September 21, 2020
America’s mean streets where people….. have dinner ht Rex Chapman The OECD has just published its annual States of Fragility report. Mega number crunch/overview across multiple dimensions. Full disclosure: I’m on the reference group. Decolonizing the commentariat contact list. Brilliant researchers and commentators from across Africa who can provide exceptional insights and expertise on key issues. Change in the humanitarian
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Development Nutshell: round-up (15m) of FP2P posts, w/b 14th September
September 19, 2020
No excerpt
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How to Monitor and Evaluate an Adaptive Programme: 7 Takeaways
September 18, 2020
I generally try to avoid ‘inside baseball’ aid discussions that make sense mainly to practitioners, but this piece by Gloria Sikustahili, Julie Adkins, Japhet Makongo & Simon Milligan was so interesting and sensible, I made an exception. We’ve all been there. We’ve drowned in the weight of programme documentation; the need to capture everything, to report everything, to be seen
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The Hidden Life of Theories of Change
September 17, 2020
We’re getting down and aid-wonky for the next couple of days. First up, ToCs: I’ve gone through a personal hype cycle on Theories of Change – first getting excited and extolling their virtues, and then starting to have second thoughts as I saw them turn from a tool that encourages imagination and experimentation into a bit of a tickbox ‘logframe
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How to vlog – top examples and advice from some very tech savvy students
September 16, 2020
Final instalment from my amazing LSE students. Earlier posts ran some of their blogs, which were part of their assignment to write an influencing strategy on a topic of their choice. But I gave them the option of doing a video blog (vlog) instead, and several of them grabbed it, with some impressive results. Here are three of the best,
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Why are Illegal Drugs still a Cinderella Issue in Development? (Looking at you CGD!)
September 15, 2020
Why don’t more mainstream aid organizations work on the issue of illegal drugs like cannabis, coca or opium poppy? We’ve known for decades that the prevalent approach to these – prohibition – harms small-scale farmers that grow them, fuels violence, undermines the rule of law and contaminates politics (the UN estimates the illegal drugs trade is worth $500bn a year
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How to reduce carbon emissions = 100 coal power stations with the world’s biggest nudge
September 14, 2020
In the latest instalment from my LSE activism students, Lachlan Hill took my course to help formulate the strategy for his Go25degrees campaign in Indonesia. This asks Air Con manufacturers – not governments – to take responsibility for their indirect emissions and make one simple change to their factory settings. One simple nudge to prevent the construction of >100 power
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Development Nutshell: round-up (12m) of FP2P posts, w/b 7th September
September 12, 2020
No excerpt
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In advocacy, which matters more – evidence or relationships? How has Covid changed the balance?
September 11, 2020
Sometimes I wish the earth was flat – then at least, we wouldn’t have time zones. Last week I blearily zoomed in for three 7am starts to discuss the strategy of the Myanmar-based Centre for Good Governance (full disclosure, I’m an adviser). Luckily, it was really interesting. CGG prides itself on its ability to adapt to a shifting context, which
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What do 13,000 children in 46 countries have to tell us about living with COVID-19?
September 10, 2020
Guest post by Save the Children International’s Melissa Burgess and Michael O’Donnell The world is certainly not lacking in research on COVID-19. But there have been gaps in empirical data showing the lived experience of people around the world. Today, Save the Children is filling some of those gaps with the release of the findings from an unprecedented study, asking
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Launching a new Research and Action programme on ‘Emergent Agency in a Time of Covid’. Want to join us?
September 9, 2020
Mutual aid groups morphing into long term citizens’ organizations; women’s organizations forming to address the surge in domestic violence during lockdown; small producers switching to producing protective equipment for health and care workers. Across the world, people are responding to the pandemic at a local level by acting, organizing and learning. What kinds of patterns can be identified in this
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Links I Liked
September 8, 2020
Tomorrow (Wednesday) I’ll be speaking on a panel on drugs and development to launch a series: ‘A World with Drugs: Legal Regulation through a Development lens’. As Helen Clark is kicking it off, I’ll mainly be doing ‘what she said’. Q to readers tho – the ‘drugs and development’ lobby has been pushing major organizations to mainstream the issue for
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