Monthly Corner

F Njahîra Wangarî - Book Chapter

Abstract
"This chapter blends African oral and written narratives, lived experiences with a genetic chronic disability and a Roman Catholic upbringing. These will be interrogated to illustrate the role of alternative explanations in influencing advocacy and activism for the lives, wellbeing, dignity and inclusion of persons with disabilities. Particularly, this chapter is an exploration of self-identity and how persons with disabilities are conditioned to view ourselves in specific ways while highlighting alternative perceptions available is presented by the author. It engages the works of several African and African-descendent authors who feature persons with disabilities as characters in their books and relies on narrative prosthesis as the basis for this engagement."

Alok Srivastava -  Article in Journal of Generic Medicines

Claudy Vouhé shared Publication

It relates strongly to the evaluation of public policies and gender equality by parliaments, as it is about Gender responsive budgeting.

Svetlana Negroustoueva shared Publication

Hooshmand Alizadeh Recently published book

now available from Springer.

Yaounde Declaration, Parliamentarians commitment for evaluation

African parliamentarians issued Yaounde declaration highlighting theirundefined commitment for development evaluation. This is the first time parliamentarians issued declaration for evaluation ever in the history. Please read the declaration attached and share it with your networks. Parliamentarians from African countries gathered at the 7th AfrEA conference and initiated African Parliamentarians Network on Development Evaluation at Yaounde, Cameroon on 4th march 2014. The initiative was supported by AfDB, UNICEF, UN Women, EvalPartners.

Views: 366

Attachments:

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

This is indeed a meaningful event. Do you mean unified rather than undefined?

Great work!

RSS

© 2025   Created by Rituu B Nanda.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service