Duncan Green's Blog, page 11
August 20, 2021
How to Write About Afghanistan: A Style Guide for Western Journalists
I loved this blistering twitter thread by Justin Podur (@justinpodur) so much, I turned into a blogpost for the untwittered. ‘(In homage to Binyavanga Wainaina) First, the opening. All good articles about Afghanistan start with a few lines from a poem by British imperialist poet Rudyard Kipling. You know the one, “the women come out […]
Published on August 20, 2021 01:52
August 18, 2021
8 mistakes to avoid in reporting an INGO’s contributions to the SDGs
Guest post from Ximena Echeverria Magariños and Jay Goulden, of CARE International INGOs have for many years felt the need to communicate how many people their programs reach in a year, but the numbers of people our programs “touch” doesn’t tell us anything about the difference they make in people’s lives. Increasingly, INGOs are seeking […]
Published on August 18, 2021 23:30
August 17, 2021
What to Read on Afghanistan? Some of the best stuff I’ve read so far – please suggest more
On Monday, exasperated by the nature of the coverage of the fall of Kabul, I tweeted a request for links: ‘What to read on Afghanistan? Interested in power analysis/stakeholder mapping of domestic players, which Afghan groups support/oppose Taliban, informed speculation about what comes next.’ Here are some extracts from what came back (plus of course, […]
Published on August 17, 2021 23:30
August 16, 2021
Some Good ideas on Promoting locally-led development in the UK aid system
The British NGO network BOND recently published a report on ‘catalysing locally-led development in the UK aid system’, which summarizes a six month project involving dozens of people from different aid organizations. I have to confess that I started reading with low expectations – there are a lot of pious exhortations on localization, which all […]
Published on August 16, 2021 23:33
August 15, 2021
Links I Liked
An Equitable Olympics medal table, weighted for population, looks very different from the standard one. Go San Marino (shooting x2 + wrestling) An evangelical pastor in rural South Sudan recounts a personal story of travelling ‘under the water’ to ‘the land of demons’. Ryan O’Byrne on the pitfalls of outsider researchers trying to ‘make sense’ […]
Published on August 15, 2021 23:30
August 13, 2021
Development Nutshell: round-up (16m) of FP2P posts, w/b 9th August
Published on August 13, 2021 23:30
August 12, 2021
Measuring Women’s Economic Empowerment: 5 Takeaways from Researchers and Practitioners
Got a gap on the blog today, so thought I’d repost this excellent piece from CGD, by Mayra Buvinic and Megan O’Donnell The rhetoric around women’s economic empowerment (WEE) in global development is finally being translated into action. Development organizations are using this objective to guide operations and exploring ways to measure impact by integrating WEE indicators […]
Published on August 12, 2021 03:22
August 10, 2021
Weathering the storm: Defending Institutions in Post-Coup Myanmar
Guest post by Will Paxton, International Director at Kivu The 1st of September marks seven months since Myanmar’s military coup. In that time over 700 Myanmar people have been killed in brutal military crackdowns, the economy has been ravaged, and conflict has rumbled on. Uncertainty defines Myanmar’s future. The military government appears to have consolidated […]
Published on August 10, 2021 23:35
August 9, 2021
7 Cartoons that could just help the IPCC Save the Planet
More than 200 scientists from 66 countries have worked together to assess knowledge on just the physical science basis of climate change. Their answers were released yesterday in the Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group I. The IPCC’s findings are clear, rigorous, and very concerning, but they […]
Published on August 09, 2021 23:30
August 8, 2021
Links I Liked
Welcome to The Future. Seems about right. UK aid: Survival of the Fittest or Cutting at Random? Ranil Dissayanake and Euan Ritchie crunch the numbers and find ‘they quickly ran out of underperformers to cut and were forced to slash high-performing programmes too.’ Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: ‘Theory is a kind of idolatry’. Summary of what […]
Published on August 08, 2021 23:30
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