Governing a Regional Development
        Initiative: The Experience of Vale do Itajaí, Southern Brazil
        
Itajaí Valley is a region in the state of Santa
        Catarina in Southern Brazil. It includes 14 municipalities, the largest
        being Blumenau. The economic backbone of the region is textile and
        garment manufacturing, though there is a variety of other industries
        (metal engineering, electrical products, food processing, software), and
        agriculture is another important source of income.
        
Regional co-operation started in the mid-1990s with the
        creation of the Comité da Bacia, a committee with representatives from
        all municipalities which was to address the problem of floods which
        occurred on a regular basis and caused major damage. The purpose of the
        committee was to identify the causes of the floods and remedies against
        them. It was soon discovered that the problems lay with the lack of
        management of smaller rivers feeding into the Itajaí river, in
        particular the lack of maintenance of small dams, but also deforestation
        and other practices which in phases of heavy rainfalls led to a swift
        rise in the level of Itajaí river. One of the important learning
        processes in the course of this work involved stakeholders from Blumenau,
        the dominating city and the place most affected by floods, who suddenly
        realised that they needed the co-operation of the small municipalities.
        This led to a less arrogant and pushy disposition of Blumenau
        stakeholders.
        
The Itajaí Regional Development Forum was created in
        1997/98, stimulated by some extent by state government. It is being
        coordinated by a professor at the Regional University in Blumenau. She
        has a background in regional planning, and she is doing this job mostly
        on a volunteer basis since her teaching load has not been reduced.
        
The Forum has been organised in a bottom-up way. It
        started with the creation of some eight working groups. Each working
        group consists of a number of representatives of organisations who have
        a stake in a given issue, plus a number of volunteers.
        
The Forum itself meets on a monthly basis. Once per
        quarter all the people involved in working group activities are invited
        to attend the meeting. The other two quarterly meetings are attended by
        delegates from each working group. The Forum is mostly about information
        exchange: Delegates report about the projects being developed by their
        working group.
        
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