Global Development Institute Blog

Global Development Institute Blog

We’re the Global Development Institute at The University of Manchester: where critical thinking meets social justice.

Fieldwork 2020 in Cape Town: Innovation and community.

Fieldwork 2020 in Cape Town: Innovation and community.

Jeannette Zes Giovani, Gloria Oviedo Perez and Danah Alzeiby, Management and Information Systems: Change and Development and ICTs for Development students

Learning is always exciting, and it is even more amazing when we can witness real-life applications of the courses and techniques we have learned at the University. In our case, as postgrad students of the Global Development Institute, it involved a trip to one of the most beautiful destinations in the world, South Africa. Cape Town is a leader in ICTs and the next niche for emerging technology companies, in addition to being a developing country with noticeable societal challenges. Thus, it was the ideal place for us, as students, to compare and see in practice some concepts such as the digital divide, the use of ICT in different industries, and to evaluate Information System success/failure through various frameworks/models that we learned in the classroom, all of which play in real life. read more…

Advancing participatory planning in Zimbabwe: Lessons from Bulawayo

Advancing participatory planning in Zimbabwe: Lessons from Bulawayo

Diana Mitlin, Professor of Global Urbanism, Global Development Institute

Over the last few years, Bulawayo in Zimbabwe has experimented with a wide range of participatory planning techniques. A recent workshop in the city, also featuring experiences from Kenya and South Africa, provided an opportunity to draw some conclusions about what has worked. read more…

In conversation: Jelmer Kamstra and Zoe Abrahamson discuss donor funding, NGOs and governance

In conversation: Jelmer Kamstra and Zoe Abrahamson discuss donor funding, NGOs and governance

In this episode, GDI’s Nicola Banks talks to Jelmer Kamstra and Zoe Abrahamson about the political role of NGOs and how donor funding can support those.

Jelmer Kamstra has been Senior Policy Officer at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands in the Civil Society Division since 2015. He is now Senior Researcher at the Policy and Operations Evaluation Department (IOB) of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Zoe Abrahamson is Bond’s senior funding adviser. She coordinates Bond’s funding stream, acting as a conduit between funders and NGOs.

Dr Nicola Banks a Senior Lecturer in Urban Development and Deputy Managing Director of the Global Development Institute.

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GDI Lecture: Civil society aid as balancing act with Jelmer Kamstra and Zoe Abrahamson

GDI Lecture: Civil society aid as balancing act with Jelmer Kamstra and Zoe Abrahamson

Listen or watch Jelmer Kamstra and Zoe Abrahamson discuss civil society aid as balancing act – navigating between managerial and social transformative principles.

Jelmer Kamstra has been Senior Policy Officer at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands in the Civil Society Division since 2015. Starting January 2020, Jelmer has taken up a new position as Senior Researcher at the Policy and Operations Evaluation Department (IOB) of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Zoe Abrahamson is Bond’s senior funding adviser. She coordinates Bond’s funding stream, acting as conduit between funders and NGOs.
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Fieldwork and citizenship through the eyes of a PhD researcher

Fieldwork and citizenship through the eyes of a PhD researcher

Francisca Álvarez-Figueroa, PhD Researcher, Global Development Institute

I began my PhD in 2018 on the broad area of citizenship and organisational citizenship behaviours within the education sector under the supervision of Dr Chris Rees and Dr Kate Rowlands. My fieldwork was conducted from October 2019 to January 2020 in Chile. My research focuses on educative leadership, diversity management, citizenship and inclusion.  read more…

Paper exploring links between institutions and economic development wins 2019 best paper award

Paper exploring links between institutions and economic development wins 2019 best paper award

Research by Professor Kunal Sen of the Global Development Institute and the United Nations University (UNU-Wider), and Sabyasachi Kar and Amrita Roy from the Institute of Economic Growth in Delhi, India has won Economic Modelling’s Best Paper of the year award for 2019.

The Double Trap: Institutions and economic development was published in the journal in January 2019 and examined whether there was a link between institutional quality and economic development.  The research explored data from over 80 countries and across a period of 3 decades (1985-2015), with the authors finding evidence of several countries which are stuck in poor quality institutions traps. Additionally, the research established that poor institutional traps are major determinants of low income traps. read more…

In conversation:  Nicholas Jepson discusses China’s impact on the Global South

In conversation: Nicholas Jepson discusses China’s impact on the Global South

In this episode, Nicholas Jepson talks to Seth Schindler about his new book In China’s wake: how the commodity boom transformed development strategies in the global south.

Dr Nicholas Jepson is a Hallsworth Research Fellow in Chinese Political Economy at the Global Development Institute. Dr Seth Schindler is a Senior Lecturer in Urban Development & Transformation at the Global Development Institute.

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GDI Lecture: How China’s growth transformed development strategies in the global south with Nicholas Jepson

GDI Lecture: How China’s growth transformed development strategies in the global south with Nicholas Jepson

Listen or watch Nicholas Jepson, Global Development Institute, discuss how China’s growth transformed development strategies in the global south. Nicholas is currently a Hallsworth Research Fellow in Chinese Political Economy.

His talk outlines his new book ‘In China’s wake: how the commodity boom transformed development strategies in the global south’

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Have investment treaties protected inward investment in the wake of the global financial crisis?

Have investment treaties protected inward investment in the wake of the global financial crisis?

Gindo Tampubolon, Lecturer in Poverty, Global Development Institute

The Monterrey consensus (2002) on financing for development recognised the importance of investment for global development; appreciating the unique resources channelled through direct investment rather than through aid alone. Through investments from foreign countries (often advanced economies), host countries (often developing economies) access necessary skills, technologies and markets in industrial economies.

For these reasons some countries have unilaterally relaxed their inward investment regimes while others have forged partnerships with other countries in bilateral or multilateral investment treaties. With such treaties host countries attract multinational corporations to bring investments, skills and technology, and conversely, to open foreign markets, achieved by enhancing terms for inward investments such as by adopting international arbitration for commercial dispute.

In practice the benefit of investment treaty on inward investment has been elusive. Two key drivers lie behind changes in inward investment. First, the last decade has witnessed investment activities by multinational corporations slowed by the global financial crisis of 2008.Second, over a much longer period, from just before the turn of the century, multinational corporations’ global investment activities have exhibited a character shift. These corporations roamed the world not only to secure market and materials but increasingly to collaborate in creating innovations.

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Gender and social assistance program

Gender and social assistance program

Vidhya Unnikrishnan, Lecturer in Development Economics, Global Development Institute

There is a growing debate on the need to focus on the gender aspect of the social assistance program. The risks of economic vulnerability and poverty differ between men and women. Previous research has found that the poverty rate among women (who are post-reproductive age) in India is 80% higher than men (Calvi, 2016). The alarming rate of poverty rates faced by older women results in excess female mortality. An important reason that is cited for missing-women at an older age* in India is their reduced bargaining power. Other works have similarly highlighted declining health status and increased disabilities among older women opposed to men in India (Chaudhri, 2008). This suggests the need to focus on the gender dimensions of social assistance programs. read more…