Home
Site Map
Foreword
Foreword
Contributors & Copyright
Introduction
Introduction
Methods
Sites
Why Pando and East Kalimantan?
Municipal Governments and Decentralisation in Bolivia
Municipal Governments and Decentralisation in Indonesia
Part I. Concepts
Wellbeing and Poverty
Poverty is More Than Low Income
Poverty is a Lack of Wellbeing
Poverty and Wellbeing Have Many Dimensions
Further Reading
Local Governments and Poverty
How can Local Governments Reduce Poverty?
Four Steps to Improve Local Governmental Action
Further Reading
Forests and Poverty
How do Forests Influence Poverty?
What is Poverty in Forest Communities?
Are Forests Safety Nets, Poverty Traps or Escape Routes?
Further Reading
Part II. Tools
Monitoring
What is monitoring?
Types of Monitoring
Indicators
When to monitor?
Who conducts monitoring?
Linking monitoring to planning
Participatory Planning
What is participatory planning?
Why is participatory planning useful?
When and where is participatory planning done?
Who should participate?
Tool 1: Interactive Mapping
What is interactive mapping?
Interactive mapping step-by-step
Use interactive mapping for monitoring
Tool 2: Wellbeing Monitoring
What is a local wellbeing monitoring system?
Wellbeing monitoring step-by-step
Step 1: Define purpose, develop plan and budget
Step 2: Develop local poverty indicators and formulate survey questions
Step 3: Design the sampling strategy
Step 4: Train staff and perform the survey
Step 5: Analyse and present the data
Step 6: Present findings
Tool 3: Community Evaluation
Evaluating local government programmes through community focus groups
Steps 1-3
Steps 4-6
Steps 7-8
Community evaluation step-by-step
Tool 4: Scenario-based Planning
What is scenario-based planning?
Scenario-based planning step-by-step
Visioning
Pathways
Final Remarks
Acknowledgements
Additional Resources
PDF Version
Site map
Home
Foreword
Introduction
Methods
Sites
Why Pando and East Kalimantan?
Municipal Governments and Decentralisation in Bolivia
Municipal Governments and Decentralisation in Indonesia
Part I. Concepts
Wellbeing and Poverty
Poverty is More Than Low Income
Poverty is a Lack of Wellbeing
Poverty and Wellbeing Have Many Dimensions
Further Reading
Local Governments and Poverty
How can Local Governments Reduce Poverty?
Four Steps to Improve Local Governmental Action
Further Reading
Forests and Poverty
How do Forests Influence Poverty?
What is Poverty in Forest Communities?
Are Forests Safety Nets, Poverty Traps or Escape Routes?
Further Reading
Part II. Tools
Monitoring
What is monitoring?
Types of Monitoring
Indicators
When to monitor?
Who conducts monitoring?
Linking monitoring to planning
Participatory Planning
What is participatory planning?
Why is participatory planning useful?
When and where is participatory planning done?
Who should participate?
Tool 1: Interactive Mapping
What is interactive mapping?
Interactive mapping step-by-step
Use interactive mapping for monitoring
Tool 2: Wellbeing Monitoring
What is a local wellbeing monitoring system?
Wellbeing monitoring step-by-step
Step 1: Define purpose, develop plan and budget
Step 2: Develop local poverty indicators and formulate survey questions
Step 3: Design the sampling strategy
Step 4: Train staff and perform the survey
Step 5: Analyse and present the data
Step 6: Present findings
Tool 3: Community Evaluation
Evaluating local government programmes through community focus groups
Steps 1-3
Steps 4-6
Steps 7-8
Community evaluation step-by-step
Tool 4: Scenario-based Planning
What is scenario-based planning?
Scenario-based planning step-by-step
Visioning
Pathways
Final Remarks
Acknowledgements
Additional Resources
PDF Version
© 2007 Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
Contributors and copyright information