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Does financial inclusion increase financial resilience? Evidence from Bangladesh Full text
2019
Belayeth Hussain, A.H.M. | Noraida Endut, | Das, Sumonkanti | Chowdhury, Mohammed Thanvir Ahmed | Haque, Nadia | Sultana, Sumena | Ahmed, Khandaker Jafor
This study explores the impact of financial inclusion on financial resilience in Bangladesh, using World Bank data on global financial inclusions. It finds that respondents with financial accounts are more resilient than those without accounts. The chances of being financially resilient are around 1.4 times higher for account holders than their counterparts. There was also a significant relationship between gender and financial resilience; males are 1.4 times more resilient than females when other covariates are considered in the regression model.
Show more [+] Less [-]Remoteness as a gendered construct Full text
2019
Lihwa, Flavian | Johnstone, Christopher J. | Thomas, Matthew A.M. | Krause, Brooke
This article explores the potential of using children’s perceptions of distance to reflect a gendered understanding of remoteness. Data collected from 1,549 children in Tanzania concerning their perceptions of remoteness in relation to accessibility of school, health care, and water resources were analysed in reference to their impact on school attendance and performance. Gendered variability in perceived distances to services by children may indicate that remoteness is as much of a social issue as it is a geographic phenomenon, in that girls perceive distance and time between home and destination to be further than boys who travel approximately the same distance.
Show more [+] Less [-]The impact of MGNREGS on child labour and child education: an empirical analysis Full text
2019
Das, Saswati | Mukherjee, Diganta
This article addresses the persistent claim that the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) has a negative impact on the availability of labour for agricultural operations, which has significant implications for the induced demand for child labour as a cheaper substitute for unskilled adult labour on agricultural farms in peak seasons. The study contributes to this debate by examining three issues: (i) effects of seasonality on child intensity of labour; (ii) impact of MGNREGS on child intensity of labour; and (iii) impact of seasonality and MGNREGS on human capital formation.
Show more [+] Less [-]The role of financial inclusion in driving women’s economic empowerment Full text
2019
Hendriks, Sarah
This article highlights why the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has focused on financial inclusion to advance women’s economic empowerment and drive progress on gender equality. It highlights key lessons from financial inclusion-related projects the foundation has supported within the “Putting Women and Girls at the Center of Development (WGCD) Grand Challenge” in 2015. The article also shares the logic and research informing the foundation’s strategy to close the gender gap in financial inclusion – a key pillar of its strategy on women’s economic empowerment – and improve the lives and livelihoods of millions of women around the world.
Show more [+] Less [-]Towards an era of official (involuntary) accountability of NGOs in India Full text
2019
Yesudhas, Ronald
In the recent past, governance reforms in India have resulted in the government and corporate sectors making serious efforts to enhance and showcase their accountability to their principals, namely citizens and shareholders. Similarly, NGOs have been pushed to demonstrate their accountability to multiple stakeholders, namely donors, communities and most importantly, the state. This viewpoint highlights this transition and also reflects on the changing contours of NGO accountability debates in India.
Show more [+] Less [-]Climate change research in bilateral development programmes: experiences from India and Peru Full text
2019
Muccione, Veruska | Orlowsky, Boris | Allen, Simon K. | Huggel, Christian | Salzmann, Nadine | Montoya, Nilton | Randhawa, Surjeet Singh | Stoffel, Markus
This article reflects on the merits and shortfalls of bilateral research programmes aimed at strengthening climate change research capabilities, using the experience from two programmes, the PACC and IHCAP in Peru and India, respectively. The study highlights key aspects of these types of bilateral programmes, namely: capacity; performance, salary and appreciation; funding; bureaucracy and hierarchy; publishing; and data sharing. Furthermore, it emerged that these programmes would benefit from a more extensive consolidation phase of the research activities and partnership rather than rapidly transferring into out- and up-scaling phases.
Show more [+] Less [-]Language, NGOs and inclusion: the donor perspective Full text
2019
Crack, Angela M.
Listening to communities is valued by UK’s Department of International Development (DFID) for contributing to “beneficiary” empowerment and programme efficiency. This article is based on interviews with elite DFID officials to explore their understandings on how they expect NGOs to engage with local languages and the role of language intermediaries. It uncovers their perceptions of the ways that languages and cultural knowledge shape NGO relationships with communities. It finds that the officials assume that listening is unproblematic for NGOs, and ask few questions about translation and interpretation. The article concludes by reflecting on policy implications and directions for further research.
Show more [+] Less [-]Livelihood vulnerabilities and diversification of fishing households in Ghana Full text
2019
Amevenku, Francis K. Y. | Kuwornu, John K. M. | Seini, Alhassan W. | Osei-Asare, Yaw B. | Anim-Somuah, Henry
This article reports on a study that employed the livelihood vulnerability approach and Simpson’s diversification index to examine the vulnerability and diversification of fishing households in Ghana, using primary data from 715 households. It found significant differences between the vulnerability indexes of the combined areas below the Akosombo dam and the area upstream of the dam. A majority of the households have diversified their activities. Therefore, policy interventions to make fishing households less vulnerable should focus on households upstream of the Akosombo dam. Policy interventions that enhance the diversification of the fishing households to enable them reduce their income risks are important.
Show more [+] Less [-]Geographical versus social displacement: the politics of return and post-war recovery in Northern Uganda Full text
2019
Khasalamwa-Mwandha, Sarah
The civil war in Northern Uganda in the period 1986–2006 fundamentally altered former ways of life and created diverse and complex needs. Protracted conflict and displacement create, reveal, and enforce vulnerability, which can undermine resilience. Based on in-depth interviews with internally displaced persons and returnees, both before and after their return to Amuru District and Gulu District, this article argues that war and displacement constitute more than a temporary disruption. The physical and social wounds of war are engraved and embedded in people’s lives. Therefore, recovery interventions must take these effects into account to forge a new post-war future.
Show more [+] Less [-]Can ICT-enabled real-time data contribute to adaptive management in development programming? Full text
2019
Barnett, Inka | Hernandez, Kevin | Ramalingam, Ben | Levy, Anna | Oppenheimer, Carrie | Valters, Craig
This article aims to explore whether ICT-enabled real-time data (RTD) systems can help to improve the operationalisation of adaptive management of international development programmes. Using a qualitative multi-method approach consisting of 48 semi-structured key expert interviews and four exploratory case studies, we found that RTD can successfully inform rapid tactical adaptive management in development programmes but is, on its own, of only limited use for most strategic adaptive management. The research identified multiple contextual barriers to the use of RTD for adaptive management. These barriers need to be addressed to realise the full potential of real-time adaptive management of programmes.
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