(The Humanitarian Social Network)
How do you tell a compelling story about people in need that doesn’t simplify or stereotype?
I use my How Matters YouTube channel to highlight portrayals of international assistance that inspire more nuanced conversations about the politics of global development and international aid. Frankly though, there’s not enough content to keep that page very active. Very few video-based products show people grappling with the realities of programming on the ground and the stories of grassroots change-makers too often remain…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on November 14, 2012 at 2:02am — 2 Comments
The storm’s a-comin’
I’m quickly writing this post before the 100-mile wide Hurricane Sandy, which has already killed 65 people in the Caribbean, takes the power out in Washington D.C. where I live.…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on October 29, 2012 at 10:12am — No Comments
Ideas please! Help shape the next “How Matters Hub”
Continue“For all of us who are in the ‘change the world’ business, we seldom reflect on our own attitudes and behaviours as donors, facilitators, managers, experts, technocrats. Yet we want to see change in the attitudes and behaviours of those we serve?! We do not want to change the power status quo within organisations and amongst ourselves, yet we are telling ‘communities’ to do so?!” ~from a …
Added by Jennifer Lentfer on September 24, 2012 at 3:41am — No Comments
Finding Room for Error
A guest post on how-matters.org by Mary Fifield
The power of learning is not just a slogan for many of us working in the non-profit sector. It's the value that undergirds the programs that we help deliver—programs designed to support people in discovering their own talents and skills to better their well-being, their environment, and their society. It's a value that supports our own…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on August 28, 2012 at 4:10am — No Comments
Games in International Development: Fad or Innovation?
People have been playing more games these days in Washington D.C. And I don’t mean the strategies of the Obama and Romney spin teams.
Two recent events suggest games’ growing popularity in D.C. aid circles: this one I attended at the World Wildlife Fund earlier this month and this Tuesday’s upcoming …
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on August 26, 2012 at 9:55am — No Comments
Want to make aid better? Let us play!
Aidspeak called for three changes to make aid better by August 1st. Oops – instead they’re getting one by August 3rd.
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Give every aid worker (local and international, cleaner to country director) a social change investment fund of US$1,000, over which they have total personal discretion.
Task each…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on August 3, 2012 at 4:00am — No Comments
It’s all about the layers, Justin!
Long-haul international flights are a great opportunity to catch up on action adventure movies I’d never bother seeing in the U.S. On my flight from Johannesburg on Friday night, I watched In Time, a Justin Timberlake as Robin Hood sci-fi film in which time replaces money as the world’s currency and presents just as many challenges to the have and have-nots.
This got me thinking about the currencies of international aid. On this trip,…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on June 25, 2012 at 10:46am — No Comments
A new kind of aid donor: Four things they do differently
We all know there are aid donors and international funding partners out there that want to change “business as usual” in development (or at least people inside those institutions that do). We also all know that for various reasons, they’re not moving quick enough for those working on the ground.
New donors could come in and fill the gaps. But more importantly, we need a new kind of donor, whether they are recent to the scene or not.
The organizations that I see doing…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on June 18, 2012 at 5:19am — 10 Comments
The too-often forgotten, yet critical first half of M&E
I’ve been enjoying inProgress’ new manual, “Integrated Monitoring: A Practical Manual for Organizations That Want to Achieve Results," on the metro over the last couple of days. (Thanks to the recommendation from @txtpablo.) The blog, Development That Works, recently discussed the same issue in its…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on May 30, 2012 at 4:28am — No Comments
Site Visits: The Feedback You’ve Never Heard
Four leaders from African organizations sat down to give us their frank feedback about site visits from funders a few years ago. I recently ran across my notes from the discussion, and because they offered such good reminders, I am sharing them here. Organization founders from Ethiopia, Kenya, South Africa, and Lesotho offer the following important, though too-often-unheard insights from a local group’s perspective.
(Pssst, pay attention, donors and aid workers. This is what your…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on May 22, 2012 at 7:08pm — No Comments
Sarah Davitt added a discussion to the group NGOs & Gender (Pretty on Paper)
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