Devpolicy Talks

AAC2016 - Panel - Putting political thinking into development practice

Episode Summary

Presentations: Designing context-relevant development programs: a problem-focused political economy analysis tool for aid practitioners (Lisa Denney, Overseas Development Institute); Everyday political analysis (David Hudson, University College London; Heather Marquette, University of Birmingham; and Sam Waldock, UK Department for International Development, Rwanda); How large, traditional aid programs can be politically smart: experience from Southeast Asia (Thomas Parks, DFAT); The evaluation of politics and the politics of evaluation: playing the game to change the rules? (Chris Roche, La Trobe University and Irene Guijt, Oxfam Great Britain). This panel discussion was part of the 2016 Australasian Aid Conference. All conference presentation slides available at: https://devpolicy.crawford.anu.edu.au/annual-australasian-aid-conference/2016/abstracts

Episode Notes

Presentations: Designing context-relevant development programs: a problem-focused political economy analysis tool for aid practitioners (Lisa Denney, Overseas Development Institute); Everyday political analysis (David Hudson, University College London; Heather Marquette, University of Birmingham; and Sam Waldock, UK Department for International Development, Rwanda); How large, traditional aid programs can be politically smart: experience from Southeast Asia (Thomas Parks, DFAT); The evaluation of politics and the politics of evaluation: playing the game to change the rules? (Chris Roche, La Trobe University and Irene Guijt, Oxfam Great Britain).

This panel discussion was part of the 2016 Australasian Aid Conference. All conference presentation slides available at: https://crawford.anu.edu.au/devpolicy/events