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Value Chain Development and the Poor by Jason Donovan, Dietmar Stoian, Jon Hellin ISBN 9781788530569, 178853056X instant download

  • SKU: EBN-239192620
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Authors:Jason Donovan, Dietmar Stoian, Jon Hellin
Pages:368 pages
Year:2020
Publisher:Practical Action Publishing
Language:english
File Size:24.69 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9781788530569, 178853056X
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

Value Chain Development and the Poor by Jason Donovan, Dietmar Stoian, Jon Hellin ISBN 9781788530569, 178853056X instant download

Since the early 2000s, value chain development (VCD) has figured prominently on the agendas of donors, governments, and NGOs in pursuit of market-based options to poverty reduction, food security, gender equity, and other goals.

Researchers have shown interest in value chains as a theoretical construct for studying interactions between farmers and markets, while practitioners have focused their attention on approaches and tools for applying VCD in the field.

Despite considerable investments in VCD, limited evidence exists on the extent to which different approaches to VCD have advanced diverse development goals. This knowledge gap sounds alarms, not least because of the complexities involved and the multitude of options for getting it right (or wrong).

This collection offers unique perspectives on VCD from both practitioners and researchers. It explores how VCD is implemented in the field, options for innovation in design, and the potential for VCD to achieve impact at scale. Altogether, the book provides a timely critique of current approaches, pointing at options for more reflexive learning, new collaborative frameworks, and faster innovation of VCD.

The book is an invaluable resource for those working with NGO programming, development think tanks, donor organizations or private foundations, or researchers with an interest in rural development.

‘Value chains need not and often do not include or benefit poor people, but there are a number of collections of case studies about those that do. This book by three acknowledged experts who have many years of field experience in appraising and developing value chains goes further. It includes some important cases, from Latin America, Africa and SE Asia, but most of the book is about what has been learned, how value chains can be developed so that they do include poor people, and do not exclude them.

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