Featured image for “How research into sexual wronging changed the course of the landmark trial at the ICC”

How research into sexual wronging changed the course of the landmark trial at the ICC

June 3, 2021
Next up in my series of interviews on the real-world influence of researchers at the LSE Centre for Public Authority and International Development, I explore the impact of Holly Porter’s research in northern Uganda, which has had a significant impact on a landmark trial and conviction of LRA commander Dominic Ongwen at the International Criminal Court, setting broader precedents for the
Read more >>
Featured image for “It’s often easier to have policy impact with research on a ‘new issue’, but proving it is just as hard”

It’s often easier to have policy impact with research on a ‘new issue’, but proving it is just as hard

May 19, 2021
Next up in my series of interviews on the real-world influence of researchers at the LSE Centre for Public Authority and International Development, I explore the impact of Claire Elder’s work on Somalia, which raises a whole host of issues around how research can influence policy and practice: How the act of researching for a PhD can itself lay the groundwork
Read more >>
Featured image for “Global Covid death toll 3 times higher than the usual stats suggest, and much more skewed towards poor countries”

Global Covid death toll 3 times higher than the usual stats suggest, and much more skewed towards poor countries

May 18, 2021
Some really important number crunching in The Economist this week. They have built an estimate of the number of ‘excess deaths’ worldwide – that is mortality above the pre-Covid average. This gives you a more accurate picture of how many people have died, because so many Covid deaths are not recorded as pandemic-related (whether because of weak stats systems, or
Read more >>
Featured image for “How scandals and crises create opportunities for Research Impact”

How scandals and crises create opportunities for Research Impact

May 12, 2021
Next up in my series of interviews on the real-world influence of researchers at the LSE Centre for Public Authority and International Development, I explore the impact of Ryan O’Byrne and Charles Ogeno’s work on how South Sudanese refugees in Uganda understand and interact with refugee camp authorities, and how they engage with those authorities when they need help or encounter
Read more >>
Featured image for “How research into Ebola secured a seat at the table of COVID-19 policy-making”

How research into Ebola secured a seat at the table of COVID-19 policy-making

May 6, 2021
In my third post on the impact of researchers at the LSE Centre for Public Authority and International Development, I talk to CPAID’s Melissa Parker about her ground-breaking work on Sierra Leone’s Ebola outbreak and how it helped her bring the ‘public authority’ lens into policy-making. When you send in the anthropologists, be ready for surprises – totally new players,
Read more >>
Featured image for “How an arts project created real-world impact for refugees and formerly displaced persons”

How an arts project created real-world impact for refugees and formerly displaced persons

April 29, 2021
Before you start on this post, a glitch in the matrix meant that yesterday’s post, on Covid-related innovation in poor countries, didn’t trigger the usual email notification. Catch up here. In my second post on the impact of researchers at the LSE Centre for Public Authority and International Development, I talk to CPAID’s Anna Macdonald and Kara Blackmore. In their
Read more >>
Featured image for “Does Local Advocacy look different in Fragile/Conflict affected places? Summary of new ebook”

Does Local Advocacy look different in Fragile/Conflict affected places? Summary of new ebook

April 15, 2021
Continuing on the theme of how aid agencies can work better in fragile and conflict affected settings (FCAS), there’s a new e-book (Advocacy in Context) looking at the work of national NGOs in South Sudan, Nigeria, Burundi, Central African Republic and Afghanistan. The researchers, Margit van Wessel, Wenny Ho, Edwige Marty and Peter Tamas, talked to local partners of the
Read more >>
Featured image for “Trust, Politics, Exhaustion and Anger: findings on Emergent Agency in a time of Covid”

Trust, Politics, Exhaustion and Anger: findings on Emergent Agency in a time of Covid

April 6, 2021
The Emerging Agency in a Time of Covid project is buzzing along nicely. Today (12.30pm, London time, 6th April) Niranjan Nampoothiri will summarize his findings from sorting, summarizing and coding the 200 cases for the project database. Register here. Headline findings here. We had a stocktake webinar recently looking for common patterns from a burgeoning set of discussion groups on
Read more >>
Featured image for “What is COVID-19 telling us about leadership?”

What is COVID-19 telling us about leadership?

March 18, 2021
Guest post from Heather Marquette and Sian Herbert, both University of Birmingham. Their paper on ­­COVID-19, Governance and Conflict: Emerging Impacts and Future Evidence Needs, reviews hundreds of pieces of research and analysis and is published by the Knowledge for Development (K4D) COVID-19 Resource Hub. COVID-19 has so far proven to be a unique – and ongoing – global natural
Read more >>
Featured image for “What can we learn from 200 case studies of ’emergent agency in a time of Covid’?”

What can we learn from 200 case studies of ’emergent agency in a time of Covid’?

March 17, 2021
The ‘Emergent Agency in a Time of Covid-19‘ research project is churning out some interesting findings and a flurry of webinars. Here Niranjan Nampoothiri and Filippo Artuso give some headline findings on the 200 case studies Niranjan has analysed and coded. We aim to publish the database later this year. Niranjan will present his findings on 6th April, 12.30 UTC
Read more >>
Featured image for “Africa’s Land Rush – what do we really know?”

Africa’s Land Rush – what do we really know?

March 15, 2021
Guest post by Wytske Chamberlain and Wegayehu Fitawek of Land Matrix Africa, hosted by the University of Pretoria  Remember the global riots over food set off by sharp spikes in commodity prices in 2008? The biofuel hype as THE solution to dirty oil? And the financial crisis that drove investors to look for alternative assets to invest their dollars, euros
Read more >>
Featured image for “How a ‘public authority’ lens can help us understand NGOs and INGOs”

How a ‘public authority’ lens can help us understand NGOs and INGOs

March 10, 2021
This post by my LSE colleague Tom Kirk is part of a series exploring ‘public authority’ based on research at LSE’s Centre for Public Authority and International Development at the Firoz Lalji Centre for Africa. It was first published on the Africa at LSE blog A ‘public authorities’ lens seeks to understand the full range of actors claiming power and governing people in the
Read more >>