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Featured researches published by Peter Mvula.


Development Policy Review | 2002

Participation and Impact of Poverty-oriented Public Works Projects in Rural Malawi

Ephraim Chirwa; Evious K. Zgovu; Peter Mvula

This article reports on factors influencing participation in the poverty-oriented public works programme in rural Malawi and analyses the determinants of the revealed positive socio-economic impact among the participants. The programme targets poor households through self-selection by offering a wage below the official minimum for rural areas. The empirical results show that most participants are poor and with little education. Probability of particpation is higher for members of female-headed households and households with longer periods of food insecurity, excess supply of labour, few assets and reservation wages below the wage offered in the programme. Taking account of selectivity bias, the impact of the programme increases with the gender (female) of participants and the numbers per household participating.


SpringerPlus | 2014

Early childhood development: the role of community based childcare centres in Malawi.

Alister Munthali; Peter Mvula; Lois Silo

BackgroundSomatic changes including growth and development of the brain of a human being occur very early in life. Programmes that enhance early childhood development (ECD) therefore should be part of the national agenda. Cognizant of this fact, the Malawi Government together with development partners facilitated the establishment of community-based child care centres (CBCCs) which are owned and managed by community members. This study was aimed at understanding how CBCCs operated and their core functions.MethodsUsing information from databases kept by the District Social Welfare Officers from all the 28 districts in Malawi, coupled with snowballing, all functioning CBCCs were enumerated. A questionnaire was administered to the head of the CBCC or a care giver. Highly trained Research Assistants also carried our observations of the structures around the centres and the activities that actually happened. Data was analysed using a Statistical Package for Social Sciences.ResultsCommunities provide structures, support for care givers, food, utensils, labour and play materials for the children in CBCCs. The first ECD centre was established in 1966 but the real surge in establishing these happened towards the end of the 1990s and by 2007 there were 5,665 CBCCs in Malawi caring for 407,468 children aged between 3 and 5 years. CBCCs were established to provide pre-primary school learning, and in some cases provide special care to orphans and other vulnerable.ConclusionsDespite the fact that most CBCC premises and structures fell short of the standards laid down by the CBCC profile, the activities and services provided were mostly to the book. Children were provided with nutritious foods and subjected to play that stimulated their cognitive and mental development. Despite the fact that some members of the community do not realize the value of the CBCCs, the existence of these institutions is an opportunity for the community to take care of their children communally, a task that has become imperative as a result of the upsurge in the number of orphans as a result of the HIV and AIDS epidemic. The study recommends that Malawi should take investments in ECD programmes as a priority.


Development Southern Africa | 2009

Common pool resource management in Lake Chilwa, Malawi: a wetland under pressure

Peter Mvula; Tobias Haller

This paper uses primary and secondary data sources to discuss changes in the management of the Lake Chilwa floodplain, Malawi, a wetland that is an important source of livelihood for over a million people who subsist on agriculture, fishing and birds. These common pool resources are under pressure, largely due to the economic value of the wetland and weaknesses in management. Colonial development split up this complex ecosystem into departmental districts and sections, making it hard to manage. Although the area is a Ramsar site, changes in economic interests combined with larger-scale economic developments have negatively affected the status of these resources, putting pressure on them and causing conflicts. The paper addresses the questions of entitlement to the use of interrelated common pool resources and power relations among local leaders, local people and immigrants to the area.


Journal of Policy Analysis and Management | 2018

Paying for Happiness: Experimental Results from a Large Cash Transfer Program in Malawi: Paying for Happiness

Kelly Kilburn; Sudhanshu Handa; Gustavo Angeles; Maxton Tsoka; Peter Mvula

Abstract This study analyzes the short‐term impact of an exogenous, positive income shock on caregivers’ subjective well‐being (SWB) in Malawi using panel data from 3,365 households targeted to receive Malawis Social Cash Transfer Program that provides unconditional cash to ultra‐poor, labor‐constrained households. The study consists of a cluster‐randomized, longitudinal design. After the baseline survey, half of these village clusters were randomly selected to receive the transfer and a follow‐up was conducted 17 months later. We find that the short‐term impact of household income increases from the cash transfer leads to substantial SWB gains among caregivers. After a years worth of transfers, caregivers in beneficiary households have higher life satisfaction and are more likely to believe in a better future. We examine whether program impacts on consumption, food security, resilience, and hopefulness could explain the increase in SWB but do not find that any of these mechanisms individually mediate our results.


Social Science & Medicine | 2016

Social networks, social participation, and health among youth living in extreme poverty in rural Malawi

Amelia Rock; Clare Barrington; Sara Abdoulayi; Maxton Tsoka; Peter Mvula; Sudhanshu Handa

Extensive research documents that social network characteristics affect health, but knowledge of peer networks of youth in Malawi and sub-Saharan Africa is limited. We examine the networks and social participation of youth living in extreme poverty in rural Malawi, using in-depth interviews with 32 youth and caregivers. We describe youths peer networks and assess how gender and the context of extreme poverty influence their networks and participation, and how their networks influence health. In-school youth had larger, more interactive, and more supportive networks than out-of-school youth, and girls described less social participation and more isolation than boys. Youth exchanged social support and influence within their networks that helped cope with poverty-induced stress and sadness, and encouraged protective sexual health practices. However, poverty hampered their involvement in school, religious schools, and community organizations, directly by denying them required material means, and indirectly by reducing time and emotional resources and creating shame and stigma. Poverty alleviation policy holds promise for improving youths social wellbeing and mental and physical health by increasing their opportunities to form networks, receive social support, and experience positive influence.


Evaluation | 2018

Managing relationships in qualitative impact evaluation of international development practice: QuIP choreography as a case study

James Copestake; Claire Allan; Wilm van Bekkum; Moges Belay; Tefera Goshu; Peter Mvula; Fiona Remnant; Erin Thomas; Zenawi Zerahun

Who does what and when during an impact evaluation has an important influence on the credibility and usefulness of the evidence generated. We explore such choreography from technical, political and ethical perspectives by reflecting on a case study that entailed collaborative design of a qualitative impact evaluation protocol (‘the QuIP’) and its pilot use in Ethiopia and Malawi. Double blind interviewing was employed to reduce project-specific confirmation bias, followed by staged ‘unblindfolding’ as a form of triangulation. We argue that these steps can enhance credibility of evidence, and that ethical concerns associated with them can be addressed by being open with stakeholders about the process. The case study illustrates scope for better use of qualitative impact evaluation methods in complex international development contexts.


BMC International Health and Human Rights | 2018

Combining survey data, GIS and qualitative interviews in the analysis of health service access for persons with disabilities

Arne H. Eide; Karin Dyrstad; Alister Munthali; Gert Van Rooy; Stine Hellum Braathen; Thomas Halvorsen; Frans Persendt; Peter Mvula; Jan Ketil Rød

BackgroundEquitable access to health services is a key ingredient in reaching health for persons with disabilities and other vulnerable groups. So far, research on access to health services in low- and middle-income countries has largely relied on self-reported survey data. Realizing that there may be substantial discrepancies between perceived and actual access, other methods are needed for more precise knowledge to guide health policy and planning. The objective of this article is to describe and discuss an innovative methodological triangulation where statistical and spatial analysis of perceived distance and objective measures of access is combined with qualitative evidence.MethodsThe data for the study was drawn from a large household and individual questionnaire based survey carried out in Namibia and Malawi. The survey data was combined with spatial data of respondents and health facilities, key informant interviews and focus group discussions. To analyse access and barriers to access, a model is developed that takes into account both measured and perceived access. The geo-referenced survey data is used to establish four outcome categories of perceived and measured access as either good or poor. Combined with analyses of the terrain and the actual distance from where the respondents live to the health facility they go to, the data allows for categorising areas and respondents according to the four outcome categories. The four groups are subsequently analysed with respect to variation in individual characteristics and vulnerability factors. The qualitative component includes participatory map drawing and is used to gain further insight into the mechanisms behind the different combinations of perceived and actual access.ResultsPreliminary results show that there are substantial discrepancies between perceived and actual access to health services and the qualitative study provides insight into mechanisms behind such divergences.ConclusionThe novel combination of survey data, geographical data and qualitative data will generate a model on access to health services in poor contexts that will feed into efforts to improve access for the most vulnerable people in underserved areas.


Journal of Contemporary African Studies | 2017

Malawi’s land problem and potential for rural conflict

Paul Kishindo; Peter Mvula

ABSTRACT Government agricultural policies which favour large-scale agriculture and rapid population growth on a limited land area have combined to create a situation of land poverty in many parts of Malawi, especially in the southern region of the country. The government’s response to land poverty has so far been focused on the creation of resettlement schemes. As such initiatives are expensive, they have tended to be piecemeal and benefit only a small fraction of land poor families. Frustrated land poor families have now resorted to land encroachment on privately held land. The emergence of movements dedicated to the restoration of estates to families with ancestral claims to the land marks a new stage in land relations which could have unwelcome consequences.


Archive | 2010

The State of Urban Food Insecurity in Southern Africa

Bruce Frayne; Wade Pendleton; Jonathan Crush; Ben Acquah; Jane Battersby-Lennard; Eugenio Bras; Asiyati Chiweza; Tebogo Dlamini; Robert Fincham; Florian Kroll; Clement Leduka; Aloysius Mosha; Chileshe Mulenga; Peter Mvula; Akiser Pomuti; Inês Raimundo; Michael Rudolph; Shaun Ruysenaa; Nomcebo Simelane; Daniel Tevara; Maxton Tsoka; Godfrey Tawodzera; Lazarus Zanamwe


IDS Bulletin | 2011

The Political Economy of Adaptation through Crop Diversification in Malawi

Blessings Chinsinga; Ronald Mangani; Peter Mvula

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Sudhanshu Handa

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Gustavo Angeles

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Kelly Kilburn

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Clare Barrington

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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