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Surveillance of the poor in a socio-financial enclosure: a critical analysis of Zidisha.org Full text
2015
Yartey, Franklin Nii Amankwah | Birzescu, Anca Nicoleta
This article provides a critical analysis in examining narratives on Zidisha.org, a microlending site that facilitates loans to the poor, building on media scholar Mark Andrejevic's conception of the digital enclosure and the critical anthropology of development scholar Anke Schwittay's theorisation of financial inclusion. Online microlending sites like Zidisha have wide-reaching implications for policy and development initiatives. The study's findings suggest that perceptible signs of the contemporary neo-liberal effort to assemble ordinary people through Web 2.0 communication technologies to participate in the socio-financial enclosure are riddled with issues of control and surveillance, coupled with a paradoxical meaning of the financial inclusion concept.
Show more [+] Less [-]ABCD to CBT: asset-based community development's potential for community-based tourism Full text
2015
Dolezal, Claudia | Burns, Peter (Peter M.)
This article conceptualises the potential for a relationship between asset-based community development (ABCD) and community-based tourism (CBT), with a view to improving CBT's patchy record in delivering community development. ABCD has previously been used in international development and community work, but is new to tourism for development. Hence, the article seeks to relate ABCD's characteristics with CBT on a theoretical level, based on a shift away from ‘needs-driven’ development towards a conscious appreciation of community assets. The authors suggest that ABCD can, and should, be applied to CBT, given the positive emphasis it puts on people and their potential.
Show more [+] Less [-]Community rehabilitation workers as catalysts for disability: inclusive youth development through service learning Full text
2015
Lorenzo, Theresa | Motau, Jane | van der Merwe, Tania | Janse van Rensburg, Elize | Cramm, Jane Murray
This paper explores access to health and education for disabled youth in sites with and without community rehabilitation workers (CRWs). A cross-sectional survey using a structured questionnaire was undertaken in nine sites in South Africa, and a snowball sample of 523 disabled youths of both sexes, aged between 18 and 35 years, was selected. The survey found that a significantly larger proportion of disabled youth living in sites with CRWs were seen by health care workers at home, and that there was a large difference in educational access between sites with and without CRWs. CRWs are well positioned to promote equal citizenship for disabled youth through service learning with occupational therapy final year students to improve access to health and education, so that barriers to their participation in economic development are removed.
Show more [+] Less [-]Challenges and dilemmas of international development volunteering: a case study from Vanuatu Full text
2015
Trau, Adam M.
This article looks at the key challenges and dilemmas of international development volunteering (IDV) as experienced within a community project in Vanuatu. By focusing on the nature and significance of IDV engagements at the local community level, it offers critical insights into roles and relationships among international development volunteers and local host communities, together with the complex global–local interface in which projects are negotiated and constructed. The article concludes by offering some ways in which IDV can be more effective in assisting community projects address the needs of contemporary village life.
Show more [+] Less [-]Toward purposeful individual capacity strengthening: alternative considerations for Western NGOs Full text
2015
Mugisha, Vincent M.
The international donor community continues to emphasise country-led development strategies designed to equitably engage public and civil society agents in managing development assistance. Similarly donors who fund Western NGOs to implement development programmes on their behalf in recipient countries are increasingly pushing for cost-effective programme implementation that actively engages local actors. This article proposes an alternative theoretically grounded model for individual capacity strengthening to responsive and mission-driven Western NGOs that claim to be committed to ideals of capacity strengthening and indigenisation of programme leadership.
Show more [+] Less [-]Voluntary and involuntary resettlement in China: a false dichotomy? Full text
2015
Wilmsen, Brooke | Wang, Mark
The success of involuntary resettlement is contingent on recasting the involuntary as voluntary. To explore this proposition, this article presents two projects in China – one “voluntary” (Poverty Alleviation Resettlement or PAR) and relatively “successful” and one “involuntary” (Three Gorges Project Resettlement or TGPR) and less so. The research finds the voluntary–involuntary dichotomy a false one. It is not volition that leads to better outcomes, but people-centred practices that are embedded in policy, planning, and implementation of PAR. Perhaps the most important lesson drawn is that all resettlements should be based on a commitment to settlement and not just resettlement.
Show more [+] Less [-]Linking local rice processors’ access to rural radio, gender, and livelihoods in Benin Full text
2015
Zossou, Espérance | Vodouhe, Davo Simplice | Mele, Paul van | Agboh-Noameshie, Afiavi Rita | Lebailly, Philippe
Linking local rice processors’ access to rural radio, gender, and livelihoods in Benin Full text
2015
Zossou, Espérance | Vodouhe, Davo Simplice | Mele, Paul van | Agboh-Noameshie, Afiavi Rita | Lebailly, Philippe
In a context of low literacy rates and a high level of rurality, the use of rural radio in agricultural extension is a method that can bridge the gap that exists between researchers, extension workers, and farmers. This article examines the level of farmers’ access to rural radio in relation to gender and livelihoods. The study was conducted in Benin with 18 rural radio stations and 240 rice processors, using the sustainable livelihoods framework to examine the relationship between access to rural radio and livelihoods. Although the study cannot draw conclusions on causal relationships, rice processors who often listened to agricultural broadcasts had better social, financial, and human capital stocks compared to those who did not. Despite the efforts of 72% of the radio stations to link up with extension services, half of the rice processors rarely or never listened to agricultural broadcasts, because the timing of the broadcasts was inappropriate. Interactive radio sessions with farmers that involve government officials will need to address this if they are to become more effective.
Show more [+] Less [-]Linking local rice processors’ access to rural radio, gender, and livelihoods in Benin Full text
2015
Zossou, Espérance | Vodouhe, Davo Simplice | Van Mele, Paul | Agboh-Noameshie, Afiavi Rita | Lebailly, Philippe
peer reviewed | In a context of low literacy rates and a high level of rurality, the use of rural radio in agricultural extension is a method that can bridge the gap that exists between researchers, extension workers, and farmers. This article examines the level of farmers’ access to rural radio in relation to gender and livelihoods. The study was conducted in Benin with 18 rural radio stations and 240 rice processors, using the sustainable livelihoods framework to examine the relationship between access to rural radio and livelihoods. Although the study cannot draw conclusions on causal relationships, rice processors who often listened to agricultural broadcasts had better social, financial, and human capital stocks compared to those who did not. Despite the efforts of 72% of the radio stations to link up with extension services, half of the rice processors rarely or never listened to agricultural broadcasts, because the timing of the broadcasts was inappropriate. Interactive radio sessions with farmers that involve government officials will need to address this if they are to become more effective. | Dans un contexte de taux d’alphabétisation faible et de ruralité considérable, l’utilisation de la radio rurale dans la vulgarisation agricole est une méthode qui peut réduire l’écart entre les chercheurs, les vulgarisateurs et les agriculteurs. Cet article examine le degré d’accès parmi les agriculteurs à la radio rurale par rapport au genre et aux moyens de subsistance. Cette étude a été menée au Bénin avec 18 stations de radio rurales et 240 usineurs de riz, en utilisant le cadre des moyens de subsistance pour examiner le rapport entre l’accès à la radio locale et les moyens de subsistance. Si l’étude ne permet pas de tirer des conclusions sur les rapports causaux, les usineurs de riz qui écoutaient souvent les émissions de radio avaient de meilleurs stocks de capital social, financer et humain que les autres. En dépit des efforts de 72 % des stations de radio pour nouer des liens avec des services de vulgarisation, la moitié des usineurs de riz écoutaient rarement, voire jamais, les émissions agricoles, parce que les horaires des émissions ne leur convenaient pas. Les sessions radio interactives avec les agriculteurs qui font intervenir des représentants du gouvernement devront résoudre ce problème pour améliorer leur efficacité.
Show more [+] Less [-]Empowering farmers? Collaborative research at Sokoine University of Agriculture, Tanzania Full text
2015
Mwaseba, Dismas Lyegendili | Kaarhus, Randi | Johnsen, Fred H. | Mattee, Amon Zacharia | Mvena, Zebedayo Samwel Kayanda | Eik, Lars Olav
Empowering farmers? Collaborative research at Sokoine University of Agriculture, Tanzania Full text
2015
Mwaseba, Dismas Lyegendili | Kaarhus, Randi | Johnsen, Fred H. | Mattee, Amon Zacharia | Mvena, Zebedayo Samwel Kayanda | Eik, Lars Olav
This article presents experiences with collaborative and on-farm research based on the implementation of a four-year Programme for Agricultural and Natural Resources Transformation for Improved Livelihoods (PANTIL) at Sokoine University of Agriculture (SUA) in Morogoro, Tanzania. It outlines the basic elements in the implementation of a programme aimed to be demand-based, and discusses the challenges encountered in combining collaborative research with the empowerment of farmers. Finally, the article draws out some lessons with implications for the future organisation of collaborative and on-farm agricultural research.
Show more [+] Less [-]Empowering farmers? Collaborative research at Sokoine university of agriculture, Tanzania Full text
2015
Mwaseba, D. L. | Kaarhus, R. | Johnsen, F. H. | Mattee, A. Z. | Mvena, Z. S. K. | Eik, L. O.
Development in Practice,Vol. 25( 2015),pp No. 3, 347–359 | This article presents experiences with collaborative and on-farm research based on the implementation of a four-year Programme for Agricultural and Natural Resources Transformation for Improved Livelihoods (PANTIL) at Sokoine University of Agriculture (SUA) in Morogoro, Tanzania. It outlines the basic elements in the implementation of a programme aimed to be demand-based, and discusses the challenges encountered in combining collaborative research with the empowerment of farmers. Finally, the article draws out some lessons with implications for the future organisation of collaborative and on-farm agricultural research.
Show more [+] Less [-]Learning from a leprosy project in Indonesia: making mindsets explicit for stigma reduction Full text
2015
Peters, Ruth | Lusli, Mimi | Zweekhorst, Marjolein | Miranda-Galarza, Beatriz | van Brakel, Wim | Irwanto, | Bunders, Joske
International attention for disability recognises that it plays an important role in persistent poverty. Leprosy can cause preventable disability. Stigma associated with leprosy often has greater implications for people affected than physical impairments. The Stigma Assessment and Reduction of Impact (SARI) project in Indonesia employs an action research methodology to develop stigma reduction interventions. By exploring the different mindsets of the stakeholders in the reconnaissance phase of the project, the project identified differences in aspirations, attitudes to research, and conflicting intrinsic models of disability. The differences in mindsets are not symptoms of failure but, rather, should be actively sought out.
Show more [+] Less [-]When development breeds contempt: case examples of community-driven health systems initiatives Full text
2015
Nanne, Ingrid | Moshabela, Mosa | Huynh, Uyen | Diop, Papa Meissa
This article discusses case examples of community-led initiatives triggered by the introduction of an external development programme in Senegal and Mali. These are community initiatives that learn from projects initiated and funded by an external donor organisation, and transform interventions to better meet their own needs. The circumstances leading to the demand for, and successful establishment of, health infrastructure are examined to understand the triggers. These breakthroughs demonstrate unintended benefits of development, and the need to leverage donor-led initiatives. Therefore, community involvement, participation, and empowerment are key in establishing local ownership in development projects.
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