Working Paper

CLARISSA Working Paper 7

Designing a Participatory Programme at Scale: Phases 1 and 2 of the CLARISSA Programme on Worst Forms of Child Labour

Published on 8 July 2021

CLARISSA (Child Labour: Action-Research-Innovation in South and South-Eastern Asia) is a large-scale Participatory Action Research programme which aims to identify, evidence, and promote effective multi-stakeholder action to tackle the drivers of the worst forms of child labour in selected supply chains in Bangladesh, Nepal, and Myanmar.

CLARISSA places a particular focus on participants’ own ‘agency’. In other words, participants’ ability to understand the situation they face, and to develop and take actions in response to them. Most of CLARISSA’s participants are children. This document shares the design and overarching methodology of the CLARISSA programme, which was co-developed with all consortium partners during and since the co-generation phase of the programme (September 2018–June 2020). The immediate audience is the CLARISSA programme implementation teams, plus the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO). This design document is also a useful reference point for other programmes trying to build large-scale participatory processes. It
provides a clear overview of the CLARISSA programmatic approach, the design, and how it is being operationalised in context.

Cite this publication

Burns, D.; Apgar, M. and Raw, A. (2021) Designing a Participatory Programme at Scale: Phases 1 and 2 of the CLARISSA Programme on Worst Forms of Child Labour, CLARISSA Working Paper 7, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/CLARISSA.2021.004

Authors

Danny Burns

Professorial Research Fellow

Marina Apgar

Research Fellow

Anna Raw

Project Manager

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.19088/CLARISSA.2021.004
isbn
978-1-78118-819-4
language
English

Share

About this publication

Related content

Report

Modern Slavery Prevention and Responses in Myanmar: An Evidence Map

CLARISSA Emerging Evidence Report 4

24 November 2020