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- Artificial Intelligence for Global Health (7)
- Centro de excelencia para los sistemas de registro civil y estadísticas vitales (5)
- COVID-19 Programa de Innovación en Inteligencia Artificial y Datos del Sur Global (5)
- Datos abiertos para el desarrollo (3)
- Economías sostenibles e inclusivas (38)
- Educación y ciencia (47)
- Fondo de innovación de vacunas para el ganado (3)
- Gobernanza democrática e inclusiva (38)
- IDRC Research Chairs on Forced Displacement (4)
- Iniciativa Think tank (3)
- Inteligencia artificial para el desarrollo (10)
- Programa de intercambio de conocimientos e innovación (16)
- Salud global (34)
- Sistemas alimentarios resilientes al clima (29)
- Transformando la economía del cuidado a través de la inversión de impacto (5)
Resultados de la búsqueda
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Investigación en acciónDesarrolloEn vísperas del segundo aniversario de la pandemia, el IDRC reunió las lecciones aprendidas sobre los esfuerzos de respuesta y recuperación.
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LibrosEconomíaFormal and Informal Enterprises in Francophone Africa: Moving Toward a Vibrant Private SectorPublication Date
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NovedadesNo relevant topicsNuevos proyectos abordan los efectos socioeconómicos del COVID-19 en poblaciones vulnerables¿Qué programas son más eficaces para proteger a los trabajadores informales de América Latina contra los impactos de la pandemia de COVID-19? ¿Qué paquetes de estímulo ayudarán a los países africanos a reconstruir economías que sean más inclusivas y ecológicas? ¿Qué intervenciones garantizarán la seguridad de los refugiados rohingya y las comunidades cercanas en Bangladesh durante y después de la pandemia?Date
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PerspectivasCiencia y tecnología SaludSe necesita apoyo internacional para responder a COVID-19 en países de bajos ingresosLos países de bajos ingresos necesitan políticas basadas en evidencia para responder y recuperarse de la pandemia.
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PerspectivasMedio ambienteExisten soluciones para las ciudades más afectadas por el cambio climáticoThe world’s cities must become part of the solution for climate change.
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PerspectivasRecursos naturales Medio ambiente SaludAcción Climática efectiva: por qué la biodiversidad es tan importante
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PerspectivasRecursos naturales Medio ambiente SaludCambio climático, comunicaciones y colaboración
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Testimonio de adjudicado IDRCNo relevant topics
Southern leaders look to downstream benefits
Southern leaders look to downstream benefits
What makes a good leader? Are the desired qualities the same the world over and in every field? Those questions were at the heart of Emma Fieldhouse’s research as a 2017 IDRC Research Award Recipient. “There is a lack of clarity on how conceptions of leaders might differ across regions,” says Fieldhouse. “The perspective of Southern leaders is noticeably absent.”
Fieldhouse focused on four leadership development programs for young researchers in the Global South to learn about how they conceptualize leadership, how they integrate gender and equity considerations, and how they define and evaluate the successes of their programs. Program participants described what good leadership in their contexts meant to them, and the challenges they faced in getting there.
For programs and participants, becoming a leader wasn’t seen as an end in itself, but as a means of achieving downstream positive effects on institutions and communities. For example, Emma found that women taking part in one program faced great challenges in being accepted as leaders in their communities, “yet they were so determined to persevere and succeed so they could make life better for others.”
Fieldhouse learned that emerging leaders in the South overwhelmingly believe that interpersonal skills are the most essential leadership elements, even in the realm of research. That includes collaboration, building trust, empathy, and nurturing other leaders. “Knowing this is important in order to assess success, because if we get this wrong, we could be evaluating things that don’t really matter, or we could be further marginalizing perspectives and experiences that should matter,” she says.
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Testimonio de adjudicado IDRCNo relevant topics
Climate change could be a boon for urban residents
Climate change could be a boon for urban residents
Trung NguyenResearch Awards2017Climate change is a crucial issue in Trung Huu Nguyen’s home country of Vietnam, particularly its coastal cities. But, says the 2017 IDRC Research Award Recipient, most of the research on climate change perceptions focuses on rural farmers and overlooks urban residents.
“Perceptions of climate change are important because they influence behaviours and response, and contribute to informed policy decisions,” says Nguyen. Working in the coastal cities of Hoi An and Nha Trang, he found that residents not only recognized impacts of climate change such as extreme heat and flooding, but had adapted in various ways, including diversifying their income-generation activities.
As Nguyen’s earlier experiences and education focused on rural communities and livelihoods, his fieldwork allowed him to gain better insight into the impacts of climate change on urban residents who depend on tourism. For them, it could mean a better and longer business season, he says.
To enable residents to adapt to future changes, he concluded that greater efforts should be made to inform them of predicted impacts and incorporate their concerns into urban and climate policies.
Working at IDRC was Nguyen’s “first professional experience abroad,” which allowed him to develop professional networks and hone his analytical skills, including in gender analysis. “It was an excellent opportunity to enhance my knowledge and skills for research on climate change impacts and adaptation strategies to reduce climate risk,” he says.
Nguyen also credits the research award with broadening his view of research for development. “Before IDRC, I worked mainly for development programs and projects insofar as they contributed to the goals of the projects, rather than global perspectives,” he says. At IDRC, he learned that programs can contribute to broader development goals.
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Testimonio de adjudicado IDRCNo relevant topics
Entrepreneurship draws Southeast Asia’s youth
Entrepreneurship draws Southeast Asia’s youth
Jonathan De LucaResearch Awards2017“The top priority for youth in Myanmar and Vietnam isn’t a high salary,” says Jonathan de Luca, 2017 IDRC Research Award Recipient. “It’s adequate health, being able to spend time with family, and to develop and use skills.”
This finding suggests that policymakers and business leaders don’t understand the needs of young
women and men, he says. “Interviews with policymakers and business leaders show that they believe that providing better paying work is sufficient.”
De Luca’s research focused on youth livelihoods in medium-sized cities of the Greater Mekong sub-region. “Dawei in Myanmar and Quy Nhon in Vietnam are experiencing rapid economic development as a result of export-oriented industrialization and manufacturing,” he says. Despite the steady jobs this industrialization creates, he found that young people are much more interested in self-employment because of the freedom and autonomy it affords them.
De Luca confesses that “I really had no idea how everything would come together until a month into the analysis phase where I took a step back and thought “Ah-hah! This actually is telling a really interesting story!”
“I can’t forget that my research exists only because there were young people in Vietnam and Myanmar who wanted to talk to me about the issues that affect them and tell me about their aspirations and hopes for life and work in the future,” he says. “I not only owe it to them for helping me to complete my research, but I also owe it to them to have my work contribute to some change in this world.”
“So even though my year at IDRC is over, I’m going to take this research with me and try and help it to influence something in some way.”
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