Navigating Complexity in International Development: Facilitating Sustainable Change at Scale
Professor Danny Burns delivers a Sussex Development Lecture on topics examined in his new book Navigating Complexity in International Development.
Showing 51–60 of 107 results
Professor Danny Burns delivers a Sussex Development Lecture on topics examined in his new book Navigating Complexity in International Development.
Published by: IDS
This CDI Practice Paper reflects on the use of participatory statistics to assess the impact of interventions to eradicate slavery and bonded labour.
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This editorial article introduces this IDS Bulletin on the value of volunteering. The issue is based on the global action research...
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This article explores the ways in which volunteering for development is changing in the context of the shifting wider ecology of...
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This article examines the threads that run through the seven different accounts of action research that make up this IDS Bulletin . It...
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This article explores Participatory Systemic Inquiry processes through two examples of practise. The first is about embedding public...
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This article reflects upon the opportunities and challenges of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) with community radio...
Published by: IDS
This report summarises the findings of the analysis of multiple life stories collected across the Freedom Fund slavery hotspot in North India by NGO representatives at the Collective Story Analysis workshop 13-16 May 2015. The authors outline the major findings and key system dynamics that emerged in the story analysis.
The Participatory Monitoring and Accountability (PMA) programme marks a new phase of the Participate initiative. It aims to foster and support PMA learning processes that enable citizen participation for accountability to be embedded in development policy and practice.
Studies have shown that it is often wealthier people in a community who benefit from market approaches to combatting poverty – men more than women, non-disabled more than disabled. So how and to what extent can market-based solutions improve the lives of extremely poor people?