Guided by other C4D tools in existence, IOM X created its own toolkit for developing content and activities to aid counter trafficking. The toolkit will help readers understand C4D and Behaviour Change Communication (BCC), as well as develop a C4D strategy for counter-trafficking initiatives. The toolkit is a practical resource for programme managers and officers, research officers and communication specialists working on information, awareness-raising and/or behaviour change communication campaigns in the counter-trafficking sector.
Mobile 4 Reproductive Health (m4RH) Toolkit (FHI 360 2016)
The Mobile 4 Reproductive Health (m4RH) toolkit provides information and tips from FHI 360’s work in mobile technology for health over several years and is intended to share lessons learned as well as facilitate replication of this SMS-based family planning and reproductive health information service. The toolkit includes an overview of m4RH, recent demographic and use data gathered through routine system use and from several studies, sample messages, costing data and a description of message development and adaptation process.
Communautés locales : fournisseurs de protection de premier et de dernier ressort (Revue des migrations forcées 53)
Il arrive bien souvent que ce soit les membres de la communauté immédiate qui fournissent les premières, les dernières et peut-être les meilleures réponses tactiques aux personnes qui subissent un déplacement ou vivent dans la menace d’un déplacement. Quelle que soit la manière dont la protection ou la communauté sont définies, à moins qu’ils comprennent cette réalité les acteurs extérieurs éprouveront des difficultés à proposer un soutien approprié. S’ils ne réussissent pas à développer une conscience plus aiguë du rôle assumé par les stratégies communautaires de protection ils risquent d’échouer à intégrer activement le « pouvoir d’agir » des communautés à leurs politiques comme à leur programmation ; au pire, ils risquent d’entraver la capacité de prévenir ou de survivre à la violence et au déplacement inhérente aux communautés.
Ten Frontier Technologies for International Development (IDS report 2016)
As new technologies and digital business models reshape economies and disrupt incumbencies, interest has surged in the potential of novel frontier technologies to also contribute to positive changes in international development and humanitarian contexts. Widespread adoption of new technologies is acknowledged as centrally important to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.
But while frontier technologies can rapidly address large-scale economic, social or political challenges, they can also involve the displacement of existing technologies and carry considerable uncertainty and risk. Although there have been significant wins bringing the benefits of new technologies to poor consumers through examples such as mobile money or off-grid solar energy, there are many other areas where the applications may not yet have been developed into viable market solutions, or where opportunities have not yet been taken up in development practice.
Against this background, the Department for International Development (DFID) commissioned the Digital and Technology Research Group at the Institute of Development Studies to undertake a review of frontier technologies in five key areas.
Media Development and Countering Violent Extremism: An Uneasy Relationship, a Need for Dialogue (CIMA report 2016)
This report looks at how media development practitioners are reacting to the rise of the Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) agenda, and its growing influence on their field. This influence is the cause of concern, not only because practitioners of CVE and media development have fundamentally different worldviews, but because the CVE agenda is seen to pose serious risks for southern media houses and the organizations that support them.
Click here for full report.
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