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Shaping policy for development

An overview of Lagoro IDP camp in Kitgum District, northern Uganda, 20 May 2007. Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Thu, 10/03/2013 - 09:36 -- Anonymous (not verified)
Fletcher Tembo
Fletcher Tembo

Fletcher Tembo

Fletcher Tembo is a Research Fellow within RAPID. He has been working in the RAPID Group since January 2007. He manages the Mwananchi Project, working with partners in seven African countries to strengthen citizen engagement in policy processes. His project experience includes networking, capacity development and action-research projects on relations among civil society, media and elected representatives and use of evidence to influence good governance. Fletcher also coordinates ODI M&E and Learning inputs into Kenya Drivers of Accountability Programme (Kenya DAP); and the Africa component of the Evidence Based Policy in Development Network. He coordinates research relationships with Japan, especially the JICA Research Institute and GRIPS.

His main research interests inclue: the roles of non-state actors in good governance and transparency, aid and poverty reduction strategies, Japanese aid and the ‘One Village One Product’ model, analysis of donor modalities for supporting civil society in developing countries, analysis of patterns and trends of capacity development support mechanisms for non-state actors in developing countries, the design and monitoring of community-based development projects, and social accountability tools.
His book, Participation, Negotiation and Poverty, emphasised the importance of understanding the power and politics of negotiations between local communities and civil society organisations, with non-governmental organisations and state actors, in order to design effective ‘citizen empowerment’ projects. His publication ‘Poverty Reduction: are the strategies working?’ was widely used in reviews of poverty reduction strategies in the context of seeking to rebalance accountabilities from international donors to a country’s citizens in aid delivery mechanisms.

Fletcher has a PhD in International and Rural development from the University of Reading. His thesis was on ‘Understanding 'agency' through interface image-conflicts for improving the design of NGOs' social transformation projects’. He also has an MA in Rural Social Development from the University of Reading. Before joining RAPID, Fletcher was a Senior Economic Justice Policy Adviser for World Vision UK and managed Community Area Development Programmes in Malawi.

Outputs

Making women's voices count: from participation to power

Event - Public event - 17 May 2012 13:00 - 14:00 (GMT+01 (BST))

As media celebration of women’s role in the 'Arab Spring' revolutions clearly demonstrates, there is growing interest in the value of women's participation in the shaping and reshaping of governance systems and processes. But when the 'real decisions' start to be made – from household to district, national to international – women disappear. What needs to change to ensure that women’s voices really count?

Demand-side governance: are we overstating the claims on social accountability?

Event - Public event - 21 March 2012 12:00 - 13:30 (GMT+00)

This event will represent the first of six discussions around the broader theme of ‘demanding accountability from the bottom-up: examining what works,what does not work, and why'. These themes reflect on the four years of implementing Governance and Transparency Fund (GTF) programmes such as Mwananchi,  in various parts of the world.  This event considers how a number of GTF programmes and projects focus directly on building grassroots capacity to demand improvements in state provision of public goods, especially by hitherto marginalised groups (women, disabled people, youths).
The speakers and discussants have been selected to provide a critical review of this theme before facilitating an open discussion among participants so that they can provide their experiences as well.

Citizen voice and state accountability: towards theories of change that embrace contextual dynamics

Publication - Discussion papers - 27 January 2012
This Working Paper provides a critical analysis of a series of citizen voice and accountability (CV&A) cases from the Mwananchi Governance and Transparency Fund (GTF) programme in order to develop some patterns of observation and thought lines which, when put together, form an analytical framework for developing theories of change (ToCs) for CV&A projects.

Pages

Download CV
CV File: 
189.pdf

(pdf, 106.47k)