Ethiopia
Workshop february/march 2003
Ethiopia hosted two linked, inter-disciplinary workshops, during
February and March 2003. These were organised by Alula Pankhurst
(Addis Ababa University) and Pip Bevan (Bath University).
Ethiopian social scientists attended the first workshop.
The topics discussed were
- the WeD conceptual framework
- the ‘reality of poverty, inequality and quality of life’
- methodology
- key policy issues relating to poverty in Ethiopia
Six of the participants in the workshop were asked
to use the material generated from the discussions and/or their
own expertise to prepare short papers for presentation at the second
workshop.
The second workshop was an international forum. WeD
members from Bath joined the Ethiopian social scientists in addition
to representatives of NGOs, Economic Policy Research Institute,
the World Bank, DFID, the British Council, the UN and WHO. A number
of these have agreed to be members of the WeD Ethiopia Advisory
Group; others will be involved in different aspects of the WeD Ethiopian
research programme.
A few ‘Ethiopian’ reactions to the WeD
programme are listed below.
· With some additional effort (the WeD framework)
can be further developed to provide a ‘common grammar’
and hence the basis for shared discourse among researchers that
are otherwise kept apart by their discipline-specific theories,
models, paradigms, concepts, and terminologies; not to mention the
well-known methods biases.’ (Yeraswork Admassie, Department
of Sociology and Social Anthropology)
· ‘Poverty stands at the forefront of a plethora of
predicaments that Ethiopian society faces at present. The quest
for overcoming this problem, however, is constrained by a mix of
the vagaries of nature and human folly anchored in climatic, socio-cultural
and economic and political factors’ (Kassahun Berhanu, Department
of Political Science)
· ‘Culture has some 50 definitions’ (Habtamu
Wondimu, Department of Psychology)
· ‘..data concerning perceptions and attitudes extracted
from the folkloric materials seem to be more reliable, more rich
and closer to reflecting the soul of a community and the individual
than the ones obtained through interviews, specially those made
during short touristy journeys to rural communities.’ (Fekade
Azeze, Department of Ethiopian Languages and Literature)
The WeD group from Bath made three field visits.
- Addis Ababa Kebeles 06, 08 and 22 which contain concentrations
of urban poverty. The visit was organised by the ‘Concern’
project which works with very poor street traders.
And two rural sites
These were studied by Pip Bevan and Alula Pankhurst
in 1995 and are possible sites for the WeD Programme.
The Bath visitors undertook the six-hour journey to
Tirfe, mainly along the highway which leads to Kenya, hence recently
re-tarmaced. In contrast the journey to Dessu was on unmade roads,
through the highlands north east of Addis Ababa, culminating in
a rapid and bumpy descent into the Rift Valley. Here in the valley
lowlands, amongst the camels and other livestock, they saw local
community irrigation schemes. Unfortunately, this site rarely receives
sufficient rain and this year conditions were worse than usual;
they passed a food aid distribution centre surrounded by people,
and donkeys, receiving rations.
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