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Library Fostering community-driven development: what role for the state?

Fostering community-driven development: what role for the state?

Fostering community-driven development: what role for the state?

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2002
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
eldis:A12698

This paper examines case studies from Asia and Latin America to show the possibilities for states to tap into community-level energies and resources for development if they seek to interact more synergistically with local communities.Using case studies from Asia and Latin America, the report shows how: State efforts to bring about land reform, tenancy reform, and expanding non-crop sources of income can broaden the distribution of power in rural communities, laying the basis for more effective community-driven collective action; and Higher levels of government can form alliances with communities, putting pressure on local authorities from above and below to improve development outcomes at the local level. These alliances can also be very effective in catalysing collective action at community level, and reducing "local capture" by vested interests. There are several encouraging points that emerge from these case studies. these powerful institutional changes do not necessarily take long to generatethey can be achieved in a diversity of settings: tightly knit or loose-knit communities; war-ravaged or relatively stable; democratic or authoritarian; with land reform or (if carefully managed) even without.there are strong political payoffs in terms of legitimacy and popular support for those who support such developmental action.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

H. Grandvoinnet
M. Romani
M. Das Gupta

Publisher(s)
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