People working together around the world to generate ideas and action for social change
316 - 330 of 389 items
Voices of the Poor
1999
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
London, UK
http://www.iied.org
Hybrid public action
2010
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Falmer, Brighton, UK
http://www.drc-citizenship.org
City governance and citizen action
2009
Publisher
Sage Publications
London, UK
http://www.sagepublications.com
Paradigms, poverty and adaptive pluralism
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2010
Abstract
In earlier analysis, two paradigms were identified in development professionalism, thinking and practice: one, often dominant, associated with things; and one, often subordinate, associated with people. Current development thinking and practice have diverged into two clusters, with procedures associated with the paradigm of things imposed by powerful actors and organisations in tension and contradiction with participatory methodologies (PMs) associated with the paradigm of people. A binocular vision sees both. This sets out to see further, and whether participatory methodologies (PMs) can bridge these binaries with both – and complementarities and win-wins. In recent years, PMs have proliferated. Contributing factors have been the way methods have multiplied, their versatility, adaptability and combinability, the explosion of applications of Information and Communication Technologies and Web 2.0, and more speculatively an increase in the number of people working in a creative participatory way. PMs that combine methods have proved increasingly versatile and adaptable to contexts and purposes. PMs are well suited to understanding and expressing the local, complex, diverse, dynamic, uncontrollable and unpredictable (lcdduu) realities experienced by many poor people. These contrast with the controlled conditions and universalities sought in much high status professionalism. Paradigmatically and practically, four domains have increasingly converged and cohere: PMs; poor people’s lcdduu realities; technology; and complexity. Paradigm can then be defined as a coherent and mutually supporting pattern of: concepts and ontological assumptions; values and principles; methods, procedures and processes; roles and behaviours; relationships; and mindsets, orientations and predispositions. Empirically, a paradigm of adaptive and participatory pluralism can be inferred from experience and examples. This fits with the realities of poor people as adaptive agents and with PMs seen through lenses of technology and complexity. It contrasts with a paradigm of neo-Newtonian practice.
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Falmer, Brighton, UK
http://www.drc-citizenship.org
Rude accountability in the unreformed state: informal pressures on frontline bureaucrats in Bangladesh
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2009
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Falmer, Brighton, UK
http://www.drc-citizenship.org
Sexuality Matters
2006
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Falmer, Brighton, UK
http://www.drc-citizenship.org
Power and Making Change Happen
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2010
Abstract
This report is based on the findings of a UK project designed to support civil society to analyse power and, as a result, take action for social change. It describes how strategies for change can be stregthened when organisations and their communities have a better understanding of their own power and what they can achieve.
Publisher
Carnegie UK Trust
Dunfermline, UK
http://www.carnegieuktrust.org.uk
Overview: changing government-community interface in China
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2011
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
London, UK
http://www.iied.org
Reflections from the Sanjiang workshop
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2011
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
London, UK
http://www.iied.org
Introduction (to Part III)
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2011
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
London, UK
http://www.iied.org
Particpatory planning and poverty analysis in Guangxi
Download available
2011
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
London, UK
http://www.iied.org
The perspective of the Ministry of Water Resources
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2011
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
London, UK
http://www.iied.org
Exploring community-driven development (CDD) in Chinese poverty reduction
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2011
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
London, UK
http://www.iied.org