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Theories of Change for Promoting Empowerment and Accountability in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Settings
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Green, Duncan (Author)
Title
Theories of Change for Promoting Empowerment and Accountability in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Settings
Abstract
This paper explores the current state of thinking among a range of aid actors (multilaterals, bilateral, applied scholars and international non-governmental organisations) on how to promote empowerment and accountability in fragile, conflict and violence affected settings. It seeks to identify trends, gaps and weaknesses in that thinking, and propose research questions and hypotheses to test.
Three underlying sources of confusion are identified that are hindering progress on both understanding empowerment and accountability in fragile, conflict and violence affected settings, and taking helpful action to promote it. They are:
Theory of endogenous change (e.g. on how empowerment and accountability arise in situ) versus the theory of action of an external intervention;
Fragility versus conflict: there is no clear justification for combining these different aspects into a single category; and
Empowerment versus accountability: donor analysis and practice has been overwhelmingly weighted towards accountability, exhibiting limited understanding or interest in the nature of power.
Report Number
499
Series Title
IDS Working Paper
Place
Brighton
Institution
IDS
Date
October 2017
Language
en
Accessed
02/08/2018, 09:26
Citation
Green, D. (2017). Theories of Change for Promoting Empowerment and Accountability in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Settings (No. 499; IDS Working Paper). IDS. http://www.ids.ac.uk/publication/theories-of-change-for-promoting-empowerment-and-accountability-in-fragile-and-conflict-affected-settings
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