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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)
Lisa Denney
Lisa Denney

Lisa Denney

Research Officer, Politics and Governance

Lisa Denney joined ODI as a Research Officer in November 2010. She has recently completed her PhD in International Politics at Aberystwyth University, focusing on the challenges of engaging informal security actors in DFID’s policing and justice reform programmes in Sierra Leone. Lisa has work experience on issues of disarmament, citizen security and youth education/reintegration in West Africa and East Timor and has also worked as a Research Assistant at the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland, Australia. Her interests focus on the relationship between security and development, post-conflict peacebuilding and informal governance practices, particularly the roles played by chiefs, secret societies and trade associations at the local level. To date, her research has focused on the inability of donors to engage with these non-state governance actors in their efforts to transform the political landscape of fragile states, and therefore the need to better account for local governance practices, rather than focusing on high level politics and centralised states.

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Lisa Denney

What Egypt tells us that development discourse doesn’t

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 7 February 2011
Events in the Middle East and North Africa challenge recent development discourse in two important ways. Prevailing wisdom in relation to governance tells us: that change is never immediate, but rather achieved through incremental, long-term reforms; and, increasingly, that we need to accept the realities of political systems and work with them, including when this involves ‘big men’.

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Lisa Denney

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