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World Affairs Online
Links: a newsletter on gender for Oxfam GB staff and partners
From poverty to power: how active citizens and effective states can change the world
From Poverty to Power From Poverty to Power argues that a radical redistribution of power, opportunities, and assets rather than traditional models of charitable or government aid is required to break the cycle of poverty and inequality. The forces driving this transformation are active citizens and effective states. Published in association with Oxfam GB. Full description
Agricultural trade policy in developing countries during take-off
In: Oxfam research report
How change happens: interdisciplinary perspectives for human development
In: Oxfam research report
The Oxfam gender training manual
In: An Oxfam publication
Gender equality and men: learning from practice
Gender, development, and humanitarian work
In: Oxfam focus on gender
Development and management: selected essays from "Development in practice"
In: A development in practice reader
In: Development in practice readers
Development is a complex process of negotiation over meanings, values, and social goals within the sphere of public action, not merely a question of project-based interventions, or of quantifiable inputs and outputs. This collection of papers draws on The Open University's path-breaking work in the field of development management, and includes in-depth accounts by academics and 'development managers' that range from civil society organisations in Brazil to NGO workers in Egypt, government departments in Tanzania and Poland, donor agencies in Bangladesh, and black feminist activists in the UK. Contributors include Simon Bell, Jo Chataway, Dorcas Robinson, Ramya Subrahmanian, Alan Thomas, David Wield, and Gordon Wilson, and guest-editors Tom Hewitt and Hazel Johnson, all of The Open University.' - Contributors. Preface. Introductory essay Development management and the aid chain: the case of NGO's. What makes good development management? Tools for project development within a public action. Institutional sustainability as learning. Managing institutional change: the science and technology systems of Eastern Europe and East Africa. Inclusive planning and allocation for rural services. Finding out rapidly: a soft systems approach to training needs analysis in Thailand. Matching services with local preferences: managing primary education services in a rural district of India. The development management task and reform of 'public' social services. An endogenous empowerment strategy: a case study of Nigerian women. Fundraising in Brazil: the major implications for civil society organisations and international NGO's. Routes of funding, roots of trust? Northern NGO's, Southern NGO's, donors, and the rise of direct funding. Relevance in the 21st century: the case for devolution and global association of international of NGO's. Northern words, Southern readings. Whose terms? Observations on 'development management' in an English city. Information Technology and the management of corruption. Petty corruption and development. The need for reliable systems: genedered work in Oxfam's Uganda programme. Domestic violence, deportation, and women's resistance: notes on managing inter-sectionality. A day in the life of a development manager. Funding preventive or curative care? The Assiut Burns Project. Small enterprise opportunities in municiple solid waste management. An innovative community-based waste disposal scheme in Hyderbad. Annotated Bibliography. Addresses of publishers and other organisations
Women and leadership
In: Oxfam focus on gender
Education now: break the cycle of poverty
World Affairs Online
Women, land and authority: perspectives from South Africa
World Affairs Online
Disabled children in a society at war: a casebook from Bosnia
In: Oxfam development casebooks
Microfinance and poverty reduction
In: Development guidelines