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中国年轻NGO人面临的挑战

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发表于 2008-3-17 23:10:01 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
http://www.chinadialogue.net/article/summary/1802
一个外国人写的
谁的网速快,可以帮忙转过来,后面还有评论
从小事做起,但不要因小失大;做环保,不做另类人

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发表于 2008-3-17 23:14:36 | 显示全部楼层

                               
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中国年轻NGO人面临的挑战
慕浩然
2008年3月13日
民间社会团体不但在处理中国环境危机的时候起到了重要的作用,而且还是明日的环境领袖。替这些年轻人着想一下吧,慕浩然说。
我采访的另一个年轻的NGO成员向他的家庭隐瞒了真实职业,很多年来他一直告诉他们,他在一家私企上班。
张天明(音译)是一名23岁大学生,来自中国西南部的昆明,他的头发又短又直,过早地斑白了,人非常幽默。张天明在一所优秀的大学里学习环境科学,并在一个著名的中国环境NGO中实习过。他协助领导学校的环保团体,并热衷于环境问题:他的梦想是为一个环保NGO工作。然而,他的下一个雇主却可能是一家私企。
毕业之后,张天明曾为一个“政府组织的非政府组织”(或GONGO)工作了很短一段时间。但是几个月之后,他就离开了。这个组织管理很差,他说,而且除非你曾经在政府中工作过,否则职业发展会非常困难。
在中国的环境问题上,民间社会团体的作用正在变得越来越大。NGO的管理者常常是社会名流,与政界、学术界和媒体的关系良好。但是,几乎没有观察员顾及到这些在中国环保NGO里工作的年轻人,同样他们常常缺乏社会认可、国际关系、工作保障以及工作前景。
压力
“为了养育我并送我上学,我的家人每天工作很长时间,辛苦地在市场上贩卖水果,”张天明说。“现在,我需要找到一份工作,来帮助赡养我的家庭。”张天明的家人说,为私人公司或政府工作有保障、收入更高而且社会地位更高,这会带给他一个更美好的未来。
中国的独生子女一代都在考虑如何照顾他们年老的父母,在环保团体工作的人中不只张天明一个人感觉到家庭的压力。我采访的另一个年轻的NGO成员向他的家庭隐瞒了真实职业,很多年来他一直告诉他们,他在一家私企上班。
人们常常对NGO部门不甚熟悉,而且年轻雇员也常常被认为社会地位比较低。最近,在中国南部城市南京召开了一次由当地NGO主管和一群中美两国学生参加的会议。在这次会议上,来自美国学生的问题集中于污染和公共政策。然而,很多中国学生却更加谨慎。他们询问了NGO在中国社会中所起的作用,并问到为什么一个人会愿意为NGO工作,而不是私企。
生活成本的提高和通货膨胀的威胁让这种担心雪上加霜。很多NGO由定期基金支持,在经济上不能自给自足。当提到裁员的时候,年轻人常常是首当其冲,而在不同的领域找工作是非常困难的。未来的雇主不一定会重视他们在NGO的工作经验。
实习在经济上也具有挑战性。大学期间,张天明在一个环保NGO实习的时候,为了省钱,他睡在办公室的地板上。但是,在中国NGO里的工作竞争是非常激烈的,而且相对来讲,在昆明和北京之外的NGO极少,这两个城市被认为是中国的“NGO之都”。
另一个障碍是教育系统。当张天明上大学的时候,他的学校新设立的环境科学课程缺乏组织并且管理混乱。因此,他和其他学生都被迫自学。
同志友爱
然而,对那些希望拯救环境的年轻人来说,也有一些好消息。在协助大学环境团体工作的时候,张天明首先了解了环境问题和NGO的管理。对于他来说,通过这个组织来了解这些问题和获取领导能力,是一个绝佳的途径。
去年,我参加了在南京举行的一次会议,这个会议主要由大学生组织,吸引了30多个当地的环保团体、以及记者和一名来自当地环保局的代表。这次活动极其成功,为很多学生提供了组织、推广活动的宝贵经验。
最后,有些社会压力虽然使在NGO的工作很艰难,但是这非常有价值。可能是因为很多人不理解环保团体的工作,在NGO团体内部有一种很强的同志友爱。像中国的很多年轻人一样,张天明的兴趣意味着,在业余时间里他仍然会作为一名志愿者来为一个环境团体服务。
但是,张天明以后会做什么呢?如果他能在环保团体中获得一份中等的薪水、稳定位置,他说,他会接受这份工作。但是至少在现在,张天明会应用其科学知识和领导技能来服务一家公司。
张天明和像他一样的年轻人都面临着很多困难,减少这些困难将是一项艰巨的任务,但是对于培训中国新一代的NGO领导人来说,这是必须的。
你是否一位为中国NGO组织工作的年轻人?你是否正在西方国家为绿色环保事业而呼喊?你觉得这篇文章内容属实吗?你是否有不同的故事?请留下片言只语,告诉我们你的故事。


慕浩然毕业于约翰·霍普金斯大学-南京大学中美文化研究中心。目前他生活在纽约的布鲁克林区。
首页图片由Joshua Wickerham

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发表于 2008-3-17 23:15:02 | 显示全部楼层
Dan Murphy
March 13, 2008
Civil society groups not only play an important role in tackling China’s environmental crisis, they also employ the environmental leaders of tomorrow. Considering these young people will benefit the green groups of the future, says Dan Murphy.
A young NGO worker I spoke to has hidden his true profession from his family, telling them for years that he works for a private company.
Zhang Tianming is a 23-year-old college graduate from Kunming, southwest China, with spiky, prematurely greying hair and great sense of humour. Zhang studied environmental science at a good university, and interned at a well-known Chinese environmental NGO. He helped to lead his campus green group and is passionate about environmental issues: it is his dream to work for a green NGO. His next job, however, is likely to be with a private company.
After graduation, Zhang worked for a short time with a “government-organised non-governmental organisation”, or GONGO. But he left after several months. It was poorly managed, he says, and career advancement was very difficult unless you had already worked in government.
Civil society plays an expanding role in China’s environmental issues. NGO directors are often public figures, well-connected in politics, academia or the media. But few observers spare a thought for the young workers at China’s green NGOs, who often lack the same social recognition, international connections, job security or prospects.
Pressures
“My family has worked long, hard hours selling fruit in the market in order to support me and send me through school,” says Zhang. “Now I need to find a job to help support my family.” Zhang’s family says that the security, higher pay and enhanced social status that come from working with a private company or in government will provide him with a better future.
As China’s single-child generation think about caring for their ageing parents, Zhang is not alone in feeling family pressure on account of his work with an environmental group. Another young NGO worker I spoke to has hidden his true profession from his family, telling them for years that he works for a private company.
People are often unfamiliar with the NGO sector, and young staffers are often seen as having a low social status. At a recent meeting with the director of a local NGO and a group of Chinese and American students in the south China city of Nanjing, the questions from the US students centred on pollution and public policy. Many Chinese students, however, were more guarded. They questioned the role NGOs could play in Chinese society, and asked why anyone would work at an NGO, rather than a private company.
The rising cost of living and the threat of inflation have made this caution more acute. Many NGOs are supported by fixed-termed funding and are not financially self-sufficient. When it comes to cutting staff, young people are often the first to go, and finding a job in a different sector can be difficult. Prospective employers do not always value NGO sector experience.
Internships are financially challenging too. Interning for a green NGO during university, Zhang slept on the floor of the office to save money. Nonetheless, competition for jobs at Chinese NGOs is stiff, and there are relatively few outside Kunming and Beijing, which are known as China’s “NGO capitals”.
Another stumbling block is the education system. When Zhang was at university, his newly established environmental science programme lacked structure and proper organisation. Consequently, he and other students were forced to study independently.
Camaraderie
There is some good news, however, for young people wanting to help the environment. Zhang first learned about green issues and NGO management while helping out with his university environmental group. For him, the organisation was a fantastic way to learn about the issues and gain leadership skills.
Last year I attended a meeting in Nanjing, largely organised by college students, which drew over 30 local green groups as well as reporters and a representative from the local environmental protection bureau. The event was a great success, and gave many students valuable experience organising and advertising for the event.
In the end, some of the same social pressures that make working at an NGO difficult can make it rewarding. Perhaps because many people misunderstand the work of green groups, there is a strong sense of camaraderie within the NGO community. Like many young people in China, Zhang’s interest means he still works as a volunteer for an environmental group during his spare time.
But what does the future hold for Zhang? If he was presented with an average-salaried, stable position at a green group, he says he would take it. But at least for now, Zhang will be putting his scientific knowledge and leadership skills to use at a company.
Lowering the hurdles that Zhang and young people like him face will be a difficult task, but it may be essential to train a new generation of NGO leaders in China.
Are you a young person working for an NGO in China? Or are you campaigning on green issues in the west? Did you find this article accurate, or do you have another story to tell? Leave a comment – and tell us about your experience.


Dan Murphy graduated from the Johns Hopkins University-Nanjing University Center for Chinese and American Studies. He currently lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Homepage photo by Joshua Wickerham via Flickr

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发表于 2008-3-17 23:17:03 | 显示全部楼层
2008年3月13日13:51 评论编号 : 1 来自英国的观点我是一个为英国的绿色NGO工作的年轻人,我觉得对中国的NGO来说,情况并没有什么的不同。比如说,很多人不理解我的工作性质,以及相关的一些内容。年纪大一些的人会因为做环保方面的工作而得到许多尊重,但是很多的年轻人不理解为什么我要接受这样的低工资,以及我为什么花那么长的时间去做那些他们认为毫无价值的事情。这是事情的关键:那些事情根本不是毫无价值,但是年轻人通常不理解这些事情的重要性。难怪很少有朋友愿意在这个领域工作。。。LL

March 13, 2008 13:51 Comment Number : 1View from the UKI'm a young person working for a green NGO in the UK, and I think the situation isn't that dissimilar to the one in China. For instance, many people do not understand the kind of work I do, or its relevance. While older people can gain a lot of respect for their work on environmental issues, a lot of young people don't understand why I would accept lower pay and work longer hours for something that seems rather obscure to them. And that's the key point: these issues aren't obscure at all, but young people still often don't understand why they are of such importance. No wonder so few of my friends tried to work in this sector... LL

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发表于 2008-3-17 23:17:30 | 显示全部楼层
中国年轻NGO人自己怀揣相同的梦想,却迫于现实,钦佩张的勇敢。环境污染很大一块在于企业生产活动,而14001体系执行的有效性,在中国躁动不安的社会氛围下,它究竟能发挥多少效用,这都是很大的问题,呵呵...

Green NGOsOne world, one dream for green planet, however, my dream is defeated due to the pressure of the real world. I do cherish Mr.Zhang's courage, when it comes to the question of environment pollution, most of time, it can be attributed to economics and manufacturing. The feasibility of implementing a new system will be challenged by Chinese social anxiety, if it can fulfill its function is still open to question. Well, just keep watching...

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发表于 2008-3-17 23:18:04 | 显示全部楼层
立意新颖,富含启示。这篇文章立意新颖,我很乐于承认在现有条件下,我们拥有比以往更多的备选方案,然而对于非政府组织,未来将面临的真正问题是如果没有资本融合能力,他们将无法继续发展并保持元气。当然,我也看到一些积极的变化,比如越来越多的公司有意于为那些所谓“草根阶层”提供资金上的帮助,但是令人遗憾的是,这些有意于投资民间公益组织的公司却苦于难以寻找并发现那些拥有专业管理团队,具备规范管理运营的组织。这也使我们常常徘徊在“十字路口”的原因, 但是我们将继续协助民间公益组织开发那些有商业投资前景的项目。

Interesting Article. There are OptionsInteresting article, and I am happy to say that there are more options now than ever.

Where the real problem lies for NGOs in the future is that without the ability to fundraise, they cannot afford to develop and keep talent.

However, I see that changing very rapidly. more and more, companies are interested in funding grassroots groups, but they really struggle to find a group that has a strong management team, with strong program management skills, and will be able to scale out.

this is something we are addressing at Crossroads, and we will begin working with NGOs to help develop business plans that firms are interested in funding.

r
www.china-crossroads.com

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发表于 2008-3-17 23:18:27 | 显示全部楼层
孤独的牧羊人我同意英国同仁的观点,一直以来民间公益组织似乎总是游离于主流社会之外,并且民间公益组织的工作似乎很难与商业或政治融合互动,但是我希望在未来,民间公益组织可以如文章《中国-十字路口的思索》所指出的一样,能与商业政策互动交融。同时我认为,中国严峻的就业形势也从两方面加剧了民间公益组织的边缘化处境,一方面尽管一部分人群热切关注环保问题,但是当今高校毕业生就业难的问题如此突出,生存问题使得人们更趋向于寻找更大回报的的就业途径,另一方面,一部分对于环保问题知之甚少的”门外汉“因为求职心切,也盲目加入了民间公益组织,这也就造成了社会对于民间公益组织的关注度有所下降。

a separate entityI agree with UK person. I feel NGO work is often boxed out from the rest of society. It seems as if our work is not that well integrated with business and government work. I hope NGO work can be integrated with business strategy in the future as \"china-crossroads\" has pointed out. Also I think the employment issue works both ways in China. You have people who are passionate about environment but need to take a job that will bring in more money, but also there are people who are so desperate for a job (because unemployment after college is so high) that they will take a job with NGO, even if they don't know anything about environmental issues. This can lead to a lack of passion.
发表于 2008-3-17 23:25:17 | 显示全部楼层
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发表于 2008-3-17 23:47:39 | 显示全部楼层
这可能也是实在的问题吧,年轻固然是一种资本,但有时也会成为事业的阻碍~
江西农业大学绿源(环保)协会,取意于“万物有源,生命相济”,成立于1998年10月28日,以“宣传环保知识,培养科学精神”为宗旨。 绿源协会网站http://jxaulvyuan.5jia1.com 协会公共邮箱lvyuanbuluo@163.com
发表于 2008-3-18 00:30:58 | 显示全部楼层
慕浩然曾是绿石的志愿者
每个人都关心自然环境,理解、参与环境保护,与自然和谐相处,分享改变世界,爱济溪
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