July 28, 2021
Guest post by Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah, Chief Executive, Oxfam GB In the past few weeks Oxfam’s work on anti-racism has attracted some criticism. Various commentators have characterised it as “woke posturing” or “anti-white.” I think they have got it wrong. Let me explain why tackling racism is an integral part of Oxfam’s mission. It is almost 80 years since a small group of volunteers,
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What’s blocking progress in fixing the Global Water Crisis?
July 27, 2021
I took part in a fun podcast recently on ‘water for development’. I was in the company of some people who actually know about the subject (Michael Wilson, Rosie Wheen, Melita Grant and Rachel Mason Nunn). I was playing my favourite role in this final wrap-up conversation of a series of discussions, that of informed ignoramus burbling on about how
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Development Nutshell: audio round-up (16m) of FP2P posts, w/b 19th July
July 26, 2021
No excerpt
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Micro, bottom-up research can shed new light on power and politics in fragile places, but it’s REALLY difficult!
July 22, 2021
Another intense couple of days hearing back from the 30 or so researchers in the Action for Empowerment and Accountability research consortium, as it approaches the end of its programme. I was returning after a couple of years’ absence (I did some work on adaptive management in an earlier phase) and it was great to hear where people had got
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Links (and Graphics) I Liked
July 21, 2021
The Pandemic Changed the World Of ‘Voluntourism.’ Some Folks Like The New Way Better Thought-provoking Foucauldian analysis of the rise of ‘research impact’ The racist abuse of England players has sparked a political row over the government’s stance over taking the knee. The team took the knee to protest against social injustice. What does the data show about the scale
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Not All in This Together: How Covid has driven up inequality in Supermarket Supply Chains
July 20, 2021
I was speaking on a UN panel on Decent Work last week, so thought I’d better catch up with the latest Oxfam report, Not in This Together, written by Anouk Franck and Art Prapha. It provides a great case study of Covid as an ‘engine of inequality’ (and of how to write a research-based advocacy report – killer facts galore,
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A TripAdvisor in development? Turns out it’s a poster on the wall…
July 19, 2021
Guest post from Derek Thorne Back in 2015, Duncan Green published a piece on FP2P asking whether a TripAdvisor-style feedback system could work in development. If you follow the link, you’ll see it generated a lot of feedback! The idea was – and is – that TripAdvisor, and systems like it, have put significant power in the hands of consumers,
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Development Nutshell: round-up (26m) of FP2P posts, June/July
July 17, 2021
No excerpt
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How can we make sure Covid-driven localization in aid endures after the pandemic?
July 15, 2021
Lots of people are hailing a surge in pandemic-driven ‘localization’ as one of the silver linings of the current grimscape. The argument goes that lockdowns have suspended aid’s standard ‘white men in shorts’ operating model, allowing local organizations to expand into the space, run their own responses, (eg to humanitarian emergencies) and generally take more control of the aid process
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We created this MEL system for you, now please own it!
July 14, 2021
Guest post by Tiina Pasanen & Pablo Yanguas External consultants, learning partners or critical friends -whatever we call them- can seldom change the system or organisational (learning) culture from outside. So, how can Monitoring Evaluation and Learning (MEL) consultants support real change instead of creating tools or processes that are quickly forgotten without any real institutional ownership? Most development organisations
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A Humanitarian ‘Cheat Sheet’ that should definitely be on your weekly reading list
July 13, 2021
Got some spare slots on the blog at the moment, so thought I would introduce you to my favourite weekly update on all things humanitarian – the Cheat Sheet, from the New Humanitarian magazine. Here’s their latest round-up (or you can listen to the 16m podcast): Rural Afghan women on peace, war, and ‘our role in society’ Greater freedom, better
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Links I Liked
July 12, 2021
Hi everyone, I’m back from hols and tweeting happily, but there’s been a few glitches on the blog still (mainly on the comments) – apologies for that. Hopefully they’re fixed now, but please let me know if you’re having problems. On with the show. I’m no great football/soccer fan, and don’t really understand what’s going on on the pitch (although
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