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Human development and decent Work: Why some concepts succeed and others fail to make an impact


Type

Article

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Authors

Sehnbruch, K 
Agloni, N 
Piasna, A 

Abstract

jats:titleABSTRACT</jats:title>jats:pThis article examines the impact of the International Labour Organization's concept of Decent Work on development thinking and the academic literature. We attempt to answer the question of what makes a development initiative successful by comparing the decent work approach to the United Nation Development Programme's Human Development concept (in conjunction with the human development indicator). We consider that the latter has been one of the most successful development concepts ever to have been launched, while the impact of decent work by comparison has been limited. Our hypothesis relating to the question of what makes a development initiative successful has three fundamental components: first, a solid theoretical foundation has to justify the launch of a development concept. A second vital factor is the availability of sufficient national and internationally comparable data that enables researchers and policy makers alike to apply the concept, preferably by means of a synthetic indicator. Third, the political will and institutional structure of the development institution that launches a concept is a key factor, particularly if data availability is limited as countries then have to be persuaded to generate new data.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

Decent Work, Human Development, Human Development Indicators, Employment, Development Institutions

Journal Title

Development and Change

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0012-155X
1467-7660

Volume Title

46

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
The authors would like to thank the Cambridge Humanities Research Grants Scheme, the European Union (FP7 project ‘Nopoor’), and the Conicyt/Fondap Proyect number 15130009 for partial funding provided for this paper.