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.

Bringing Social Theory back into issues of Development

Tim Jacoby and Uma Kothari, both from IDPM at the University of Manchester, have edited a special edition of the journal Progress in Development Studies which has just been published. It showcases emerging research from early career colleagues at the Institute.

By Tim Jacoby and Uma Kothari

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I dream about those German sausages

By Tanja R. Müller

The above sentence was the message I received the other day from a Facebook-friend, together with a black and white photograph showing some African kids in a classroom with a tall, Germanic looking woman-teacher, and some German sentences on the big blackboard in the background. The picture was taken around 1984, in a small town in what was then East Germany, Staßfurt. My Facebook friend was one of a cohort of almost 900 Mozambican children who completed the long years of secondary schooling and adolescence in East Germany in order to become homem novo, a specific type of ‘new socialist man’, upon their return to Mozambique.

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New visions for violence reduction strategies in the Mexico

By Natalia Garcia-Cervantes

Rising levels of violence and crime can erase the benefits of economic growth and dramatically decrease well-being. But if we see high levels of violence as a specifically urban problem, with therefore specifically urban solutions, new ways of approaching the problem can be established. Natalia Garcia explains how her research in Mexico is developing this idea.

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The Politics of the diffusion of Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America

By Paola Pena

The political and social scenarios of Latin America have been shaped by the coming to power of ideological Left-wing governments along with the adoption and rapid expansion of a particular type of social assistance programmes known as Conditional Cash Transfers (CCT). It may seem obvious that these two facts are directly related. Leftist candidates obtain their electoral victories by following a common discourse of improving the high levels of poverty and inequality across the region. However, this may not be as straightforward as it seems. Therefore, in my Dissertation, I analyse the politics of the diffusion of Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America. A modified version of the dissertation has been published at the Brooks World Poverty Institute at the University of Manchester, as a BWPI Working Paper 201 with the title “The Politics of the diffusion of Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America”.

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Consuming celebrity advocacy

By Dan Brockington

One of the most intriguing facts about celebrity is how little we know about how the general public respond to it. And, when you do try and find out, then one of the most intriguing things is how little notice many people appear to take of it. Yes, there are studies of fans and fandom. But fans are not necessarily the best indicators of how broader publics respond to celebrities. Indeed, by definition (the word is short for ‘fanatic’) a fan is an unusually committed supporter.

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Podcast your research!

Viva Voce is a new and exciting online platform that was created by our very own IDPM PhD student, Gemma Sou. Viva Voce promotes and supports PhD students, PostDocs and Early careers researchers in the Social Sciences, by providing a platform for setting up short, sharp and engaging podcasts about yourself and your research. Gemma says that,

“We’re increasingly encouraged to get our research ‘out there’ and to have ‘impact’ beyond academia. However, there are few platforms that are dedicated to publicising and disseminating the exciting knowledge that emerges from early career researchers. Other sites like linkedin and academia.edu are basically there for people to upload their CVs, which marginalises early career researchers who have less publications and experience. Plus, these sites are very text heavy and not very accessible or exciting. I wanted something that focused more on the topic and quality of your research (‘what you do’) than how many publications or years of experience you have (‘how much you have done’)”.

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Learning from Dhaka’s BusteeBashees

By Sally Cawood

In March 2014, IDPM PhD Student Sally Cawood boarded a plane to Dhaka for her first taste of urban life in the Bangladeshi capital, dubbed one of the most ‘unliveable cities’ in the world. In this blog Sally describes how this two week trip fundamentally altered her views on urban slums (bustees), their residents (busteebashees) and her PhD.

In Dhaka, at least 5 million people live in slums known as bustees, with thousands more joining the world’s most crowded city every day (See Banks et al, 2011; Ahmed, 2012; Cox, 2012; Shikdar, 2012). As opposed to passive vehicles of hyper-urbanisation, I argue in my PhD that bustee residents are highly networked and active agents, a view shared by others (see Roy and Hulme, 2013; Slum/Shack Dwellers International; Asian Coalition for Housing Rights). My research focuses on the drivers, forms and outcomes of grassroots collective action among this neglected group.

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Constructing celebrity advocacy

By Daniel Brockington

Celebrity is a normal part of development business these days. While we can all point to famous development advocates, I suspect that most of us do not know the extent to which development NGOs in Britain, and indeed the whole NGO sector, has transformed itself as part of an effort to work more effectively, and successfully with celebrity advocates. This blog describes this transformation and some of the tensions it has produced.

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Beyond the PhD: careers in the NGO sector

By Jessica Hope, PhD student at IDPM, and a Postgraduate careers workshop.

If you are working on research in a University and are thinking of joining the NGO sector this blog will help you to prepare.

With the end of her PhD on the horizon, Jessica Hope co-organised a postgraduate careers workshop, held at the Royal Geographical Society (RGS) in London and delivered by their Developing Areas Research Group (DARG). The day provided information and practical advice about building a career in the NGO sector, as well as raising key questions about the roles that both academia and NGOs assume in international development. Here are Jess’ observations on the day, an outline of opportunities presented and her unanswered questions about how academia and the NGO sector relate to one another in the development world.

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Carbon Expo: Small Market, Tainted Image

By Robert Watt

Carbon Expo: Small Market, Tainted Image

Leverhulme Centre PhD researcher Robbie Watt attended the 2014 annual gathering of experts and practitioners working in the fields of carbon markets and climate finance at Carbon Expo in Cologne, to gain new insights into the current state of carbon offsetting. In this short piece, Robbie argues that the tarnished reputation of carbon offsets is a key reason why people find it difficult to sell their carbon credits.

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