Developmental Leadership Program Explained

Developmental Leadership Program
Type:International organization
Founded Date:July 2009
Location:Birmingham, United Kingdom
Area Served:Worldwide
Homepage:http://www.dlprog.org/

The Developmental Leadership Program (DLP, or DLPROG) is an international research and policy initiative. The Program looks at the political processes that underpin development goals such as sustainable economic growth, political stability and inclusive social development. In particular, DLP explores the central role of leaders, elites and coalitions in developing countries and how they can help or hinder the positive reform of institutions and policies in the public, private and civil society sectors. DLP is funded primarily by the Australian Aid Program.

Background

The core aims and activities of DLP

The core aim of DLP is to develop a clearer understanding of the political processes that support developmental change and to embed that understanding in the thinking, policies and practices of the wider development community. DLP does this by:

Central argument: politics is the key

Organisational structure

DLP is run by a Program Management Team. While DLP's funding comes primarily from the Australian national government (DFAT), the Program is independent and autonomous. As of March 2021, DLP's management team consists of:

History

DLP has its origins in the work of the Leaders, Elites and Coalitions Research Program (LECRP), which began in 2007. It evolved into the Leadership Program: Developmental Leaders, Elites and Coalitions (LPDLEC) in 2009 before adopting its current form.

Publications

DLP has published research on the following themes; activism, adaptive management, advocacy, agency, aid, climate change, coalitions, collective action, contestation, corruption, developmental leadership, education, elites, fragile states, gender, governance, growth, inequality, leadership, legitimacy, monitoring, evaluation and learning, networks, perceptions of leadership, political analysis, political settlements, politics, power, service delivery, state-building, thinking and working politically, values, and women's leadership.

DLP Publications can be viewed here https://www.dlprog.org/publications DLP Opinions can be viewed here https://www.dlprog.org/opinions

External links

Notes and References

  1. See, for example: Harrison, T. and Kostka, G. (2012) “Manoeuvres for a Low Carbon State: The Local Politics of Climate Change in China and India”, DLP Research Paper 22; and Tadros, M. (2011) “Working Politically Behind Red Lines: Structure and agency in a comparative study of women’s coalitions in Egypt and Jordan”, DLP Research Paper 12. http://www.dlprog.org/ftp/