31 - 45 of 74 items
Mediating sustainability : growing policy from the grassroots.
Publisher
Kumarian Press
Participatory rural appraisal and planning workbook
Abstract
This hands-on workbook provides guidelines for conducting participatory rural appraisal and planning (PRAP) to identify and design community and regional level projects, based on local needs. It emphasises the "how to" of the PRAP methodology in a practical and understandable way. The workbook begins with brief descriptions of areas related to the planning and practical implementation of PRAP at the field level including: advantages and disadvantages, results, guiding principles, who applies and who participates in it, the role of the facilitator, time needed and concrete guidelines for planning the PRAP process.
The second part of the workbook explains, step by step, how to apply 22 different participatory appraisal and planning tools. More than 50 illustrations of actual field exercises, plus two complete PRAP case studies, document the process in detail. Recognising the gap between project identification and planning processes, this workbook's key strength is that it integrates participatory project identification (or appraisal) with the concrete steps needed to design realistic projects involving the active participation of community members.
Based on many years' field experience in Latin America, this guide is designed for practitioners directly involved in the identification and design of development projects in areas including agriculture, health, education and community development.
Publisher
IIRR
Mediación para la sustentabilidad : construyendo políticas desde las bases
Publisher
Plaza y ValdÚs
Participatory assessment and the Twenty Points of Progress Programme : the experience from Mexico
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Abstract
This paper describes the field-test of the Twenty Points of Progress Programme (20PPP) presently being implemented by an NGO called Choice Humanitarian in Guanajuato, Mexico. This is a participatory methodology for systematically measuring and assessing the impact of village development programs, which is participatory in nature, has a specific commitment to community action planning and encourages network development between communities governments and NGOs. Having described the development and implementation of the programme it goes on to look at outcomes and lessons learned, concluding that the 20PPP provides a short, simple, inexpensive and flexible approach to measuring village progress and mobilising community action.
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Participatory development communication: raising citizen's voice
Abstract
This document comprises three sections: an overview of the literature, discussion and reflection on the wider issues relating to participatory monitoring and evaluation (PM&E) in Latin America, and an annotated bibliography. The overview provides a broad scan of the literature, which is divided into references that look at case study examples and conceptual issues, tools and methodologies, reviews of experiences in PM&E, and documents that look at PM&E in a broader sense. It then outlines the gaps in the literature. The second section discusses the more important issues as they relate to Latin America, the trends in PM&E work currently observed and some reflections on the methodologies employed. The bibliography sources and abstracts literature relating to PM&E in Latin America.
Participatory monitoring and evaluation in Latin America: overview of the literature with annotated bibliography
Abstract
This document comprises three sections: an overview of the literature, discussion and reflection on the wider issues relating to participatory monitoring and evaluation (PM&E) in Latin America, and an annotated bibliography. The overview provides a broad scan of the literature, which is divided into references that look at case study examples and conceptual issues, tools and methodologies, reviews of experiences in PM&E, and documents that look at PM&E in a broader sense. It then outlines the gaps in the literature. The second section discusses the more important issues as they relate to Latin America, the trends in PM&E work currently observed and some reflections on the methodologies employed. The bibliography sources and abstracts literature relating to PM&E in Latin America.
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Participatory budgeting in Porto Alegre: toward a redistributive democrary
Abstract
Counter hegemonic globalisation occurs today in many forms and many settings and deals with a variety of issues from land and labour rights to sexual equality to biodiversity and the environment. This paper examines one urban experiment developed to resist the social exclusion that is an undeniable result of the globalisation process by redistributing city resources in favour of the more vulnerable social groups by means of participatory democracy. The experiment was the participatory budget established in 1989 in the city of Porto Alegre.
The first part of the paper describes basic information and the recent history of the city and its government, contextualising both within the Brazilian political system. The second part details a description of the main features of the institutions and processes of the participatory budget and of participation as well as the criteria and methodology for the distribution of resources. The third part examines the development of the participatory budget. The final part analyses the processes of the participatory budget with regards to its efficiency in redistribution, its accountability and quality of representation in a participatory democracy, the notion of dual powers and competing legitimacies and its relationship with the legislative body that formally approves budget.
Seguimiento y evaluación participativos en América Latina: panorama bibliografýa anotada
Publisher
FIDA; PREVAL
La partipación en el Programa Chile-Barrio: evaluación en curso y propuestas de mejoramiento
Abstract
Recent efforts by the Chilean government to promote civic education are seen to have contributed to social exclusion of the poorest people of the population. This paper was developed as part of a thesis, and evaluates the participatory model developed and implemented by the Chilean government. It attempts to determine the failures and possible areas for improvement by considering: who benefits, what is being offered and how, and what role should the beneficiaries play?
An analysis of over 100 communities was undertaken to test the hypothesis that the participation of the poorest people is possible given certain geographical and social conditions, local opportunities of the communities, and wider responses to community demands and political goals.
The following findings emerged and are put forward as considerations for improving project efficiency:
" Interventions are more successful in areas where inhabitants have secure land rights, and where basic services are present or are quickly provided;
" Larger communities tend to be more successful;
" Diversification and an increase in the programme's scope will attract poorer groups.
From participatory systematisation to a regional network for policy change
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Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Indigenous peoples, national parks and participation: a case study of conflicts in Canaima National Park, Venezuela
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Abstract
This paper provides a resume of a D.Phil. research project. The overall aim of the project is to study and analyse the nature of conflicts in Canaima National Park, with emphasis on their history, structural causes and power relations. It seeks to find out which forms of participation are more likely to contribute to managing conflicts in national parks established in indigenous peopleÆs territories. The paper gives a brief background and rationale to the research project; presents the main points of argument and objectives; describes the project site and existing conflicts; and explains the research methodology which combines a community case study approach with traditional qualitative research methods. The paper discusses the spread of natural resource conflict management in Latin America; present trends and gaps in analysing conflicts in national parks; and the need to go beyond perception and stakeholder analysis in order to understand conflicts. The preliminary results of the study are presented regarding the nature of conflicts over implementation of park policy with focus on the use of fire by the Pemon people; tourism development; and the building of a power line to Brazil. The role of power in shaping different forms of participation is analysed focussing on the meaning of participation for the different factors. Based on the preliminary results, the paper proposes forms of participation that are likely to contribute to conflict management in Canaima National Park, focussing on the main conflicts (as mentioned above). An attachment gives further details of the field work process.
And What About Women? Promoting Gender Balanced Participation
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Abstract
This article shares the author's experiences in promoting gender equality in the æSupport to Generation and Transfer of Agricultural Technology ProjectÆ (PRODETEC) in Nicaragua. They represent important lessons for gender sensitive participatory diagnosis and are applicable to other organisations. The article presents the background to the project, and its two main approaches: farming systems and gender. Rapid gender analysis was carried out at the start of the project and this explored the broad differences between male and female production systems. This is followed by a participatory diagnosis during the planning process phase. The article stresses the need for gender equality in the project, especially in participation in decision making. It offers practical tips on when and how participation may happen. It also offers a clue to increasing female participation as discussion by separate men and womensÆ groups. In conclusion, the article advises that a high or low profile gender approach should be adopted according to what is appropriate and sensitive to the context.
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Paris in Bogota: applying the aid effectiveness agenda in Colombia
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Abstract
Recent research in the field of development aid persuasively problematises aid relationships and begins to reveal their significance for the real-life application and effectiveness of international development cooperation. Until insights from such research percolate through aid machineries such as the OECD DAC and its workings, the country-level consequences of universal aid frameworks and prescriptions will continue to be insufficiently foreseen, and in some cases unexpectedly problematic. This paper is about an in-depth, qualitative study of the application of the Paris Declaration (PD) on Aid Effectiveness in Colombia. This middle-income, non aid-dependent country with a prolonged and complex internal armed conflict and a poor human rights record, hitherto on the margins of international aid circles, has fast assumed a high-profile role in them via its adoption of the PD.
The study stemmed from a conviction that PD application in Colombia has unanticipated consequences, with under-appreciated impacts on the strategies of donors and social actors. Donors are subject to an attempt to push them (back) into a technocratic corner. In this politically complex context where donors' presence owes at least as much to concerns over Colombia's international human rights performance as to classic aid donor concerns with widespread extreme poverty, this is worrying and undesirable. It also has serious implications for the tripartite aid dialogue process established in 2003, involving Government, donors and social actors. This, for all its flaws and frustrations, is unique and important in a historic context of polarised, antagonistic and violent relationships between the state and left-wing advocates of human rights and social democratic principles. It will require skilful and opportunistic responses by both donors and social organisations to turn this conjuncture to their favour, in the sense of strengthening their leverage on the Government in relation to human rights, poverty, conflict and democratic governance.