ScholarGate
Assistent

Jämför metoder

Granska de valda metoderna sida vid sida; rader som skiljer sig är markerade.

Resilience Measurement for Development×Sustainable Livelihoods Framework×
ÄmnesområdeDevelopment StudiesDevelopment Studies
FamiljProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ursprungsår20161998
UpphovspersonFAO (RIMA); Christophe Béné and colleagues (conceptual framing)Robert Chambers & Gordon Conway; Ian Scoones; DFID
TypLatent-variable framework for measuring development resilienceAnalytical framework for understanding livelihoods and poverty
UrsprungskällaFAO (2016). RIMA-II: Resilience Index Measurement and Analysis-II. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome. link ↗Scoones, I. (1998). Sustainable Rural Livelihoods: A Framework for Analysis. IDS Working Paper 72. Institute of Development Studies, Brighton. link ↗
AliasRIMA, Resilience Index Measurement and Analysis, Resilience Capacity Index, Development Resilience MeasurementSLF, Sustainable Livelihoods Approach, SLA, DFID Livelihoods Framework
Närliggande44
SammanfattningResilience Measurement and Analysis is a family of methods for quantifying the ability of households and communities to withstand, recover from, and adapt to shocks and stresses while maintaining or improving their well-being, especially food security. Exemplified by the FAO's Resilience Index Measurement and Analysis (RIMA-II) and informed by Béné and colleagues' critical conceptual work, it treats resilience as a latent capacity inferred from observable assets, access to services, and adaptive behaviours, estimated statistically and tracked over time to inform and evaluate resilience-building interventions.The Sustainable Livelihoods Framework (SLF) is an analytical lens for understanding how poor households construct their livelihoods, drawing on five categories of capital assets within a vulnerability context that is mediated by institutions and policies. Crystallised by Robert Chambers and Gordon Conway and operationalised by Ian Scoones and the UK Department for International Development (DFID) in the late 1990s, it shifts development analysis from sector-by-sector or income-only views to a holistic, people-centred account of what people have, what they do with it, and what outcomes result.
ScholarGateDatamängd
  1. v1
  2. 2 Källor
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Källor
  3. PUBLISHED

Gå till sökningen Ladda ner bildspel

ScholarGateJämför metoder: Resilience Measurement for Development · Sustainable Livelihoods Framework. Hämtad 2026-06-24 från https://scholargate.app/sv/compare