I must admit that I did not expect so many queries and questions
to my first post. The two
most FAQs were: “What are you going to do? “ and “What did you do to get
there?”. Regarding the first question (the second will be dealt with the next
post) I have a learning agenda composed of teaching (“the most effective form
of learning”), attending selected courses (held by Alain de Janvry, Olivier de
Schutter, Miguel Altieri) and working on my own research related to
agriculture, nutrition and health.
Prof. Lynn Huntsinger, Chair of the Division of Society and
Environment, within the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and
Management (ESPM) who invited me as Visiting Scholar requested me to teach an
interactive reading seminar for graduate students based on real-life
experience. Let me share with you the
course description and some of the replies I received from the
students/participants who have enrolled (18 at the moment). This will give you
a sense of their experience and expectations from the course. Do you think I will be able to meet them? I will keep you posted. Ciao
_____________________________
Course Description: ESPM 290 SEM 006 Fa13
Topic: Implementing and assessing internationally funded
development projects: theory and application
The interactive reading seminar will meet for 2-hours once
per week for six weeks (from 23 September to 28 October). The purpose is to
help graduate students bridge the gap between development theory and its
application by sharing the challenges that arise from: i) the implementation of
projects and programs supported by an international financing institution like
IFAD; and ii) the assessment of their impact. Hence, students will be exposed
to specific projects supported by IFAD that have been completed and evaluated.
Since the mandate of IFAD is to focus on fighting rural poverty, the seminar
will cover a range of topics regarding: i) sectoral/sub-sectoral domains such
as rural development, natural resource management, and micro-finance; ii)
vulnerable social groups such as indigenous people, marginal farmers, women and
youth; and iii) key development processes such as targeting, empowerment,
participatory planning and monitoring and evaluation. Finally, the seminar will
be an opportunity to exchange views on some of the fundamental questions of
development and international cooperation (why, how and for whom), its current
situation and future perspectives, with reference to the work of different
authors like Amartya Sen, Edgar Morin, Dave Snowden and Serge Latouche.
_____________________________________________________
Dear participants, greetings from Rome!
Let me first thank you for having selected this course.
I have prepared few questions listed below so that I can
know a bit more about you before the beginning of the course and, above all, do
my best to address as much as possible your interests and expectations.
1. Your
academic experience: what have you studied so far?
2. Your
work experience: in particular, have you got already any field experience? (you
can send me your CV if you want)
3. Your
contribution to the course: Is there anything you have worked, or are working
on, that you want to share during the course?
4. Your
plans: what is your next academic target and how this course fits with it?
5. Your
expectations regarding the course: are there any specific topics you would like
to be covered?
Finally, let me stress the point that the main purpose of
this seminar if to bridge your studies with some real-life experience. Hence, I
don’t plan to engage in any formal teaching but I can promise that I will share
with you whatever I find thought provoking. I also promise that I will be
available for follow-up discussions over coffee if needed. I very much look
forward to interacting with you.
Kindest regards
Mattia Prayer Galletti
Senior Evaluation Officer
Independent Office of Evaluation
Tel. +39 06 5459 2294
Skype: mattia.ifad
www.ifad.org
"I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw
that life was service. I acted and behold, service was joy."
— Rabindranath Tagore
__________________________
Here are two replies:
Hello Mattia,
I'll answer your questions in order.
1) What have I studied?
I am a first-year doctoral student in Environmental Science, Policy, and
Management here at Berkeley (I'm Lynn Huntsinger's advisee), so have no
experience here yet. I am currently enrolled in "Political Ecology"
and in "Sociology of Forests and Wildlands," as well as a required
seminar for my cohort. Prior to
Berkeley, I have a self-taught M.A. in Environmental Studies with a
concentration in Social Ecology. My coursework for the program had four foci:
climate change; energy security (both global and specific to the U.S., mostly
focusing on peak oil); alternative food movements (agroecology, organics,
etc.); and green urban design and planning.
My undergraduate work mostly focused on conservation biology. During my undergraduate
years I spent six months in Namibia, four in Ecuador, and two in British
Columbia working on and studying conservation issues.
2) My work experience is quite varied, and also atypical of
a doctoral student. Rather than trying to explain, I'm attaching a CV. Not
listed there is a recent temporary field research technician position at Oregon
State University setting up research sites for a long-term forestry study.
3) Is there anything you want to share during the
course? My most relevant
experience for this course is the two years my wife and I spent in Ethiopia
with the Peace Corps. We were working in the environmental sector, living in an
illegal village in the middle of Bale Mountains National Park. While our
village had fairly minimal direct impact from development projects, we
certainly witnessed many other instances of development in various forms around
the country. Given how much aid and development money is spent in Ethiopia, it
might be helpful to have the viewpoint of someone who saw how it was used and
how it worked/didn't work first-hand.
4) What is your next academic goal, and how does this course
fit that goal? I am pursuing a Ph.D.
in a field with which I have very little experience. My research goal is to
examine how international (mostly) development practices affect the land use
and land management practices of nomadic pastoralists. I do not have a
geographic region selected yet due to lack of the necessary contacts, but China
and/or Mongolia currently seem promising. Following my degree I intend to advocate
for better land rights for nomads, and for a more appropriate application of
development funds/efforts so as to maintain as high degree of autonomy among
those groups as possible. For example, the forced settlement of nomads by
governments around the world is a primary concern, as are large-scale
development projects (e.g. dams, agricultural land grabs) that result in
physical displacement of nomadic groups from traditionally occupied lands.
5) My hope for this course is to gain a better understanding
of the process by which development grant applications (i.e. future projects)
are evaluated and judged. Why do some projects get funded and not others? What
attributes of the prospective project site are considered when evaluating a
grant proposal? How are effects to the local population (target and non-target)
determined and weighed? As an advocate
for an indigenous group, how would someone fight for or against a development
proposal being funded? How can the funding process be improved to better
respond to the relevant ethics, ecology, and cultural issues of a particular
project area?
Thanks for asking for input, Mattia. I'm very much looking
forward to the class.
-Tracy
-----------------------
Hello there! A pleasure to make your acquaintance. My name
is Pierce Gordon, a MS/PhD student here at Berkeley in the Energy and Resources
Group. I'm glad you asked these questions to find out a bit more about me. So,
here goes!
1. Your
academic experience: what have you studied so far?
I have undergraduate bachelor's degrees in Applied Physics
and Aerospace Engineering, through a dual-degree engineering program between
Morehouse College and the University of Michigan. I am currently in my second
year of my Master's program here at Berkeley, on a track towards a PhD.
2. Your
work experience: in particular, have you got already any field experience? (you
can send me your CV if you want)
My CV is attached.
3. Your
contribution to the course: Is there anything you have worked, or are working
on, that you want to share during the course?
To be quite honest, my experience in international
development is relatively thin. I do have a few I'd like to speak on, however:
The project which lit my fire in international assistance
you can see on my CV; it was the HelpNSBEHelpHaiti program. In the spirit of
the Haitian 2010 earthquake, a year later I orchestrated a campus-wide
fundraising initiative which raised over $2,000 for a working water pump in
Croix-Marchaterre, Haiti.
I also became a part of the Human Needs Project in my first
year of graduate study, in the hopes that it would turn into breeding ground
for dissertation research. I acted as a consultant for a small energy grid for
a developing co-op which aimed to serve many of the needs of a large stake of
Kenyan residents in Kibera, Nairobi, a well-known slum.
As someone who has built my current experience upon being a
critic of inequitable systems, and a trained scholar, I'm here to learn from
other's experiences, and can't wait to hear about the other development
opportunities that you and the other registered students have experienced.
4. Your
plans: what is your next academic target and how this course fits with it?
My next academic target is the Masters, followed by the PhD.
My research interests include human-centered design
practices for tangible technologies for the multidimensionally poor. Many
design projects instilled by NGOs, multinational corporations, governmental
institutions, Bretton Woods Institutions, and academic breeding grounds
currently use interdisciplinary methods like never before. However, many
previous forays into the fields by technological designers have created
failures which are diverse, yet related. I intend to research the processes
through which powerful entities create these technologies, the actors and
fields included, and how multiple variables in design contribute to technology
success.
I love having the opportunity to hear about current trends,
opportunities, and causes for alarm concerning the community from individuals
who make a career about the work, and what are important fields of interest to
research and become an activist for.
5. Your
expectations regarding the course: are there any specific topics you would like
to be covered?
I'd love to learn about:
The place, and relationship between disparate actors in the
development community,
the design and implementation of projects, through history,
and today (differences, similarities, etc).
personal advice for the development community about what is
actually keeping us back from solving many problems,
and the place of certain intervention technologies (ICTs,
water cleansing, sanitation, energy, cooking, lighting, health) that are
helping communities out of poverty.