In Touch l RCPLA Network 221 in March and The pulse of Egypt’s revolt, edited by Mariz Tadros, in December. Recent working papers from the team include Women’s empowerment revisited: from individual to collective power among the export sector workers of Bangladesh by Naomi Hossain, and Shifting power? Assessing the impact of transparency and accountability initiatives by Rosie McGee and John Gaventa. n More information is available at: www.ids.ac.uk/go/bookshop. October 2012 at a side event at the Convention on Biodiversity’s 11th Conference of Parties in Hyderabad, India. We hope to be able to continue to launch and promote future issues in this way, and establish ongoing informal learning networks to share ideas and lessons from articles published in PLA. Team members The team has welcomed new member Jerker Edstrom who works on masculinities, HIV and AIDS, and returning member Jas Vaghadia. We are also pleased to have Naomi Vernon as part of the team, working on CommunityLed Total Sanitation. After many years with the team, we are sad to say goodbye to Georgina Powell-Stevens who has moved on to work on a major new project elsewhere in IDS: we wish her well. n The above are just a few highlights from the team’s work – for more information please see: www.ids.ac.uk org Sign up for our blog: participationpower.wordpress.com Email J.Stevens@ids.ac.uk News from the European Region: update from IIED Launching PLA As mentioned in the Editorial, IIED held a successful launch of PLA 64: Young citizens: youth and participatory governance in Africa at our new offices in Gray’s Inn Road, following the launch of PLA 63: How wide are the ripples? From local participation to international organisational learning a few months’ earlier, which had been co-organised with the Organisational Learning Network (OLN).1 PLA 65 will be launched in Panel on food security in Africa The Pastoral and Environmental Network in the Horn of Africa (PENHA), in partnership with IIED, launched the Food We Want – Sustainable, Local, Fair project at IIED’s offices in March. The event commenced with a discussion on Food Security in Africa: Critical Issues for Small Scale Producers led by three panelists: Michel Pimbert from the Agroecology and Food Sovereignty team at IIED, Micheline Ravololonarisoa, former Head of the Africa section of the United Nations Development Fund for Women (now UN Women), and William Lume, Director of the Centre for InterAfrican Relations (CEFIAR), based in London. Both Michel Pimbert and Micheline Ravolonarisoa stressed that the majority of farmers in Africa are women, and that there is increasing participation by women in decision-making relating to agricultural practices. Michel Pimbert put forward the framework of food sovereignty and an agricultural production system that mirrors natural cycles of production as a sustainable model, and William Lume gave some historical background to the food security issue in Africa. The panel discussion ended with a question and answer session, followed by a presentation on the project itself by PENHA staff. 1 See: www.bond.org.uk/pages/organisational-learning-network.html

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