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Social capital, household income, and community development in Bhutan: a case study of a dairy cooperative Full text
2016
Tenzin, Galey | Natsuda, Kaoru
Using a case of a dairy cooperative in Bhutan, this study investigates how social capital enhances individual household income and community development in rural areas. It also examines the influence of cooperatives in social capital formation. The study finds that social capital facilitates households that are resource-constrained by working together to reduce costs through economies of scale, enhancing information accessibility, building confidence, and strengthening teamwork. It fosters not only an improvement in the livelihoods of cooperative members, but also provides a positive influence for non-members and the community as a whole. The study also reveals that cooperatives influence formation of three forms of bonding, bridging, and linking social capitals. While bonding social capital facilitates strong teamwork among the members, bridging and linking social capitals connect the cooperatives with the outside networks and provides them more opportunities and services for its sustainability.
Show more [+] Less [-]The paradoxes of empowerment: gendering NREGA in the rural landscape of India Full text
2016
Maiorano, Diego | Thapar-Björkert, Suruchi | Blomkvist, Hans
The growing importance of public works programmes (PWPs) as a social protection tool has attracted significant scholarly attention. However, despite the fact that the empowerment of marginalised communities is one of the key objectives of most PWPs, scant attention has been dedicated to this crucial issue. We contextualise these concerns in relation to India's Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA). In particular, we propose two areas which are relatively unexplored. First, the methodologies currently used to research NREGA and PWP, more generally, need to be broadened. Second, the processes that lead to empowerment need to be researched empirically.
Show more [+] Less [-]Reflections of an evaluator navigating between community development and welfare paradigms Full text
2016
Kelly, Leanne
This practical note discusses some of the challenges evaluators face when their values clash with those of their employer. A case example where the author was commissioned to complete an evaluation for a community development project within a welfare-minded NGO highlights evaluation issues for welfare-minded NGOs attempting to deliver community development programmes. A fundamental issue is the differing interpretation of key terms including evaluation, participation, and empowerment. The note discusses how the author attempted to navigate between maintaining community development principles in the evaluation process while at the same time fulfilling quantitative evaluation requirements mandated by the organisation and funders.
Show more [+] Less [-]Non-governmental development organisations’ sustainability, partnership, and resourcing: futuristic reflections on a problematic trialogue Full text
2016
Fowler, Alan
The CIVICUS Civil Society Index Report 2011 highlights a disassociation between non-governmental development organisations (NGDOs) and the general population. The vulnerability of aided development CSOs is systemic. This can often be traced to a failed trialogue between NGDOs, their partners, and resource providers. This article argues that NGDOs share co-responsibility for their sustainability predicament. Signs of aid uncertainty in the last decades of the millennium were not heeded, nor strategies developed for life beyond aid. Instead, NGDOs were saved by the advent of, and prescribed roles in reaching, the Millennium Development Goals. A repeat performance with the new Sustainable Development Goals is unlikely.
Show more [+] Less [-]The new OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises: better but not enough Full text
2016
Reinert, Kenneth A. | Reinert, Oda T. | Debebe, Gelaye
This viewpoint addresses the extent to which the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises adequately serve as a system of global governance for MNEs. We argue that, while a 2011 revision has strengthened the Guidelines, their somewhat limited scope, voluntary nature, and less than satisfactory implementation render their potential utility unrealised.
Show more [+] Less [-]Reconciling cultural practices and progress: childbirth in Dove, Ghana Full text
2016
Arku, Frank S. | Arku, Cynthia
Women are forbidden from giving birth within the community in Dove, Ghana because it is against their culture. Such cultural practice is scarce in contemporary societies so studies on the impact of the practice are currently limited in development literature. This article uses key informant interviews and focus group discussion guides to gather data. Findings reveal that the Chief, the Queenmother, and other community members maintain that the practice is not negatively affecting the socio-economic development of Dove as they have strategies to mitigate the practice.
Show more [+] Less [-]Moving from nos/otros to nosotros: a transcendent approach to sustainable development Full text
2016
Upton, Sarah De Los Santos
Traditional top-down approaches to community development reinforce nos/otros binaries within provider/recipient relationships; transcendent approaches, on the other hand, create space for nosotros collaborative development. This article describes an instance of the nos/otros binary, in which a foreign volunteer in a rural community in Ecuador assumed the role of practitioner and limited community members’ roles to recipients or beneficiaries of her development projects. Inspired by findings from this experience, the article presents a case study highlighting an alternative, transcendent, nosotros approach in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where community members work together to imagine, implement, and sustain projects.
Show more [+] Less [-]Municipality and food security promotion for disabled people: evidence from north-eastern Thailand Full text
2016
Bualar, Theeraphong
This article puts forward a qualitative method for analysing the role of municipalities in promoting food security for people with disabilities, and examining barriers that affect their food access and food utilisation. Findings from face-to-face interviews with mayors, street vendors, and disabled persons from three major municipalities in north-eastern Thailand clearly indicate that a lack of knowledge of food security among mayors and street vendors, and financial restrictions suffered by families, have become insurmountable barriers to food among people with disabilities. The article recommends that municipalities should create paid employment for people with disabilities and incorporate universal design into infrastructure improvement.
Show more [+] Less [-]Utilisation of maternal health services in Ethiopia: a key informant research project Full text
2016
King, Rosemary | Jackson, Ruth | Dietsch, Elaine | Assefa Hailemariam,
This article explores the application of key informant research to examine barriers and facilitators to maternal health services in rural and pastoralist Ethiopia. The key informants were health extension workers (HEWs) who assist women with birth preparedness and facilitate timely referral to health centres for birth. While women encounter many barriers to giving birth in health facilities, where HEWs are supported by their communities and health centre staff, they can effectively encourage women to travel to health centres to give birth with skilled birth attendants rather than at home with unskilled relatives or traditional birth attendants.
Show more [+] Less [-]Supporting farmer participation in formal seed systems: lessons from Tharaka, Kenya Full text
2016
Mucioki, Megan | Hickey, Gordon M. | Muhammad, Lutta | Johns, Timothy
This article examines contemporary challenges of formal seed sector participation for resource-poor farmers in Tharaka and engages in a wider discussion of national seed policy and formal seed sector development in Kenya. While many farmers reported utilising modern seed varieties developed by the formal seed sector, the majority of these were introduced through seed aid and maintained through seed saving, supporting seed system integration strategies. Building on these findings, the article discusses ways in which national seed policy in Kenya might be refined to better meet national and regional development goals focused on decreasing the incidence of hunger and poverty.
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