Octavio de Sousa from CARE Mozambique talks about our recent post-project evaluation of agriculture adoption. Some practices the community never adopted—but didn’t tell us until 5 years later. Some they did adopt, but market forces made it impractical after the project ended. Octavio reflects on how power dynamics, safe spaces, and incentives can prevent us from making the best impact possible, and from applying our learning. Read the Learning Brief published with our partner FANRAPAN here.
It’s not a choice: Connecting Cash and GBV
Move faster: Finding ways to support GBV Survivors with Cash Services (English)
Move faster: Finding ways to support GBV Survivors with Cash Services (Arabic)
Efficient, Effective, or Inexpensive: Looking at Cost Efficiency for Impact, Not Just Savings
Gender Equality in Savings Groups: Women Cannot Do It Alone
Designing Cash Programming to Reduce Gender Based Violence (English)
Designing Cash programming to reduce gender based violence: Part 2 (Arabic)
Designing Cash to reduce Gender Based Violence (Arabic)
Get Beyond Your Own Assumptions
Treat the System, Not the Disease
We are not superior: lessons on working authentically with local organizations
Breaking Inward: Digital Failures and Who Bears the Risk
Don't Try to Win: Lessons from innovation failures in the humanitarian sector
Where White Feminism has Failed: Linking women's empowerment with anti-racism
Study, analyze, adjust quickly: the Bihar Technical Support Program's concurrent measurement and learning approach
We are not immune: unlearning white supremacy in international development
Fail Again. Fail Better.
Data in the time of COVID
Dream Big, But Move Methodically
Implementers vs. Allies
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