In Touch l General resources 205 GENERAL RESOURCES Provocations for development l Robert Chambers IDS, 2012 Do we use obscure words to impress our colleagues – or fashionable ones to win research proposals? How do poor people define their poverty? How can we use aid budgets most effectively? Are many of our actions against poverty simple, direct and wrong? Provocations for Development is an entertaining and unsettling collection of writings that questions concepts, conventions and practices in development. It is made up of short and accessible writings by Robert Chambers, many from the past ten years and some from earlier, reflecting on the evolution of concepts like participation and of organisations like the World Bank. Besides provocations, there is mischief, verse and serious fun. The book is organised into four sections. The first, Word play, irreverently examines vocabularies of development and how words are instruments of power. The second, Poverty and participation, challenges concepts of poverty, presents empowering breakthroughs in the current explosion of participatory methodologies, and concludes with what can be done at the personal level. The third, Aid, is critical of past and present procedures and practices in aid and points to feasible changes for doing better. The provocations in the last section For our future touch on values, ethics, gender and participation, immersions, hypocrisy and paradigms, and sees hope in children. The final provocation invites readers to find answers to the question ‘what would it take to eliminate poverty in the world?’ Provocations for development will be enjoyed by development professionals, including academics, students, NGO workers and the staff of international agencies, as well as the wider public. n Available to buy from the IDS bookshop at: www.ntd.co.uk/idsbookshop/details.asp?id= 1278 Principle 10: public participation in environmental decisionmaking (DVD) l FIELD, 2011 Poor people in developing countries often rely heavily on their immediate environment for their livelihoods. However, they are often underrepresented or absent from decision-making processes that affect their environments and the natural resources that sustain their communities. Principle 10 of the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and Development calls for public access to information, participation in decision-making and access to justice as key principles of environmental governance. Only when these principles are protected by the law and embodied in government practices can decisions be equitable, responsive to people’s needs and environmentally sustainable. The film Principle 10: public participation in environmental decision making provides a snapshot analysis of the principle’s relevance in law and practice. On the basis of various interviews and research in Ethiopia, the 20-minute film reflects on some of the work under way to improve environmental decision-making, existing barriers and challenges. Version with Spanish subtitles forthcoming. n Watch the film at: http://vimeo.com/30856233 For more information on this research visit FIELD’s website: www.field.org.uk

Select target paragraph3