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New IDS research project seeks to re-imagine ‘shit’ as ‘brown gold’
23 Nov 2020: A new IDS-led research project seeks to re-imagine sanitation in rapidly urbanising areas in Asia and Africa to help address the sanitation crisis, enhance off–grid economies and improve the well-being of poor and vuln - Document
Urban land value capture in São Paulo, Addis Ababa, and Hyderabad: Differing interpretations, equity impacts, and enabling conditions
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, 2020This paper presents analysis of the fiscal and equity impacts of urban land value capture instruments based on three case studies from the global south. These include the Lideta redevelopment in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; the Outer Ring Road in Hyderabad, India; and Água Espraiada Urban Operation in São Paulo, Brazil.DocumentUrban land value capture in São Paulo, Addis Ababa, and Hyderabad: Differing interpretations, equity impacts, and enabling conditions
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, 2020This paper presents analysis of the fiscal and equity impacts of urban land value capture (LVC) instruments based on three case studies from the global south. These include the Lideta redevelopment in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; the Outer Ring Road in Hyderabad, India; and Água Espraiada Urban Operation in São Paulo, Brazil.NewsSussex research findings continue to influence policy on migration and poverty
17 Dec 2019: After nearly a decade, the Migrating out of Poverty Research Programme Consortium (MOOP) is drawing to a close, having conducted research in more than ten countries in an effort to uncover how and why migration plays such a significant role in poverty reduction in some contexts, but not in others.DocumentAutomation, women, and the future of work
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2017Will women benefit from the rapid automation and digitisation that is set to change the world of work as we know it? How can we ensure that women’s economic interests are brought into focus, and that debates on the future of work are not about the changing relationship between man and machine, but between people and machine?DocumentLand tenure reforms, tenure security and food security in poor agrarian economies: causal linkages and research gaps
Global Food Security - journal, 2016This paper reviews the literature to identify the relationship between tenure security and food security. The literatures on tenure issues and food security issues are not well connected and the scientific evidence on the causal links between tenure security and food security is very limited.DocumentImpacts of higher temperatures on labour productivity and value for money adaptation: lessons from five DFID priority country case studies
Vivid Economics, 2017This report assesses the impact increased temperatures will have on labour productivity in select DFID priority countries, and maps out the adaptation options that could mitigate these impacts.DocumentScaling Up Impact on Nutrition: What Will It Take?
Advances in Nutrition, 2017Despite consensus on actions to improve nutrition globally, less is known about how to operationalize the right mix of actions—nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive—equitably, at scale, in different contexts. This review draws on a large scaling-up literature search and 4 case studies of large-scale nutrition programs with proven impact to synthesize critical elements for impact at scale.DocumentUnderstanding, enabling and building effective leadership in nutrition
Transform Nutrition, 2015Transform Nutrition’s work on leaders in nutrition explores how effective leaders understand the systems which both shape and constrain their action; and are able to translate this understanding into action which spans the boundaries of sectors and disciplinary knowledge. Researchers within the Transform Nutrition consortium carried out a study of 89 individualDocumentAccounting for nutritional changes in six success stories: a regression-decomposition approach
Global Food Security - journal, 2017Over the past two decades, many developing countries have made impressive progress in reducing undernutrition. In this paper, the authors explore potential explanations of this success by applying consistent statistical methods to multiple rounds of Demographic Health Surveys for Bangladesh, Nepal, Ethiopia, Odisha, Senegal, and Zambia.Pages
