGOs to amplify the voice and representation.<\/span><\/p>\nWhen we took up a project to revisit the government\u2019s decision not to ratify the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, considered controversial in Malaysia because of the perception that the Constitutional provision to protect Bumiputera\u2019s special position would be abolished, we reached out to these highly conservative Islamic NGOs. In some cases, I could not even be present in the meetings because of who I am as an ethnic minority Chinese. But we were the only organisation in the country able to speak to all sides of the divide. A lot of time was spent on trust-building to assure them we were not necessarily slamming their positions at the outset.<\/span><\/p>\nThink tanks have convening power that other organisations don\u2019t. IDEAS\u2019 convening power has allowed us to bring government, politicians of different sides together that otherwise would never meet. We succeeded to bring Members of Parliament from different parties to promote political financing reform, which none of their parties would support.<\/span><\/p>\nDirect Community Work<\/strong><\/h1>\nSeparately, we have worked more directly with the community in a few ways. We set up a network of subnational-level activists and NGOs to train them on how to read their state budgets. We conducted public education workshops with community leaders of all states on the importance of political financing reform. We set up a Seed Community for Indigenous education, going into villages to talk to teachers and students about their challenges, hopes and dreams.<\/span><\/p>\nWe started these ground-level workshops and engagements precisely because we wanted to increase the demand for accountability from the bottom-up. Politicians in a first-past-the-post electoral system need to see and believe there is pressure from their own voters before they decide to act on a certain policy. Second, we want to show that impact can happen away from the halls of Parliament, that a groundswell of support and learning should happen from the bottom up. It’s a great coincidence that funders are also very interested in diffusion of democracy away from the urban centres.<\/span><\/p>\nBut in all of this, there have been challenges as well. One is the challenge of adapting ourselves to working outside the urban centres. The skill sets of research staff are very different from what is required to do network-building and maintenance. Two is the issue of representation and whether an elite think tank is able to understand the problems and real-life issues faced at the more rural level.<\/span><\/p>\nThird, the challenge of divergence of positions within the same coalition. We have had instances of institutional reform coalition partners being economically left-wing and opposing free trade deals that we were otherwise championing in our other work.<\/span><\/p>\nWe overcame these by ensuring that we diversified the network as much as possible, bringing in groups that were stronger in community engagement than we were. We also listened with an open mind and a researcher spirit, that we didn\u2019t necessarily have all the answers and were willing to alter our positions to suit the reality of the situation. For example, even listening to local politicians made us change our mind about how high the political financing threshold for transparency should be. Finally, we agreed to disagree with the positions taken on other areas, and work constructively with the coalition members on an issue-by-issue basis. In a way, we could build trust with them and they slowly were able to warm to our position on other areas.<\/span><\/p>\nIn the middle of the pandemic, we also reached out to all think tanks across the spectrum \u2013 in Malaysia, we are one of the few independent think tanks and most others are affiliated to either the government, a political party or a political individual. IDEAS led a coalition of think tanks to endorse a public statement calling for the government to change the way it managed the pandemic, including calling for more data-driven decision-making which was at the time not happening.<\/span><\/p>\nIt was because of this relationship-building process that allowed us to host OTT for a local OTT talk, bringing none other than Enrique Mendizabal over to Kuala Lumpur for a gathering of think tanks. In this meeting, we discussed the changing role of think tanks and common challenges faced. These opportunities were grabbed at the right time, to show collective voice on an issue that affected all communities \u2013 and in Malaysia\u2019s context, to have conversations across the divide, to be the bridge that connects political parties together, at a time when there is great polarisation.<\/span><\/p>\nCommunity, Impact and what this means for think tanks<\/strong><\/h1>\nAs the world becomes ever more polarised, which the Israel-Palestine war has really intensified, I believe it is ever more important for think tanks to be the bridge across divided communities.<\/span><\/p>\nA global Ipsos study, carried out in 27 countries in 2018 found that three in four people on average across 27 countries think society in their country is divided. Countries that are most concerned about division are Serbia, where most people (93%) say their society is divided, Argentina (92%), Peru and Chile (both 90%). Those in Saudi Arabia are least likely to say their country is divided (34%) followed by China (48%) and Japan (52%).<\/span><\/p>\nWhen asked how divisions have changed since ten years ago, six in ten (59%) feel their country is now more divided (compared with 16% who say it is less divided). European countries are the most likely to think divisions have grown; three-quarters (77%) of people in Spain say their country is more divided now than a decade ago followed by Sweden, Germany, Britain and Italy (all 73%).<\/span><\/p>\nThink tanks are needed more than ever.<\/span><\/p>\nWe are needed to work within and with communities.<\/span><\/p>\nWorking with communities will require different sets of skills, expertise and stamina than think tanks had been traditionally expected to have. Making use of our strong networks upwards with the elite and downwards with community organisers is powerful.<\/span><\/p>\nThink tanks+<\/strong><\/h1>\nBut sustaining networks and partnerships is incredibly exhausting and requires core and consistent funding. Time is needed to build trust with partners across ethnicities and political persuasions. Sometimes there are disruptions when members of the network leave for other jobs, so the work has to start all over again. So ensuring sustainability and continuity are key.<\/span><\/p>\nThis convening power means that we are not necessarily the activists on the ground. Since community-based activists must often focus scarce resources on their frontline work, they are unable to organise the type of research-based evaluation and policy messaging that is the core specialisation of a think tank. So it is good for think tanks to partner with the community to consolidate the messaging to get a certain policy proposal out. Think tanks occupy an important middle ground as we are not identified with the street-based activism (which has its rightful place and its proponents), so we can open doors and bring the principles and evidence that support the objectives into the policymaking space.<\/span><\/p>\nAnd community engagement helps to enrich our data collection methods to inform our research as well. In our indigenous work, we realise it is not necessarily that we have policy prescriptions for them but that setting up a platform and the network of changemakers is what helps to inform our work and also deliver impact.<\/span><\/p>\nWhat all of this means for think tanks is that we are increasingly in great demand to be many things to many people. Maintaining a high quality of research, whilst also working with the community to establish networks and build partnerships is an increasing expectation. Resilience is required for the long haul, but I believe think tanks must show that we are contributing to the community \u2013 because we are too part of the community. The think tank ecosystem needs to adapt accordingly; funders and fellow think tanks must be able to provide the necessary support, encouragement and facilitation to ensure these networks survive and thrive.<\/span><\/p>\nTo survive as a species, we have to overcome the illusion that we are separate and realise that we are interdependent, mutually dependent beings. Communities have thrived precisely because of our ability to work together, and there is an intrinsic desire to connect with each other. To quote Thomas Merton, a Trappist monk and writer, \u201cWe are all part of one another and all involved in one another.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\nThank you.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
Tricia Yeoh, Chief Executive Officer of IDEAS in Malaysia delivered this keynote address at the OTT Conference 2024, at Fundaci\u00f3 Bofill, Barcelona, Spain.\u00a0 Good afternoon everyone, and thanks to OTT for having invited me to speak at this year\u2019s conference on Think Tanks and Communities. Today I\u2019d like to share the story of IDEAS, […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":28,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"tags":[3486],"class_list":["post-2843012","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","tag-think-tanks-and-their-communities","article-types-opinion","article-types-video","people-tricia-yeoh-phd","series-think-tanks-and-their-communities"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2843012","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/28"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2843012"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2843012\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2843012"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onthinktanks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2843012"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}