Capacitation (outside the field of
biology) has been used previously, in English, mainly to emphasize educational content which differs from and/or transcends the basic meaning of the English one-size-fits-all
training. In some sectors of
Community health, "capacitation" is said to be synonymous with
empowering training. Capacitation has also historically been used in the area of
adult education, starting with
Paulo Freire, who, in the seventies, uses the term "Technical Proficiency Capacitation" to refer to an adult learning activity which can
"never be reduced to the level of mere training". In the eighties, Capacitation is defined, by the
ILO, as:
"availability of opportunities for people to build up their capacities to move from the status of object and passive victims of social processes to the status of subjects guided by self-consciousness and active agents of change". The
UNRISD (Geneva) had started (in the seventies) to promote the term capacitation as a "problem-solving, educational" alternative to the then prevalent but mainly pragmatic 'social amelioration' approaches to
International development.
Jan Nederveen Pieterse contrasts
"capacitation" or
human development, as proposed by
alternative or
autonomous (aka self-development) theorists – (such as e.g. Korten, 1990; Max-Neef, 1991; Rahman, 1993 and Carmen, 1996), – with
"development-as -economic growth" theorists for whom, according to Pieterse,
capital accumulation is the ultimate Development objective. By the mid-nineties, any mention of
capacitation had virtually disappeared from the
International Development scene, to be replaced by the
World-Bank-sponsored
Capacity Building. Although de Morais worked for many years with a range of UN and International Agencies, his
"Activity"-based pedagogy never became common currency there, possibly, as Sobrado suggests, because of, among others, its then presumed "Evil Empire" pedigree. == Moraisean large-group capacitation (LGC): overview ==