Heritage Repertoires for Inclusive and Sustainable Development in Egypt, Syria, and Beyond
This project builds on the Coptic Culture Conservation Collective's existing database of stories, legends, social practices and oral...
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This project builds on the Coptic Culture Conservation Collective's existing database of stories, legends, social practices and oral...
Against the backdrop of a mass exodus of religious minorities from the Middle East, there is an urgency to empower the youth from the...
The Pakistan Hub provides focus in a country at the leading edge of development thinking and practice and is...
The Coalition for Religious Equality and Inclusive Development (CREID) provides research evidence and delivers practical programmes which aim to redress the impact of discrimination on the grounds of religion or belief, tackle poverty and exclusion, and promote people’s wellbeing and empowerment. CREID is led by the Institute of Development Studies in partnership with Al-Khoei Foundation, Minority Rights Group and Refcemi (the Coptic Office for Advocacy and Public Policy).
Generating practical policy options for states and citizens so they can better address and mitigate violence in both rural and urban settings.
The Shan are a Tai people closely related to the Tai of Thailand, Laos and Yunnan and are one of the ethnic minorities in the Shan...
Background A few years ago, a video captured on mobile of a female Cairo University student being sexually harassed by a group of male...
The Coptic Culture Conservation Collective initiative will create a narrative and visual archive of contemporary Coptic intangible cultural heritage.
This research theme, under the Action for Empowerment and Accountability (A4EA) Research Programme, is concerned with the meanings of empowerment and accountability from the point of view of the people’s experiences and perceptions, and this in turn means for collective action.
Background The early 21st century saw an unprecedented wave of episodes of contentious politics. Many were predictable protests about...