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Long walk to participation: civil society’s participation in Malawi’s PRSP formulation
Chancellor College, University of Malawi, 2002Malawi is not simply government-owned, but developed in cooperation with other stakeholders, and particularly those directly affected by or working to address poverty. In this way, policy and planning processes would be open to extensive participation by ordinary people and civil society groups.DocumentMid-term review of the capacity development programme for the national management of the HIV/AIDS response
2005UNDP in collaboration with the Government of Malawi formulated a Programme Support Document (PSD) for a five-year programme from 2002 to 2006 for Capacity Development for National Management of the HIV/AIDS Response.The programme was designed to directly assist Government’s poverty reduction strategy as outlined in the Malawi Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (MPRSP).DocumentThe participatory development approach under a microscope: the case of the poverty alleviation programme in Malawi
Chancellor College, University of Malawi, 2003There is little doubt that one of the most momentous policy events within the development community at the beginning of the previous decade was the return of poverty on the international development agenda.DocumentRural radio and the promotion of people-centred development in Africa: radio listening clubs and community development in Malawi
Council for the Development of Economic and Social Research in Africa, 2005The introduction of multiparty politics in 1993 in Malawi resulted in political and social reforms, which centred on media diversity, freedom of expression and participatory development, all of which are founded on the libertarian principles of empowering local people to consciously generate and utilize local knowledges for improving their status quo.DocumentCommunity development in Malawi: a situation analysis report
Chancellor College, University of Malawi, 2008This situation analysis of community development in Malawi is a product of the fieldwork that was carried out in nine districts across the country as an intermediary input in the task of developing a community development policy.DocumentLearning for social change: exploring concepts, methods and practice
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2008This document is an outcome of a dialogue on facilitating learning for social change (FLASC) which took place through e-fora and an international workshop in the Spring of 2006.OrganisationINFOCON
INFOCON aims to promote a better understanding of how Civil Society Organisations representing Transnational Communities can work on preventing and resolving conflicts in Europe and worldwide.DocumentA rapid appraisal of the factors influencing the right to vote in parliamentary elections in Malawi
Centre for Social Research, University of Malawi, 2003Malawi became a sovereign state on July 6th 1964. Its first president was Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda, who ruled the country from independence until May 1994. Under Dr. Banda the only political party allowed to operate legally was the Malawi Congress Party (MCP), of which he himself was president. Moreover, no dissent or opposition of any kind was allowed in the country.DocumentRealising the right to development in Bangladesh: progress and challenges
Bangladesh Online Research Network, 2010By signing and ratifying various human rights instruments, the State of Bangladesh has committed itself to pursuing socio-economic policies in a way that would promote its people’s right to development, understood as integrated realisation of the whole range of human rights - including economic, social and cultural rights on the one hand and civil and political rights on the other.DocumentThe use of participatory processes in wide-scale dissemination of micro dosing and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe
AgEcon Search, 2010Participatory technology development has been used for quite some time, but little is known about how farmers perceive participatory methods and processes. This paper argues that understanding farmers’ concerns about the participatory process can further the ultimate aim of encouraging sustained technology adoption.Pages
