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Project planning with people's participation.
1994
Wickramanayake E.
Release of the poor through education in Tamil Nadu, India.
1993
Waran B. | Waran N.
Community-based rehabilitation and development: disabled children in Guyana.
1994
O'Toole B. | Maison Halls G.
The NGO sector as an alternative delivery system for agricultural public services.
1994
Poole N.
An education programme for peasant women in Honduras.
1993
Tabora R.
NGOs and income-generation projects: lessons from the joint funding scheme.
1993
Gibson A.
Absentee tenants and farmland transfers in sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Malawi Texte intégral
2022
Ricker-Gilbert, Jacob | Jayne, Thomas S. | Chamberlin, Jordan
Absentee tenants and farmland transfers in sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Malawi Texte intégral
2022
Ricker-Gilbert, Jacob | Jayne, Thomas S. | Chamberlin, Jordan
Absentee tenants and farmland transfers in sub-Saharan Africa: evidence from Malawi Texte intégral
2022
Ricker-Gilbert, Jacob | Jayne, Thomas S. | Chamberlin, Jordan
We use a unique dataset from Malawi that matches tenants and their landlord counterparts to document the role played by absentee tenants, i.e. tenants who reside outside the area where the rented land is located. We found that non-local tenants made up 22% of the tenants in our sample. A significant subset of them had higher off-farm income and significantly more assets than did other tenants. Conversely, we found that 76% of landlords rented land because they needed cash. Our results highlight the fact that some rental transactions reinforce power imbalances and may exacerbate risks faced by poorer landlords.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Gender differences in rice value chain participation and career preferences of rural youth in India Texte intégral
2021
Veettil, Prakashan Chellattan | Raghu, P. | Mohapatra, B. | Mohanty, Samarendu
Gender differences in rice value chain participation and career preferences of rural youth in India Texte intégral
2021
Veettil, Prakashan Chellattan | Raghu, P. | Mohapatra, B. | Mohanty, Samarendu
Ageing farming communities and youth abandoning agriculture are serious issues, with attracting and retaining youth in agriculture a key challenge. This article reports on a gender-sensitive study of rural youth conducted in eastern India. The willingness to be involved in agriculture varies across region and gender, with the high readiness of female youths signalling a feminisation in agriculture. Involvement in value chain activities has a significant and positive impact on career choice. Youth policy needs to address the different preferences and facilitation requirements of male and female youth, in order to change youth’s aspiration and be inclusive of both genders.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Gender differences in rice value chain participation and career preferences of rural youth in India Texte intégral
2021
Prakashan Chellattan Veettil, | Raghu, Prabhakaran | Mohapatra, Bidhan | Mohanty, Samarendu
Ageing farming communities and youth abandoning agriculture are serious issues, with attracting and retaining youth in agriculture a key challenge. This article reports on a gender-sensitive study of rural youth conducted in eastern India. The willingness to be involved in agriculture varies across region and gender, with the high readiness of female youths signalling a feminisation in agriculture. Involvement in value chain activities has a significant and positive impact on career choice. Youth policy needs to address the different preferences and facilitation requirements of male and female youth, in order to change youth’s aspiration and be inclusive of both genders.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Fit for purpose? A review of guides for gender-equitable value chain development Texte intégral
2018
Stoian, D. | Donovan, J. | Elias, Marlène | Blare, T.
Fit for purpose? A review of guides for gender-equitable value chain development Texte intégral
2018
Stoian, D. | Donovan, J. | Elias, Marlène | Blare, T.
This article presents a review of seven guides for gender-equitable value chain development (VCD). The guides advocate persuasively the integration of gender into VCD programming and raise important issues for designing more inclusive interventions. However, gaps persist in their coverage of gender-based constraints in collective enterprises, the influence of norms on gender relations, and processes to transform inequitable relations through VCD. Guidance for field implementation and links to complementary value chain tools are also limited. The article identifies opportunities for conceptual and methodological innovation to address the varying roles, needs, and aspirations of women and men in VCD.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Fit for purpose? A review of guides for gender-equitable value chain development Texte intégral
2018
Stoian, D. | Donovan, J. | Elias, M. | Blare, T.
This article presents a review of seven guides for gender-equitable value chain development (VCD). The guides advocate persuasively the integration of gender into VCD programming and raise important issues for designing more inclusive interventions. However, gaps persist in their coverage of gender-based constraints in collective enterprises, the influence of norms on gender relations, and processes to transform inequitable relations through VCD. Guidance for field implementation and links to complementary value chain tools are also limited. The article identifies opportunities for conceptual and methodological innovation to address the varying roles, needs, and aspirations of women and men in VCD. | 494-509
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Fit for purpose? A review of guides for gender-equitable value chain development Texte intégral
2018
Stoian, Dietmar | Donovan, Jason | Elias, Marlène | Blare, Trent
This article presents a review of seven guides for gender-equitable value chain development (VCD). The guides advocate persuasively the integration of gender into VCD programming and raise important issues for designing more inclusive interventions. However, gaps persist in their coverage of gender-based constraints in collective enterprises, the influence of norms on gender relations, and processes to transform inequitable relations through VCD. Guidance for field implementation and links to complementary value chain tools are also limited. The article identifies opportunities for conceptual and methodological innovation to address the varying roles, needs, and aspirations of women and men in VCD.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Participatory risk assessment: a new approach for safer food in vulnerable African communities Texte intégral
2008
Grace, Delia | Randolph, Thomas F. | Olawoye, J. | Dipelou, M. | Kang'ethe, Erastus K.
Participatory risk assessment: a new approach for safer food in vulnerable African communities Texte intégral
2008
Grace, Delia | Randolph, Thomas F. | Olawoye, J. | Dipelou, M. | Kang'ethe, Erastus K.
Women play the major role in food supply in developing countries, but too often their ability to feed their families properly is compromised; the result is high levels of food-borne disease and consequent limited access to higher-value markets. We argue that risk-based approaches - current best practice for managing food safety in developed countries - require adaptation to the difficult context of informal markets. We suggest participatory research and gender analysis as boundary-spanning mechanisms, bringing communities and food-safety implementers together to analyse food-safety problems and develop workable solutions. Examples show how these methodologies can contribute to operationalising risk-based approaches in urban settings and to the development of a new approach to assessing and managing food safety in poor countries, which we call 'participatory risk analysis'.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Participatory risk assessment: a new approach for safer food in vulnerable African communities Texte intégral
2008
Grace, Delia | Randolph, Tom | Olawoye, Janice | Dipelou, Morenike | Kang'ethe, Erastus
Women play the major role in food supply in developing countries, but too often their ability to feed their families properly is compromised; the result is high levels of food-borne disease and consequent limited access to higher-value markets. We argue that risk-based approaches – current best practice for managing food safety in developed countries – require adaptation to the difficult context of informal markets. We suggest participatory research and gender analysis as boundary-spanning mechanisms, bringing communities and food-safety implementers together to analyse food-safety problems and develop workable solutions. Examples show how these methodologies can contribute to operationalising risk-based approaches in urban settings and to the development of a new approach to assessing and managing food safety in poor countries, which we call ‘participatory risk analysis’.
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