Featured image for “Where thinking and working politically meets gender: tactics that have worked”

Where thinking and working politically meets gender: tactics that have worked

May 17, 2023
Guest post by  Jane Lonsdale and Joanne Choe. This post was first published on the DevPolicy blog Questions that repeatedly come up when supporting reform programs include: how do we work with local politics to influence change without reinforcing existing elitism and capture of power? How do we “dance with the system” whilst at the same time trying to change the system?
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Featured image for “Podcast: Talking you through the last two week’s posts (30m)”

Podcast: Talking you through the last two week’s posts (30m)

May 13, 2023
No excerpt
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Featured image for “Why are Civil Wars Lasting Longer?”

Why are Civil Wars Lasting Longer?

May 11, 2023
‘Why are civil wars lasting longer?’ Asked a recent Economist essay – exactly the kind of big, hairy question to justify my subscription. Don’t agree with all of it, but very thought-provoking. Some extracts from a typically highly readable piece: ‘The average ongoing conflict in the mid-1980s had been blazing for about 13 years; by 2021 that figure had risen to 20.
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Public Engagement with Aid: What do we know from 10 years of research?

May 10, 2023
Went to a big event on public attitudes to aid recently . Weird being back in conference mode – panels galore, a few lightbulb moments, buzzy coffee breaks, the occasional bit of powerpoint poisoning. Still struggling to make sense of it all. Let’s try. The panel was presenting the findings of a 10 year research programme currently known most recently
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Links I Liked

May 9, 2023
Coronation humour: props to Tescos, hope no-one lost their job The Long, Slow Death of Global Development – American Affairs Journal. Big sweep piece arguing that previous exit strategies no longer work and no-one knows what to do next ht Irene Guijt Naomi Hossain: ‘What has changed since the Rana Plaza factory collapse? Labor leaders tells us that work are
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Featured image for “Linking Dignity & Development: Where have we got to?”

Linking Dignity & Development: Where have we got to?

May 4, 2023
Guest post by Tom Wein, Director of the IDinsight Dignity Initiative Five years ago, I published a post here on FP2P considering the role of dignity in development. Back then I wrote: “Development aims to give people better lives. In doing so, we mainly aim to increase wealth and health – in part because we can measure those outcomes with
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Featured image for “Older and at the Sharp End: Why more Social Protection is needed to protect Older People in the global food, finance & fuel crisis ”

Older and at the Sharp End: Why more Social Protection is needed to protect Older People in the global food, finance & fuel crisis 

May 3, 2023
Guest post by Babken Babajanian The current global crisis, with soaring prices for food and fuel, has been devastating for many people around the world. But for older people in poor countries with no access to pensions or social protection, it is particularly bleak. And worse still for older women.  Sadly, although they are bearing the brunt of the crisis,
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Featured image for “Seeing the forest beyond the trees: Coalition building in Indonesia and beyond and the lessons for donors”

Seeing the forest beyond the trees: Coalition building in Indonesia and beyond and the lessons for donors

May 2, 2023
Guest post by Nicola Nixon, Erman Rahman, Sumaya Saluja and Rahpriyanto Alam Surya Putra ‘Coalition-building’: one of those topics that gets enthusiastic nods of approval among development practitioners. But what distinguishes effective from ineffective coalitions and what can donors do to support them?’ In The Asia Foundation’s recent reflection paper On the right tack: reflections on coalition-building in The Asia
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Featured image for “Podcast: talking you through the week’s posts on From Poverty to Power”

Podcast: talking you through the week’s posts on From Poverty to Power

April 29, 2023
Me talking you through the week’s posts, while you do the washing up/kill it at the gym. Covers: Links I LikedAid in ‘Politically Estranged Settings’ and the Disappointment Cycle of reading new papersBook Review: Reimagining Civil Society Collaborations in Development: Starting from the SouthChatGPT: implications for teaching, how it analyses Brexit and the link to Psychoanalysis 
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ChatGPT: implications for teaching, how it analyses Brexit and the link to Psychoanalysis

April 27, 2023
ChatGPT. Discuss. Isn’t everyone? Right now, everyone seems to be playing with it, writing and/or worrying about it and with good reason. Some are already losing their jobs after publishing faked interviews. There are refuseniks – this is crowdsourced plagiarism and must be kept at bay. Students must not use it. Massive health warnings etc etc. That feels both King
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Featured image for “Book Review: Reimagining Civil Society Collaborations in Development: Starting from the South”

Book Review: Reimagining Civil Society Collaborations in Development: Starting from the South

April 26, 2023
‘Localization’ of aid, when you think about it, is actually quite an outsider’s word. It suggests taking the assets currently held in the North (money, knowledge, power) and somehow transferring them to the South. The value of this book, edited By Margit van Wessel, Tiina Kontinen, Justice Nyigmah Bawole is captured in the subtitle. It discards that idea and asks how CSOs in
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Featured image for “Aid in ‘Politically Estranged Settings’ and the Disappointment Cycle of reading new papers”

Aid in ‘Politically Estranged Settings’ and the Disappointment Cycle of reading new papers

April 25, 2023
I often experience a ‘disappointment cycle’ when reading papers on aid and development. The initial question/framing gets me excited – this is really going to tell me something new/interesting. But then the paper peters out, reverting to standard prescriptions and vague generalizations. That certainly was my feeling with the new paper from Chatham House and New York University’s Center on
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