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Realising sexual rights
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Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Legends of Choar Mumtaz: Saleiha Chachi smiles
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Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Immersions as a form of apprenticeship at PRADAN
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Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
How SRIJAN uses immersions as part of its recruitment process
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Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Reality check: accountability, learning and practice with the people who matter
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Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Reality checks: first reflections
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Publisher
International Institute for Environment and Development
Participation Guide: Involving those directly affected in health and development communication programs.
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Abstract
The Participation Guide provides simple tips and tools to involve affected individuals and groups in the various stages of health and development communication programs. This Guide provides examples of how to include those most marginalized that a health or development communication program is meant to empower. These people could include low-income women of reproductive age, youth, orphans and vulnerable children, people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHA), or staff from organizations working with affected individuals or groups The Guide's intended audience includes program officers, program staff, and development practitioners interested in effectively involving those directly concerned in the health and development communication programs they support
Publisher
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Center for Communication Programs, Health Communication Partnership [HCP]
Assessing damage after disasters: a participatory framework and toolkit
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The benefits of participatory methodologies to develop effective community dialogue in the context of a microbicide trial feasibility study in Mwanza, Tanzania
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Abstract
Background
During a microbicide trial feasibility study among women at high-risk of HIV and sexually transmitted infections in Mwanza, northern Tanzania we used participatory research tools to facilitate open dialogue and partnership between researchers and study participants.
Methods
A community-based sexual and reproductive health service was established in ten city wards. Wards were divided into seventy-eight geographical clusters, representatives at cluster and ward level elected and a city-level Community Advisory Committee (CAC) with representatives from each ward established. Workshops and community meetings at ward and city-level were conducted to explore project-related concerns using tools adapted from participatory learning and action techniques such as listing, scoring, ranking, chapatti diagrams and pair-wise matrices.
Results
Key issues identified included beliefs that blood specimens were being sold for witchcraft purposes; worries about specula not being clean; inadequacy of transport allowances; and delays in reporting laboratory test results to participants. To date, the project has responded by inviting members of the CAC to visit the laboratory to observe how blood and genital specimens are prepared; demonstrated the use of the autoclave to community representatives; raised reimbursement levels; introduced HIV rapid testing in the clinic; and streamlined laboratory reporting procedures.
Conclusion
Participatory techniques were instrumental in promoting meaningful dialogue between the research team, study participants and community representatives in Mwanza, allowing researchers and community representatives to gain a shared understanding of project-related priority areas for intervention.