posted on 2024-09-05, 22:04authored byKatrina Barnes, Colin Anderson, Stephanie de Chassy, Affaf Ahmed, Mudabbir Ali, Myo Min Aung, Egidio Chaimite, Anuradha Joshi, Danyal Khan, Miguel Loureiro, Lucio Posse, Jo Rowlands, Alex Shankland, Rizwan Wazir
What does governance look like ‘from below’ – from the perspectives of poor and marginalised households? How do patterns of conflict affect that? These were the questions at the heart of the Governance at the Margins research project. Over three years from 2017-2020 we worked to explore this through in-depth study in conflict-affected areas of Mozambique, Myanmar, and
Pakistan. Our research teams interviewed the same people regularly over that time, finding out how they resolved problems and interacted with authorities. In this paper we connect what we found to the realities and complexities of development practice, drawing on the input of 20 experienced practitioners working in bilateral and multilateral development agencies
and international NGOs, who generously gave their time to help us think through the practical implications of our wealth of findings.
Funding
Department for International Development
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
Barnes, K.; Anderson, C.; de Chassy, S.; Ahmed, A.; Ali, M.; Aung, M. M.; Chaimite, E.; Joshi, A.; Khan, D.; Loureiro, M.; Posse, L.; Rowlands, J.; Shankland, A. and Wazir, R. (2021) ‘Understanding Governance from the Margins: What Does it Mean in Practice?’, A4EA Policy and Practice Paper, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/A4EA.2021.003