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Why has the Peru One Laptop Per Child program failed to live up to its promise?

The One Laptop Per Child Foundation is a US-based charity established by Nicholas Negroponte in 2005 to “empower the world’s poorest through education”. OLPC set out to achieve this by designing a laptop computer specifically for the conditions in developing countries, and partnering with the governments in these countries to roll-out the laptops to all their schools and children.

Over 2,000,000 children and teachers in Latin America are part of an OLPC project, with another 500,000 in Africa and the rest of the world but how should such projects be evaluated? This paper uses the ‘Design Reality Gap’ framework to look at the OLPC project in Peru in more detail, demonstrating how delivery problems have obscured much of the potential of its innovative underlying approach. It concludes that radical changes are necessary for future phases of the project in order that the potential social impact of OLPC can be properly assessed and evaluated.

Author:Matt Haikin  

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Focus on Corruption: How to secure the aims of decentralization in Peru by improving good governance at the regional level

Decentralization holds out the promise of improving democratic participation and public service delivery, but this can be undermined where week institutions allow corruption to flourish. In this joint policy analysis paper, the authors create an econometric model of corruption at the regional level in Peru to inform policy recommendations aimed at the Peruvian National Council of Decentralization and the Office of the Public Defender. The paper was awarded Most Outstanding Policy Analysis in 2005 at the MPA/ID program at Harvard Kennedy School.

Authors: Aaron Ausland and Alfonso Tolmos

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Focus on Corruption: How to secure the aims of decentralization in Peru by improving good governance at the regional level

Change or Continuity? Female Sex Workers’ Lives in the Dominican Republic

As a response to many studies in which the exploitative nature of sex tourism was pronounced, the work in review about the Dominican Republic emphasises that female sex workers are local agents who take advantage of their clients, transforming their bodies into resources for economic independence, while challenging structures of patriarchy and inverting gender relations. Neo-liberal economic reforms led to a change in the household’s income distribution and gave female sex workers, on a practical level, the possibility to increase their economic independence and status. However, as this paper argues, sex workers’ agency is very limited within well-defined structures and gender roles are not transformed on an ideological level. This paper puts into perspective sex worker’s lives and shows the importance of not loosing sight of structural forces such as economic constraints and familial obligations, and alerts researchers not to apply Western concepts of emancipation.

Author:David Parduhn

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Change or Continuity? Female Sex Workers’ Lives in the Dominican Republic (3662)

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