Our Board Chairperson, Mrs. Pester Siraha, set the pulse for the conference. Here are the key highlights from her remarks:
1. Civil Society Must Adapt to a New Regulatory and Financing Reality: The PVO Amendment Act and shifting donor landscapes—marked by the exit of major funders like USAID—have created a new operating environment that demands stronger compliance, resilience, and strategic adaptation. CSOs must proactively engage regulators, strengthen governance, and diversify funding to remain effective.
2. Civic Space Is Under Pressure, but Civil Society Remains Essential: Amid global and local trends of democratic backsliding, restrictive laws, and shrinking civic space, Zimbabwean CSOs face heightened scrutiny and rising operational challenges. Yet the sector remains a critical development partner and defender of accountability, rights, and community voice.
3. A United, Innovative, and Locally Driven Sector Is the Future: Emerging frontiers—digital governance, FATF processes, localisation, and community-driven development—call for a more agile, collaborative, and technologically aware civil society. The sector’s strength lies in solidarity, innovation, and placing communities at the centre of solutions.
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