Type | Working Paper |
Title | Asset-Based community development in Myanmar: Theory, fit and practice |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
Abstract | Asset-Based Community Development in Myanmar: Theory, fit and practice Effective community development empowers the marginalised, powerless and poor to achieve better life outcomes and a higher level of wellbeing for themselves. This requires imagining their world differently and taking action to change their circumstances, implying a high level of participation and empowerment (Eyben, Kabeer, & Cornwall, 2008, p. 3). Myanmar has been a highly complex and very restrictive socio-political context for poverty alleviation and development activity over the past two decades. Attempts to address the high levels of poverty in the country were frustrated by a government highly suspicious of the motivations of international agencies, by a domestic priority on security over poverty alleviation, and by strained international relations over human rights concerns1 , which resulted in economic sanctions and restrictive international assistance policies. Recent political reform is bringing very welcome change, however research conducted prior to this reform (Ware 2012) found highly participatory, community-led approaches to development to be effective forms of poverty mitigation and community empowerment even within this restrictive context. One of the more highly participatory approaches first researched then is now the focus of the discussion in this chapter. |
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