Foresight for new collaborative platforms to support LMIC science systems
To achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) it has become clear that we require systemic change across societies, and that as...
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To achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) it has become clear that we require systemic change across societies, and that as...
This study, commissioned by the International Development Research Centre, identified gaps and future entry points for Southern-led...
3 July 2020
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
From forest fires in Australia and California to record floods in Jakarta and the UK, it is clear that no area of the world is immune from the effects of climate change. Many countries and cities have woken up to this fact and have declared climate emergencies. Mainstream discourses are increasingly framed around the recognition that climate change is fundamentally a question of justice, in terms of the responsibility for the problem and its mitigation; that vulnerabilities to the impacts of climate change are both a reflection of, and exacerbate, structural injustices; and that there will be residual impacts beyond the capacity to mitigate and adapt or what might be deemed ‘tolerable’ impacts.
10 January 2020
This paper seeks to examine how childcare impacts upon women’s economic engagement in India, Nepal, Tanzania, and Rwanda. In delineating the linkages between childcare, paid work, and other tasks that women carry out within and outside the house, this paper privileges women’s own perceptions of childcare as ‘work’, and the extent to which they see this as a tension between women’s caregiving role and their income-generating role.
9 October 2019
Published by: IDS
Women’s childcare responsibilities are often seen as a barrier to them undertaking paid work. However, this is a two-way interaction, mediated by large quantities of unpaid work. Women thus find themselves in a downward spiral of a ‘triple burden’ consisting of (a) time‑consuming, yet unpaid work with no economic returns to them; (b) informal and back‑breaking low-paid work; and (c) supervisory childcare and domestic tasks like cooking, cleaning, and fetching water and fuel.
1 December 2018
Published by: Oxford University Press
Mobile health (mHealth) provides health services and information via mobile technologies, including mobile phones. There is considerable...
Pathways to Inclusive Development through Innovation, Technology and Change is developing a framework to analyse alternative pathways that link different forms of technological innovation, and evaluate resulting structural change and inclusion outcomes in low-income countries.
The 'Balancing unpaid care work and paid work: successes, challenges and lessons for women's economic empowerment programmes and policies' project aims to create knowledge about how women's economic empowerment (WEE) policy and programming can generate paid work that empowers women and provides more support for their unpaid care work responsibilities.
This programme aimed to strengthen the policy engagement and communication (PEC) work of researchers and communication staff based in 26 think tanks across Latin America and South Asia.
This research seeks to inform and influence the current state of debate in India on the issue of malnutrition and food security.