Max-Neef
on
Human Needs and Human-scale Development
on
Human Needs and Human-scale Development
Conventional western ideas of development and progress are seen by many as a root cause of rainforest destruction and other aspects of the global ecological crisis, but what are the alternatives? Development as it is usually conceived is based on a particular view of human nature. This view, which is taken for granted by economic rationalists, assumes that human beings are driven by a limitless craving for material possessions. Max-Neef’s conception of what human beings need, and what motivates them, is fundamentally different. If decision-makers operated according to his assumptions rather than those of most economists, then the choices they made would change radically. This article by Kath Fisher outlines Max-Neef's ideas on human needs and Human-scale Development.
The Max-Neef Model of Human-Scale Development
Manfred Max-Neef is a Chilean economist who has worked for many years with the problem of development in the Third World, articulating the inappropriateness of conventional models of development, that have lead to increasing poverty, massive debt and ecological disaster for many Third World communities. He works for the Centre for Development Alternatives in Chile, an organisation dedicated to the reorientation of development which stimulates local needs. It researches new tools, strategies and evaluative techniques to support such development, and Max-Neef's publication Human Scale Development: an Option for the Future (1987) outlines the results of the Centre’s researches and experiencesMax-Neef and his colleagues have developed a taxonomy of human needs and a process by which communities can identify their "wealths" and "poverties" according to how these needs are satisfied.Human Scale Development is defined as "focused and based on the satisfaction of fundamental human needs, on the generation of growing levels of self-reliance, and on the construction of organic articulations of people with nature and technology, of global processes with local activity, of the personal with the social, of planning with autonomy, and of civil society with the state." (Max-Neef et al, 1987:12)The main contribution that Max-Neef makes to the understanding of needs is the distinction made between needs and satisfiers. Human needs are seen as few, finite and classifiable (as distinct from the conventional notion that "wants" are infinite and insatiable). Not only this, they are constant through all human cultures and across historical time periods. What changes over time and between cultures is the way these needs are satisfied. It is important that human needs are understood as a system - i.e. they are interrelated and interactive. There is no hierarchy of needs (apart from the basic need for subsistence or survival) as postulated by Western psychologists such as Maslow, rather, simultaneity, complementarity and trade-offs are features of the process of needs satisfaction.Max-Neef classifies the fundamental human needs as: subsistence, protection, affection, understanding, participation, recreation(in the sense of leisure, time to reflect, or idleness), creation, identity and freedom. Needs are also defined according to the existential categories of being, having, doing and interacting, and from these dimensions, a 36 cell matrix is developed which can be filled with examples of satisfiers for those needs.
Fundamental
Human Needs |
Being
(qualities) |
Having
(things) |
Doing
(actions) |
Interacting
(settings) |
subsistence
|
physical and
mental health |
food, shelter
work |
feed, clothe,
rest, work |
living environment,
social setting |
protection
|
care,
adaptability autonomy |
social security,
health systems, work |
co-operate,
plan, take care of, help |
social environment,
dwelling |
affection
|
respect, sense
of humour, generosity, sensuality |
friendships,
family, relationships with nature |
share, take care of,
make love, express emotions |
privacy,
intimate spaces of togetherness |
understanding
|
critical
capacity, curiosity, intuition |
literature,
teachers, policies educational |
analyse, study,meditate
investigate, |
schools, families
universities, communities, |
participation
|
receptiveness,
dedication, sense of humour |
responsibilities,
duties, work, rights |
cooperate,
dissent, express opinions |
associations,
parties, churches, neighbourhoods |
leisure
|
imagination,
tranquillity spontaneity |
games, parties,
peace of mind |
day-dream,
remember, relax, have fun |
landscapes,
intimate spaces, places to be alone |
creation
|
imagination,
boldness, inventiveness, curiosity |
abilities, skills,
work, techniques |
invent, build,
design, work, compose, interpret |
spaces for
expression, workshops, audiences |
identity
|
sense of
belonging, self- esteem, consistency |
language,
religions, work, customs, values, norms |
get to know
oneself, grow, commit oneself |
places one
belongs to, everyday settings |
freedom
|
autonomy,
passion, self-esteem, open-mindedness |
equal rights
|
dissent, choose,
run risks, develop awareness |
anywhere
|
Satisfiers
also have different characteristics: they can be violators
or destroyers, pseudosatisfiers, inhibiting satisfiers, singular
satisfiers, or synergic satisfiers. Max-Neef shows that
certain satisfiers, promoted as satisfying a particular
need, in fact inhibit or destroy the possibility of
satisfying other needs: eg, the arms race, while ostensibly
satisfying the need for protection, in fact then destroys
subsistence, participation, affection and freedom; formal
democracy, which is supposed to meet the need for
participation often disempowers and alienates; commercial
television, while used to satisfy the need for recreation,
interferes with understanding, creativity and identity - the
examples are everywhere.
Synergic
satisfiers, on the other hand, not only satisfy one
particular need, but also lead to satisfaction in other
areas: some examples are breast-feeding; self-managed
production; popular education; democratic community
organisations; preventative medicine; meditation;
educational games.
This
model forms the basis of an explanation of many of the
problems arising from a dependence on mechanistic economics,
and contributes to understandings that are necessary for a
paradigrn shift that incorporates systemic principles.
Max-Neef and his colleagues have found that this methodology
"allows for the achievement of in-depth insight
into the key problems that impede the actualisation of
fundamental human needs in the society, community or
institution being studied" (Max-Neef et al, 1987:40)
This
model provides a useful approach that meets the
requirements of small group, community-based processes that
have the effect of allowing deep reflection about one's
individual and community situation, leading to critical
awareness and, possibly, action al the local economic level.
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