Search
There will be no orgnisations as you have selected publisher.
Showing 661-670 of 1029 results
Pages
- Document
Sources of strengths, remaining vulnerabilities and new policy challenges for Asia
S. Griffith-Jones, R. Gottschalk / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007Currently East Asia is growing at an impressive rate. However, there are risks and challenges to sustaining growth. This introduction to the IDS bulletin discusses these challenges and notes shifts in the nature of the banking system.DocumentFrom PRA to PLA and pluralism: practice and theory
R. Chambers / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007This paper looks at the evolution of PRA (participatory rural appraisal) and the more inclusive PLA (participatory learning and action). It explains how these participatory methodologies have spread and have been applied.DocumentThe European Union in Africa: the linkage between security, governance and development from an institutional perspective
N. Bagoyoko, M.V. Gibert / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007This paper discusses the European Union’s (EU) agenda for development in Africa. It particularly focuses on the triangular linkage aspect of this agenda between good governance, security, and economic development.DocumentWhy the development industry should get over its obsession with bad sex and start to think about pleasure
S. Jolly / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007The development industry has emphasised the dangers of sex and sexuality - in relation to population control, disease and violence. This negative approach to sex has been filtered through a view of gender which stereotypes men as predators, women as victims, and fails to recognise the existence of transgender people.DocumentGender and Indicators: Supporting Resources Collection
E. Bell, E. Esplen / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007Gender-sensitive measurements are critical for building the case for taking gender (in)equality seriously, for enabling better planning and actions by gender and non-gender specialists, and for holding institutions accountable to their commitments on gender equality.DocumentGender and Indicators Cutting Edge Pack
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007What does a world without gender inequality look like? Realising this vision requires inspiring and mobilising social change. But what would indicate we are on the right track - and how will we know when we get there?DocumentGender and Indicators Cutting Edge Pack
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007What does a world without gender inequality look like? Realising this vision requires inspiring and mobilising social change. But what would indicate we are on the right track - and how will we know when we get there?DocumentBRIDGE Gender and Development in Brief. Issue 19: Gender and Indicators
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007What does a world without gender inequality look like? Realising this vision requires inspiring and mobilising social change. But what would indicate we are on the right track - and how will we know when we get there?DocumentWhy the Development Industry Should Get Over its Obsession with Bad Sex and Start to Think About Pleasure
S. Jolly / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007The development industry has emphasised the dangers of sex and sexuality - in relation to population control, disease and violence. This negative approach to sex has been filtered through a view of gender which stereotypes men as predators, women as victims, and fails to recognise the existence of transgender people.DocumentViolence, power and participation: building citizenship in contexts of chronic violence
J. Pearce / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007This paper discusses the role civil society can play in situations of violent conflict. In particular it explores the role of civil society organisations in Colombia and Guatemala and how these organisations can build citizenship and address violence. The paper argues that in order to address chronic violence it is important to clarify the issues of power.Pages
