16 January 2017
Welcome to our first short course participants of 2017!
We’re delighted to welcome a wonderfully diverse group of participants to our first short courses of 2017: impact evaluation and participatory action research.
Showing 41–50 of 53 results
16 January 2017
We’re delighted to welcome a wonderfully diverse group of participants to our first short courses of 2017: impact evaluation and participatory action research.
14 December 2016
Articles in a new IDS Bulletin suggest that the over-dominance of market forces over government, business and civil society accounts for many of today’s development challenges, and suggest a rebalancing of the current states–markets–society triad.
1 December 2016
1 December 2016
Unique evidence from IDS and partners incorporated into the first High Level Report on Women’s Economic Empowerment highlights the centrality of unpaid care work to women’s economic empowerment and their opportunities in the world of work.
23 November 2016
Slum dwellers call into question the effectiveness of militaristic responses to urban violence in a new film, ‘No One Left Behind’ produced by IDS and Shack/Slum Dwellers International which will be screened at the United Nations Habitat III Conference.
5 October 2016
The Institute of Development Studies has released its Annual Review 2016 – a special one marking our 50th anniversary.
3 October 2016
IDS researchers urge World Health Summit participants and decision-makers globally to take a broader approach to address the social, structural and economic determinants of health, and to ensure community involvement in interventions with genuine gender inclusivity.
17 August 2016
Nearly one in three women and one in five men are experiencing domestic violence in Ghana and young people are most at risk, says a new study released today.
3 August 2016
New initiative launched to support global efforts to make agricultural and nutritionally relevant data available
10 May 2016
New IDS research reveals that the real motivations behind Latin America’s protests relate not to absolute levels of inequality but to individual’s perceptions of inequality and their beliefs around how income should be distributed.