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result(s) for
"Labour and livelihoods - Migration"
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Comparative analysis of the driving forces and spatiotemporal patterns of urbanisation in Muscat, Doha, and Dubai
by
Al-Awadhi, Talal
,
Al-Barwani, Mohammed
,
Abulibdeh, Ammar
in
Aid - development policies
,
Arab States
,
Change agents
2019
This article analyses contemporary urbanisation patterns in Muscat, Dubai, and Doha cities, focusing on urban land cover change and the roles of governance, globalisation, oil revenues, internal migration, social factors, and urban planning forces in developing these cities. Remotely sensed and demographic data for the past 30 years were used to identify concurrent changes in urbanisation patterns, in order to gain a comprehensive understanding of the dynamics of urbanisation. The results show that the three cities have all experienced unprecedented urban transformation, with high urbanisation and population growth, but with differences in the patterns of development.
Journal Article
Of bulls and bulbs: aspirations, opinions and perceptions of rural adolescents and youth in Zambia
2019
In Africa, policymakers and development practitioners focus heavily on making farming more attractive for the youth. To reach this goal, different actions are proposed, often emphasising the need for modern technology. These proposed actions are mostly based on anecdotes and prior policy beliefs. Using interviews and drawing exercises, this article shows that the aspirations, opinions and perceptions of adolescents (pre-youth) and youth are more diverse than assumed by the prevailing orthodoxies. The findings suggest that policymakers and development practitioners should pay more attention to their views, comprising environmental and social concerns, to avoid misguided policies.
Journal Article
A new way of measuring behavioural compliance for prevention programme interventions using KAP Score
2019
KAP Score is an evaluation tool developed to enable aid and donor organisations to monitor and evaluate the outcome of interventions, particularly those where the link between programme activities and outcomes constitutes an \"unknown\". This article articulates KAP Score and demonstrates how it has been applied to two separate interventions related to risk avoidance (human trafficking) and demand reduction (wildlife consumption) to generate quantitative evidence for assessing how they contributed to increasing compliance. The examples presented demonstrate how KAP Score attributed the effectiveness of these interventions to a proxy indicator that can measure incremental behavioural compliance.
Journal Article
Promoting the economic reintegration of returnees through vocational training: lessons from Liberia
by
Omata, Naohiko
,
Takahashi, Noriko
in
Aid - Monitoring and Evaluation, Development policies
,
Beneficiaries
,
Conflict and reconstruction - Forced displacement
2018
Through a follow-up study, this article explores the role of vocational training programmes in promoting the economic reintegration of repatriated refugees in Liberia. In 2014, we conducted an initial study on livelihood outcomes of vocational training programmes provided by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization for Liberian returnees. By tracing the trained returnees two years after the completion of training, the article investigates the employment and economic conditions of these former beneficiaries and aims to provide valuable insights into the potential and limitations of vocational training programmes in relation to refugees' economic reintegration post-repatriation.
Journal Article
Passion, paternalism, and politics: DIY development and independent volunteers in Honduras
2017
Independent development volunteers (IDVs) and their DIY development projects, although largely neglected in the literature, are part of an emerging movement of non-traditional agents within development. However, they are also participants in a deeply paradoxical industry; both a reflection of passion and commitment, and a paternalist and neo-colonial practice that reflects the messy realities of geo-political and cultural power and privilege. This article explores these debates, drawing on research with IDVs in Honduras. The intersection of passion, paternalism, and politics highlights the complex environments in which IDVs work, and the need to make them visible in discussions of development.
Journal Article
Self-protection in Greece: sticking with groups, communicating, protesting, and fighting
by
Karas, Tania
,
Bock, Joseph G.
in
Aid - Capacity development
,
Communication
,
Community involvement
2018
Despite the international community's responsibility to protect (R2P) mandate, we are years away from effective international enforcement mechanisms. It is therefore important that we better understand and seek to support local capacities for self-protection. Migrants and refugees in Greece have shown us four central ways they cope with insecure environments. They stick together in groups, communicate warnings of danger, protest when conditions are threatening, and fight when all else fails. This practical note offers three recommendations on how to support the capacity of displaced people to protect themselves.
Journal Article
Social development and informal markets: lessons from Thohoyandou market, South Africa
2017
This article explores informal markets as spaces of socialisation. Informal markets are important given the increase in migrants seeking a better life in cities and the need to formulate appropriate development policies. The methodology used involved a literature study that focused on social adaptation, and fieldwork done at an informal market in South Africa. The results show that informal traders are able to adapt to difficult circumstances by using informal networks, and also that they can remain victims trapped in poverty if they accept their powerless situations.
Journal Article
Developing urban space: the changing role of NGOs in Bangladesh
by
Chowdhury, Mushtaque Raza
,
Jahan, Ferdous
,
Rahman, Rehnuma
in
Aid - Development policies
,
Antipoverty programs
,
Bangladesh
2017
Rapid urbanisation has been an emerging issue in recent decades, particularly for developing countries such as Bangladesh. As one of world's largest international NGOs, BRAC, based in Bangladesh, is transiting towards a more integrated approach for alleviating urban poverty. This article presents BRAC's current journey for eradicating urban poverty and outlines the characteristics of urban poverty, key issues faced by the urban poor, and learning that BRAC has accumulated through its urban interventions. Introducing the concept of \"coproduction\", the article identifies BRAC's priorities to eradicate urban poverty within the context of an overall urban strategy.
Journal Article
Road development, and changes in livelihood and mobility in Savannakhet, Lao PDR
by
Khumya, Tanaradee
,
Kusakabe, Kyoko
in
Aid - Development policies
,
Development projects
,
empirical research
2015
The development of roads is a major focus of development projects in the Mekong Sub-Region. This empirical study was conducted in Savannakhet, Lao PDR, to examine the benefits of road development, its impact on livelihoods, and the link between livelihoods and mobility through the concept of sense of place. The results showed that road development affected people's livelihoods, which, in turn, affected their sense of place and mobility. Analysing sense of place allows us to understand how road development can change gender norms and why more women migrate than men.
Journal Article
Critical aspects of social networks in a resettlement setting
by
Murphy, Arthur D.
,
Faas, A.J.
,
Whiteford, Linda M.
in
Aid - Aid effectiveness
,
Conflict and reconstruction - Forced displacement
,
disasters
2015
Each year, more than 30 million people worldwide are displaced by disaster, development, and conflict. The sheer magnitude of displacement points to a need for wider application of social science theories and methodologies to the special problems posed by these crises. We are convinced that social network analysis of the structure and development of social relations can help to identify variables and patterns essential to maintaining or fostering social (re)articulation in resettlement. The research model we propose applies advances in network methodology to emerging theory on structural gaps in networks in the context of forced displacement and resettlement.
Journal Article