Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research

Many projects start with a baseline setting the state of affairs or a needs assessment with community members and/or key persons. Only few ex ante studies have sought to include past and ongoing dynamics. This is especially concerning for projects aiming at gender-transformative change since these c...

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Main Author: Burg, Margreet van der
Format: Ponencia
Language:Inglés
Published: Wageningen University & Research 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136960
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author Burg, Margreet van der
author_browse Burg, Margreet van der
author_facet Burg, Margreet van der
author_sort Burg, Margreet van der
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Many projects start with a baseline setting the state of affairs or a needs assessment with community members and/or key persons. Only few ex ante studies have sought to include past and ongoing dynamics. This is especially concerning for projects aiming at gender-transformative change since these cannot rely on literature about localized changes as in gender and other social relations, labor divisions or use of introduced innovations. We might wonder why such ex ante research covering the momentum is never really disputed. And what methodologies can we use to change? First, I illustrate why it is necessary to systematically contextualize any project not only within its local spatial-geographical, ecologicalclimatological, and social-cultural context but also its temporal-historical one. I will also elaborate on the need for decolonizing the underlying bias toward ‘distant’ cultures and communities as long-time homogeneous, unspoiled, stable and hardly changed, especially in rural areas. Second, I will show and build on existing approaches that include past and ongoing dynamics in their project sites. These are, for instance, the CGIAR GENNOVATE project tools that help ranking change over 10 years, and mapping exercises to make changes visible as an entry point to elaborate on the experiences with and perceptions on change in relation to various impacts. Additional local sources are community elders or local newspapers. Significant themes to focus on are project dependent and can be extracted from historical and development literature. By purposefully including participants in their long-term processes of change and building on their local experiences and learning with changes and their impacts, transformative change will be more within reach.
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spelling CGSpace1369602024-01-05T02:15:01Z Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research Burg, Margreet van der gender agriculture research project design Many projects start with a baseline setting the state of affairs or a needs assessment with community members and/or key persons. Only few ex ante studies have sought to include past and ongoing dynamics. This is especially concerning for projects aiming at gender-transformative change since these cannot rely on literature about localized changes as in gender and other social relations, labor divisions or use of introduced innovations. We might wonder why such ex ante research covering the momentum is never really disputed. And what methodologies can we use to change? First, I illustrate why it is necessary to systematically contextualize any project not only within its local spatial-geographical, ecologicalclimatological, and social-cultural context but also its temporal-historical one. I will also elaborate on the need for decolonizing the underlying bias toward ‘distant’ cultures and communities as long-time homogeneous, unspoiled, stable and hardly changed, especially in rural areas. Second, I will show and build on existing approaches that include past and ongoing dynamics in their project sites. These are, for instance, the CGIAR GENNOVATE project tools that help ranking change over 10 years, and mapping exercises to make changes visible as an entry point to elaborate on the experiences with and perceptions on change in relation to various impacts. Additional local sources are community elders or local newspapers. Significant themes to focus on are project dependent and can be extracted from historical and development literature. By purposefully including participants in their long-term processes of change and building on their local experiences and learning with changes and their impacts, transformative change will be more within reach. 2023-10-11 2024-01-04T12:46:32Z 2024-01-04T12:46:32Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136960 en Open Access application/pdf Wageningen University & Research Burg, Margreet van der. 2023. Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research. Presentation. Presented at the CGIAR GENDER Conference 'From Research to Impact: Towards just and resilient agri-food systems', New Delhi, India, 9-12 October 2023. Wageningen University & Research
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
research
project design
Burg, Margreet van der
Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research
title Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research
title_full Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research
title_fullStr Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research
title_full_unstemmed Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research
title_short Including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research
title_sort including past and ongoing dynamics in ex ante project research
topic gender
agriculture
research
project design
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136960
work_keys_str_mv AT burgmargreetvander includingpastandongoingdynamicsinexanteprojectresearch