The advocacy-impact gap: A bottom-up analysis of NGO advocacy/campaigning and sustainable livelihoods in Zimbabwe
Abel Sibanda, Nirmala Dorasamy & Wonder Muchabaiwa
Abstract
While non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are pivotal in advocating for policies that support sustainable livelihoods in Zimbabwe, a discernible disjuncture often emerges between their advocacy work and the realisation of tangible, sustainable benefits for communities. This article explores this “advocacy-impact gap” by examining community perspectives on the work of three leading Zimbabwean NGOs: ActionAid Zimbabwe (AAZ), the Zimbabwe Environmental Law Association (ZELA), and the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (ZIMCODD). Based on qualitative data from focus group discussions across six districts and key informant interviews, this research finds that while communities value NGO-led awareness and capacity-building efforts, they also identify significant limitations. Key critiques include the transient, project-based nature of interventions, the difficulty in attributing specific livelihood improvements to advocacy, and a pronounced “insider-outsider” dynamic where positive impacts are largely confined to direct participants. Consequently, this study contends that bridging the advocacy-impact gap necessitates a strategic shift. NGOs must move beyond a narrow focus on policy victories to embrace sustained, community-driven approaches that confront the “implementation gap” and cultivate genuine local ownership, particularly within Zimbabwe’s challenging context characterised by weak governance and political instability.
Keywords
sustainable livelihoods, campaigning NGOs, Zimbabwe, advocacy, impact, community perspectives, implementation gap
Author information & Contribution
Abel Sibanda. Corresponding author. Master of Arts in Development Studies, PhD Candidate - Doctor of Philosophy in Management Sciences specialising in Public Management - Public Administration, Durban University of Technology. Email: 22384564@dut4life.ac.za
Nirmala Dorasamy. Doctor of Administration. Professor, Durban University of Technology. E-mail: nirmala@dut.ac.za
Wonder Muchabaiwa. Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology, Lecturer, Midlands State University. E-mail: muchabaiwaw@staff.msu.ac.zw
"All authors equally contributed to the conception, design, preparation, data gathering and analysis, and writing of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript."
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Funding
This work was not supported by any funding.
Institutional Review Board Statement
This study was conducted in accordance with the ethical guidelines set by Durban University of Technology. The conduct of this study has been approved and given relative clearance by the Durban University of Technology’s Institutional Research Ethics Committee (DUT-IREC).
AI Declaration
AI tools were not used in writing this paper.
Notes
Acknowledgement
The authors wish to extend their sincere gratitude to the dedicated staff and youth campaigners working with ActionAid Zimbabwe (AAZ), the Zimbabwe Environmental Law Association (ZELA) and the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (ZIMCODD) for their invaluable support and collaboration. We are also deeply appreciative of the community members and leaders whose willing participation and insightful contributions were essential to the successful completion of this research.
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Cite this article:
Sibanda, A., Dorasamy, N. & Muchabaiwa, W. (2025). The advocacy-impact gap: A bottom-up analysis of NGO advocacy/campaigning and sustainable livelihoods in Zimbabwe. International Review of Social Sciences Research, 5(3), 189-207. https://doi.org/10.53378/irssr.353249
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