16 - 30 of 74 items
Gender-related Impacts and the Work if the International Agricultural Research Centers
Abstract
This paper follows from the recognition that meeting food needs requires that women's roles in production and food systems are taken into account. International agricultural research centres have paid little attention to the demands of domestic post-harvest technologies, being given a low priority in the determination of research agenda. Gender-specific varietal preferences for seed or stock selection have also been ignored. In addition to methodological weaknesses built into current research programming, insufficient attention has been paid to the institutional barriers which inhibit the exchange of experience and information between women and agricultural researchers and extension agents. The paper begins by suggesting why gender matters. The second section discusses seed technology and gender issues. The third section raises questions of methodology (discussing socio-economic research, farming systems research and policy research). [This section may be of particular interest to PRA collection users]. Further sections discuss research-extension linkages, and the measurement of inputs. The final three sections are case studies of the impact of technical change in agriculture on women in Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Sub-Saharan Africa.
Publisher
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
Social capital, sustainability and working democracy : new yard sticks for grassroots development.
Abstract
This article describes how the Inter-American Foundation (IAF) has attempted to ensure that their results are measured not only in terms of immediate tangible products but also in what it argues are equally or more important, longer term, less tangible results, such as building social capital.
The article describes in some detail the conceptual tool developed by the Foundation for this purpose, which is called the Grassroots Development Framework or 'cone.' Case studies are given from pilot tests of the Framework which reveal how it use can show a Project in a very differemt light to traditional evaluation procedures.
In spite of some shortcomings that are outlined in the article, the author believes that the Framework is revealing its potential in that it is spreading to other countries and organisations who are also keen to look beyond immediate results in evaluating their development efforts.
Sharing experiences of participation in Latin America: a workshop report.
Download available
Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Scaling up from local perceptions of poverty to regional poverty profiles: developing a poverty profile for Honduras.
Abstract
This paper argues that local perceptions of poverty have tended to be used as mere additions to more conventional poverty assessments because not only do people's perceptions of poverty differ making it difficult to compare results across locations but also, little is known about how to aggregate these local perceptions to be able to estimate overall levels of poverty at regional and national levels. Work carried out in Honduras to test a methodology designed to overcome these constraints is reported on step by step in the document.
Aprendiendo juntos : vivencias en investigación participativa.
Publisher
Vanguardia
About people's dreams and visions and how to retune our perceptions : convergence of PAR and PRA in Latin America.
Abstract
This paper discusses the potential for convergence between PRA (participatory rural appraisal) and PAR (participatory action research) concentrating on ways of bridging the gap between outsiders and local populations. Using examples from different countries in Latin America, the exploration touches on complex processes within and between individuals and societies.