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Participation: the New Tyranny?

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TLDR
The case for participation as Tyranny as mentioned in this paper was made by Bill Cooke and Uma Kothari, who argued that people's knowledge, participation and Patronage were operations and representation in rural development.
Abstract
* 1. The Case for Participation as Tyranny - Bill Cooke and Uma Kothari * 2. 'People's Knowledge', Participation and Patronage: Operations and Representations in Rural Development - David Mosse * 3. Institutions, Agency and the Limitations of Participatory Approaches to Development - Frances Cleaver * 4. Pluralism, Participation and Power: Joint Forest Management in India - Nicholas Hildyard, Pandurang Hegde, Paul Wolvekamp, Somasekhare Reddy * 5. Participatory Development at the World Bank: The Primacy of Process - Paul Francis * 6. Beyond the Formulaic: Process and Practice in South Asian NGOs - John Hailey * 7. The Social-Psychological Limits of Participation? - Bill Cooke * 8. Insights into Participation from Critical Management and Labour Process Perspectives - Harry Taylor * 9. Participatory Development: Power, Knowledge and Social Control - Uma Kothari * 10. Beyond Participation: Strategies for Deeper Empowerment - Giles Mohan * 11. Participation as Spiritual Duty: Empowerment as Secular Subjection - Heiko Henkel and Roderick Stirrat * Bibliography

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Stakeholder participation for environmental management: A literature review

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of the development of participatory approaches in different disciplinary and geographical contexts, and reviews typologies that can be used to categorise and select participatory methods.
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Using Community-Based Participatory Research to Address Health Disparities

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Livelihoods perspectives and rural development

TL;DR: Livelihoods perspectives have been central to rural development thinking and practice in the past decade But where do such perspectives come from, what are their conceptual roots, and what influences have shaped the way they have emerged? as mentioned in this paper offers an historical review of key moments in debates about rural livelihoods, identifying the tensions, ambiguities and challenges of such approaches.
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Community Based (and Driven) Development: A Critical Review

TL;DR: In this article, the conceptual and empirical foundations of community-based and driven development (CBD) initiatives are reviewed, and the authors find that projects that rely on community participation have not been particularly effective at targeting the poor.
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Does Adaptive Management of Natural Resources Enhance Resilience to Climate Change

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that societies and communities dependent on natural resources need to enhance their capacity to adapt to the impacts of future climate change, particularly when such impacts could lie outside their experienced coping range.