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HistoriaDesarrollo Salud Economía Información y communicación Medio ambiente Política socialel IDRC en la conferencia Women Deliver 2023
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NovedadesDesarrollo Economía Alimentación y agricultura Política social AdministraciónEl IDRC apoya cinco alianzas para abordar prioridades en la recuperación del COVID-19El IDRC está invirtiendo 1 millón de dólares canadienses en proyectos seleccionados de una amplia cartera de investigaciones lideradas por Canadá, para abordar las desigualdades socioeconómicas globales que se han agudizado por la pandemia de COVID-19.Date
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PerspectivasDesarrollo Administración Medio ambienteLa justicia pasa al centro del escenario a medida que aumenta la acción climáticaSe necesitan estrategias de justicia para garantizar que las acciones climáticas no exacerben las desigualdades existentes ni creen otras nuevas.
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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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