Book Review: Can We Know Better? by Robert Chambers

January 11, 2019
Robert Chambers is a role model – in his mid-80s, he has retained all the curiosity, humour, iconoclasm, commitment and originality that has made him a cult figure on large parts of the development circuit, North and South. His latest book, Can We Know Better?, builds on a string of publications going back to 1983 (Rural Development: Putting the Last
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What did trade campaigns achieve? Plus reinventing Robert Chambers & changing aid narratives: some Berlin conversations

March 24, 2016
Had a really interesting couple of days in Berlin last week, at the invitation of the German government aid agency, GIZ. Also spent time with the impressive policy and campaigns wonks at Oxfam Germany. Here’s a few of the topics that came up. What did all that trade campaigning achieve? From the late 90s to 2005, when I was working
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Into the Unknown: Explorations in Development Practice: lovely (and short) new book from Robert Chambers

April 28, 2014
Robert Chambers is who I want to be when I grow up, an object lesson in how to grow old (dis)gracefully. Funny, passionate, always willing to admit doubt and failure, and endlessly curious – he never pulls that weary ‘oh, we tried that in the 1970s and it didn’t work’ routine beloved of other development veterans. He also writes short
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Robert Chambers on the Fifth Power (the power to empower)

November 29, 2012
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Paradigms, lock-ins and liberations: Robert Chambers on rice and shit

September 12, 2012
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Robert Chambers – why don't all development organizations do immersions?

September 6, 2012
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Provocations for Development: Superb new collection of Robert Chambers’ Greatest Hits

September 4, 2012
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Inspiring action on shit (getting rid of it) – guest post from Robert Chambers

May 30, 2011
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So the world is complex – what do we do differently?

May 13, 2011
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Newton v Complexity: Robert Chambers on competing aid paradigms

February 16, 2011
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How do you help people cope with shocks? A liquid brainstorm with Robert Chambers

March 15, 2010
At an IDS seminar last week, part of its excellent Crisis Watch initiative, Steve Wiggins from ODI argued that his research on the food price crisis shows that during an actual shock, state initiatives are much less important to poor people than their own social coping mechanisms as individuals, communities or through local institutions like churches. These mechanisms include borrowing money,
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