Ideas for DevelopmentOur world seems entangled in systems increasingly dominated by power, greed, ignorance, self-deception and denial, with spiralling inequity and injustice. Against a backdrop of climate change, failing ecosystems, poverty, crushing debt and corporate exploitation, the future of our world looks dire and the solutions almost too monumental to consider. Yet all is not lost. Robert Chambers, one of the ?glass is half full? optimists of international development, suggests that the problems can be solved and everyone has the power at a personal level to take action, develop solutions and remake our world as it can and should be. Chambers peels apart and analyses aspects of development that have been neglected or misunderstood. In each chapter, he presents an earlier writing which he then reviews and reflects upon in a contemporary light before harvesting a wealth of powerful conclusions and practical implications for the future. The book draws on experiences from Africa, Asia and elsewhere, covering topics and concepts as wide and varied as irreversibility, continuity and commitment; administrative capacity as a scarce resource; procedures and principles; participation in the past, present and future; scaling up; behaviour and attitudes; responsible wellbeing; and concepts for development in the 21st century. |
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Page v
Personal behaviour and attitudes Responsible well-being The primacy of the personal The pedagogy for the ... power and relationships Grounding pro-poor realism Congruence in personal and institutional change Reflexive responsibility ...
Personal behaviour and attitudes Responsible well-being The primacy of the personal The pedagogy for the ... power and relationships Grounding pro-poor realism Congruence in personal and institutional change Reflexive responsibility ...
Page vii
... and resource-poor CDR farmers 157 7.1 Development vocabulary 187 7.2 Four approaches to development 208 7. 3 Professional, institutional and personal conditions, values, norms and roles: Shifts for a grounded pro-poor realism 212 ...
... and resource-poor CDR farmers 157 7.1 Development vocabulary 187 7.2 Four approaches to development 208 7. 3 Professional, institutional and personal conditions, values, norms and roles: Shifts for a grounded pro-poor realism 212 ...
Page 13
These did not have settlers, only small farmers or pastoralists already on the land; so when many failed, as they did especially in Africa ... debt relief, good governance, participation and human rights policies proclaimed as pro-poor.
These did not have settlers, only small farmers or pastoralists already on the land; so when many failed, as they did especially in Africa ... debt relief, good governance, participation and human rights policies proclaimed as pro-poor.
Page 17
There are signs of a new consistency in two domains: in rhetoric, extolling partnership, country ownership and policies that are pro-poor; and in targets, with the international and now MDGs (Millennium Development Goals) set for ...
There are signs of a new consistency in two domains: in rhetoric, extolling partnership, country ownership and policies that are pro-poor; and in targets, with the international and now MDGs (Millennium Development Goals) set for ...
Page 72
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Contents
1 | |
2 Aid and Administrative Capacity | 30 |
3 Procedures Principles and Power | 54 |
Review Reflections and Future | 86 |
5 PRA Participation and Going to Scale | 119 |
6 Behaviour Attitudes and Beyond | 156 |
7 For Our Future | 184 |
References | 221 |
Index | 252 |
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Common terms and phrases
action ActionAid activities administrative capacity Africa agricultural aid agencies Alcamo analysis appraisal Appreciative Inquiry approaches and methods Bangladesh behaviour and attitudes capital Chambers Chapter commitment community-led total sanitation concepts continuity costs countries culture demands DFID diversity economic Email empower empowerment evaluation example experience Eyben facilitators farmers funds going to scale groups human rights implementation India innovation institutional International irreversibility irrigation Kenya learning and change lenders and donors logframe Managing Rural Development means Mwea NGOs non-negotiable NWDP organizations participation participatory approaches participatory methodologies participatory poverty participatory rural appraisal Perkerra pers comm planning political poor power relations PPAs practice precautionary principle priorities pro-poor procedures professionals programmes projects realities reflection reports responsible well-being Samatha scientists settlement schemes social social capital spread SRDP sustainable livelihoods Tanzania targets top-down trainers Uganda UNDP village words workshop World Bank Zambia