Your search
Results 158 resources
-
Outside of community-led design projects, most participatory design processes initiated by a company or organisation maintain or even strengthen power imbalances between the design organisation and the community on whose purported behalf they are designing, further increasing the absencing experience. Radical participatory design (RPD) is a radically relational answer to the coloniality inherent in participatory design where the community members’ disappointment is greater due to the greater...
-
This chapter examines good practices in implementing effective Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning (MEL) systems within complex international development Democracy, Human Rights, and Governance (DRG) programs, which are characterized by challenges of non-linearity, limited evidence of theories of change, and contextual and politically contingent nature of outcomes. The chapter presents three cases of MEL systems in complex projects implemented by Pact across distinct and diverse operating...
-
Technical assistance is provided to country governments as part of international development programmes to support policymaking or strengthen state capability. This article presents the conceptual evolution of ‘technical assistance’ linked to capacity development, starting with programmes aiming exclusively to enhance individual capacity in the 1950s to 1970s and progressing to complex systems approaches in the past ten years. It also presents some of the frequent challenges in designing and...
-
Digital platforms for urban democracy are analyzed in Madrid and Barcelona. These platforms permit citizens to debate urban issues with other citizens; to propose developments, plans, and policies for city authorities; and to influence how city budgets are spent. Contrasting with neoliberal assumptions about Smart Citizenship, the technopolitics discourse underpinning these developments recognizes that the technologies facilitating participation have themselves to be developed...
-
This article reviews longstanding debates about the relationship between power over and power to – often posed as the tension between domination and emancipation. It then turns to several frameworks which integrate these approaches to inform strategies for social action. In particular, it focuses on recent empirical studies which apply one such framework, the ‘powercube’, to glean insights into how social actors navigate across multiple forms, spaces and levels of power. In so doing, we gain...
-
This article explores the potential of using participatory action research as an adaptive programming modality to drive learning and innovation to tackle the drivers of (and seek to eliminate) the Worst Forms of Child Labour. We draw on our experience from early phases of implementation of a large-scale action research programme, which despite the constraints covid-19 posed in moving to full implementation and participatory engagement with children and other stakeholders on the ground, is...
-
Meeting the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will require adapting or redirecting a variety of very complex global and local human systems. It is essential that development scholars and practitioners have tools to understand the dynamics of these systems and the key drivers of their behavior, such as barriers to progress and leverage points for driving sustainable change. System dynamics tools are well suited to address this challenge, but they must first be adapted for...
-
Evaluation processes that facilitate learning among advocates must be nimble, creative, and meaningful while transcending putative performance and accountability management. This article describes the experience, lessons, and trajectory of one such approach, Simple, Participatory Assessment of Real Change (SPARC), that a transnational HIV prevention research advocacy coalition pilot-tested in sub-Saharan Africa. Inspired by the pioneering work of the outcome harvesting (OH) and participatory...
-
Development and radical uncertaintyFeinstein, O. - 2020 - Development in Practice, 30(8), 1105–1113
Development strategies, programmes and projects are designed making assumptions concerning several variables such as future prices of outputs and inputs, exchange rates and productivity growth. However, knowledge about the future is limited. Uncertainty prevails. The usual approach to deal with uncertainty is to reduce it to risk. Uncertainty is perceived as a negative factor that should and can be eliminated. This article presents an alternative approach which recognises that radical...
-
This paper tackles a key problem in path dependence research: how can locked-in organizations regain their scope for maneuver? Leveraging insights from two surprising and thus revelatory cases of organizations that have successfully escaped from path dependence, we develop the theoretical argument that regaining scope for maneuver can be achieved by interrupting the logic of a path’s underlying self-reinforcing mechanisms. More specifically, we argue that, through a targeted interruption of...
-
Amplifying the impact of sustainability initiatives to foster transformations in urban and rural contexts, has received increasing attention in resilience, social innovation, and sustainability transitions research. We review the literature on amplification frameworks and propose an integrative typology of eight processes, which aim to increase the impact of such initiatives. The eight amplification processes are: stabilizing, speeding up, growing, replicating, transferring, spreading,...
-
This paper analyzes the award-winning e-participation initiative of the city council of Madrid, Decide Madrid, to identify the critical success factors and the main barriers that are conditioning its performance. An exploratory case study is used as a research technique, including desk research and semi-structured interviews. The analysis distinguishes contextual, organizational and individual level factors; it considers whether the factors or barriers are more related to the information and...
-
Rather than a glossy brochure that no one reads, your strategy should be an ongoing practice that informs your decisions and adapts as circumstances change. A Viewpoint from the Summer 2019 issue.
-
The Scale Up Sourcebook is informed and inspired by the September 2018 conference, Innovations in Agriculture: Scaling Up to Reach Millions, organized by Purdue University, in partnership with the African Development Bank. The Sourcebook consolidates, extends, and disseminates some of the scaling insights presented at the Purdue conference. It is intended as an easy-to-use guidebook targeted to a broad and diverse audience of stakeholders associated with scaling agricultural technologies and...
-
Polycentricity is a fundamental concept in commons scholarship that connotes a complex form of governance with multiple centers of semiautonomous decision making. If the decision-making centers take each other into account in competitive and cooperative relationships and have recourse to conflict resolution mechanisms, they may be regarded as a polycentric governance system. In the context of natural resource governance, commons scholars have ascribed a number of advantages to polycentric...
-
Healthcare systems are increasingly recognised as complex, in which a range of non-linear and emergent behaviours occur. China’s healthcare system is no exception. The hugeness of China, and the variation in conditions in different jurisdictions present very substantial challenges to reformers, and militate against adopting one-size-fits-all policy solutions. As a consequence, approaches to change management in China have frequently emphasised the importance of sub-national experimentation,...
-
More and more global aid agencies believe they should replace one-size-fits-all best practices with locally tailored solutions, but they must shift from just agreeing to “go local” to preparing development experts for the task by taking on three major problems with their internal practices.
-
Tools and expertise to improve the evidence base for national and international Illegal Wildlife Trade policy already exist but are underutilised. Tapping into these resources would produce substantive benefits for wildlife conservation and associated sectors, enabling governments to better meet their obligations under the Sustainable Development Goals and international biodiversity conventions. This can be achieved through enhanced funding support for inter-sectoral research...
-
This rapid review summarises the evidence on how to scale up inclusive approaches to complex social change. It looks at how to design scalable inclusive change interventions, as well as how to plan and manage the scale-up process. Focusing on interventions with the aim of reaching the most marginalised and transform social norms, it covers programmes aiming to deliver inclusive outcomes for women and girls (with a particular focus on preventing violence against women and girls) and persons...
Explore
Theme
-
Sectors [+]
- Advocacy and Activism (2)
- Agriculture (2)
- Alternative Development (28)
- Behavioural Change (3)
- Children (1)
- Citizen Engagement (22)
- Economic development (1)
- Education (1)
- Employment (1)
- Environmental Management (16)
- Fragile and Conflict Aflicted Settings (1)
- Governance and Accountability (37)
- Health (6)
- Inclusion/Disability (1)
- Innovation (in Development) (9)
- Institutional Capacity & Change (1)
- Knowledge to Practice (9)
- Locally driven development (4)
- NGOs (1)
- Organizational Change (3)
- Philanthropy (1)
- Research for Development (R4D) (6)
- Rural development (4)
- Scaling up / Propagating (5)
- Social Accountability (38)
- Social Change (3)
-
Technology (in Development)
(13)
- Appropriate Tech (2)
- Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) (1)
-
Adaptive Approaches [+]
(54)
- Adaptive Learning (7)
- Adaptive Management (24)
- Design Thinking / HCD (13)
- Implementation Research (1)
- MSD - Market Systems Development (1)
- Other Adaptive approaches (2)
-
Other sectors
(2)
- Activism and Social Movements (1)
- Sport (1)
- Participation (1)
- PDIA (Problem-Driven Iterative Adaptation) (1)
- PEA (Political Economy Analysis) (3)
- Positive Deviance & 2 loops models (1)
- Systems Thinking / Complexity (10)
- TWP (Thinking & Working Politically) (1)
- Cases (15)
-
Development Actors Perspectives
(8)
- Canada - GAC & IDRC (1)
- China (2)
- FCDO/DFID (UK) (2)
- Private Donors (OSF, Hewlett...) (1)
- USAID (1)
- World Bank (1)
-
Geography
(15)
-
Africa
(9)
- Central Africa (2)
- Eastern Africa (8)
- Southern Africa (1)
-
West Africa
(2)
- Nigeria (1)
-
Asia
(7)
-
Eastern Asia
(2)
- China (2)
- South-eastern Asia (2)
-
Southern Asia
(3)
- Bangladesh (3)
- Nepal (1)
-
Eastern Asia
(2)
-
Europe
(1)
-
Northern Europe
(1)
- United Kingdom (1)
-
Northern Europe
(1)
-
Oceania
(1)
-
Melanesia
(1)
- Papua New Guinea (1)
-
Melanesia
(1)
-
Africa
(9)
-
MEL4 Adaptive Management
(24)
- Causal Mechanisms (1)
- Community Led MEL (1)
- Cost-Benefit Analysis (1)
- Ethnography / Rapid Ethnography (1)
- Impact evaluation (2)
- Logical Framework (2)
- MEL in International Development (5)
- Most Significant Change (2)
- Network Analysis (1)
- Outcome Harvesting (1)
- Participatory Action Research (2)
- Participatory Evaluation (1)
- Participatory Rural Appraisal - PRA, RRA (1)
- Power Analysis (1)
- Process Tracing (1)
- Realist Evaluation (1)
- Sense-making (1)
- Stakeholder analysis (1)
- Systemic Change (2)
- Systems Mapping (2)
- Theory-based evaluations (1)
- TOC (Theory of Change) (2)
- Utilisation focused evaluation (1)
- Value for Money (1)
-
Practical
(2)
- Tools (1)
Resource type
Publication year
-
Between 1900 and 1999
(14)
-
Between 1940 and 1949
(1)
- 1948 (1)
- Between 1960 and 1969 (2)
-
Between 1970 and 1979
(1)
- 1974 (1)
- Between 1980 and 1989 (5)
- Between 1990 and 1999 (5)
-
Between 1940 and 1949
(1)
-
Between 2000 and 2025
(143)
- Between 2000 and 2009 (24)
- Between 2010 and 2019 (87)
- Between 2020 and 2025 (32)
- Unknown (1)