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Department for International Development Participatory Rights Assessment Methodologies (PRAMs)

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Presentation on theme: "Department for International Development Participatory Rights Assessment Methodologies (PRAMs)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Department for International Development Participatory Rights Assessment Methodologies (PRAMs)

2 DFID, Rights and Poverty Reduction DFID is committed to a rights-based approach in order to reduce poverty outcomes, as measured by the Millenium Development Goals (MDGs).

3 DFID’s Target Strategy Paper principles: 1.Participation: From passive beneficiaries to active and empowered citizens 2.Inclusion: All human rights for all people 3.Fulfilling obligation : to protect, promote and ensure the realisation of all human rights

4 DFID’s Target Strategy Paper: From principles to poverty reduction Active Citizenship Equality and Non- Discrimination Democracy and Accountability Participation Inclusion Fulfilling obligation Legislation Execution (public and private sector) Judiciary Economic Well- being Human and Social Development Environmental sustainability and regeneration Development Values TSP Principles Institutions and Policies Poverty Reduction Outcomes

5 What is PRAMs? PRAMs aims to facilitate: People’s own identification and assessment of their rights Understanding and agreement between stakeholders of the obstacles poor people face in accessing those rights Identification of actions to support governments and other duty bearers in the protection, promotion and realisation of human rights Institutional change and the opening up of new channels of institutional engagement between citizens and duty bearers.

6 Why PRAMs? Participatory poverty assessment explores the multidimensional nature of poverty Participatory rights assessment: –Politicises assessment, highlighting power relations and processes of exclusion and discrimination –Identifies and engages with institutional structures that define, interpret and implement rights

7 How will PRAMs work? Partnership building Identification: –What is the institutional context? –How does civil society engage with rights? –What are the key thematic or sectoral issues? –What are the processes of policy change that affect rights? Assessment: –Who are the local partners with PRA experience? –What methods are used locally? –How can methods best be combined? Institutional change

8 Where is PRAMs being piloted? CountryOperational entry pointActorsAdded value MalawiEducation Sector Support Programme (ESSP) DFID Malawi MoEST District Assemblies National NGOs Local CSOs Parents & schoolchildren School teachers Administrators MMethodology for: production of a Teachers’ Code of Conduct (ESSP Output 6); and increasing community responsibility and capacity to manage primary schools (ESSP Output 4) Peru Human Rights for the Poor in Peru Programme (HRPP) operating in 5 geographical Departments DFID Peru OXFAM (implementing agency) Local Government Round Tables Local NGOs Grassroots Organisations  Providing the method for implementing the HRPP  Creating democratic accountability at local level RomaniaNorth-East Regional Development Programme (LARPDP) DFID Romania Enterprise-PLC (implementing agency) Local Government Local NGOs and CSOs Shifting from a needs based to a rights-based approach to regional development ZambiaHealth sector (HIV/AIDs) DFID Zambia Family Health Trust Women and Law in Southern Africa Zambia National AIDS Network The Youth Forum.  Promoting reproductive rights  Creating institutional changes in health delivery and accountability

9 Methodological choices for PRAMs TSP PrincipleUnderpinning values ActorsPRAMs methodology PRAMs toolsRights policy context ParticipationVoice Active citizenship Empowerment Citizens CSOs NGOs Facilitating diagnosis and design HR Education Advocacy Role play Theatre for Development Board games Citizens’ Juries Social mapping Freedom of opinion and expression Right to receive and impart information Right to participate InclusionEquality Non- discrimination Voice Street-level bureaucrats Service providers Justice system actors Community/ political patrons MoF/Cabinet Office /Cross-sector working groups Participatory baseline Participatory M&E Institutional analysis/ Venn diagramming Problem tree Causal flow diagram SWAps/SIPs Extension programmes Social sector policy Decentralisation Privatisation Fulfilling obligation Receptiveness Information Accountability Government Depts Media PSOs Regulators Monitoring Social auditing Public hearings/ testimonies Report cards Focus group discussions Corporate social responsibility Poverty Reduction Strategies Sustainable Livelihoods Security and violence Accessible justice


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