Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty

While governments face significant obstacles in designing and delivering approaches for people living in extreme poverty, a substantial body of research shows that programs can achieve transformative impact by addressing the socioeconomic barriers that often exclude this population. An increasing number of governments are adopting and scaling economic inclusion programs, including Graduation programs, to address the multidimensional vulnerabilities of people living in extreme poverty. By integrating the Graduation approach into their poverty reduction initiatives, governments can increase the impact and scale of their initiatives by investing in the systems, processes, and capacities needed to reach those furthest behind and deliver multidimensional, timebound, and sequenced program interventions. This In Practice paper shares insights and learning from four non-governmental organizations on the potential to scale up government-led Graduation programs for people living in extreme poverty. It contributes to the growing policy space around economic inclusion and identifies good practices for designing and implementing government-led Graduation programs. It makes recommendations and identifies key considerations for governments on how to identify, reach, and deliver impactful programming to individuals and households facing socioeconomic exclusion and marginalization.

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Main Authors: Gollin, Maxwell, Miranda, Carolina de, Muriuki, Taddeo, Commins, Steve
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2023-02-21T17:04:16Z
Subjects:PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY, ECONOMIC INCLUSION, GOVERNMENT-LED GRADUATION PROGRAMS, INCLUSIVE EDUCATION, GIRLS EDUCATION, EDUCATION OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS, CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS, IMPROVED LIVELIHOOD,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099524302172325759/IDU04121a9de068fb046e80bab50668f994034fc
https://worldbank7-prod.atmire.com/handle/10986/39457
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spelling dig-okr-10986394572023-03-06T16:13:33Z Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty Gollin, Maxwell Miranda, Carolina de Muriuki, Taddeo Commins, Steve PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY ECONOMIC INCLUSION GOVERNMENT-LED GRADUATION PROGRAMS INCLUSIVE EDUCATION GIRLS EDUCATION EDUCATION OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS IMPROVED LIVELIHOOD While governments face significant obstacles in designing and delivering approaches for people living in extreme poverty, a substantial body of research shows that programs can achieve transformative impact by addressing the socioeconomic barriers that often exclude this population. An increasing number of governments are adopting and scaling economic inclusion programs, including Graduation programs, to address the multidimensional vulnerabilities of people living in extreme poverty. By integrating the Graduation approach into their poverty reduction initiatives, governments can increase the impact and scale of their initiatives by investing in the systems, processes, and capacities needed to reach those furthest behind and deliver multidimensional, timebound, and sequenced program interventions. This In Practice paper shares insights and learning from four non-governmental organizations on the potential to scale up government-led Graduation programs for people living in extreme poverty. It contributes to the growing policy space around economic inclusion and identifies good practices for designing and implementing government-led Graduation programs. It makes recommendations and identifies key considerations for governments on how to identify, reach, and deliver impactful programming to individuals and households facing socioeconomic exclusion and marginalization. 2023-02-21T17:04:16Z 2023-03-06T16:13:32Z 2023-02-21T17:04:16Z 2023-03-06T16:13:32Z 2023-02-17 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099524302172325759/IDU04121a9de068fb046e80bab50668f994034fc https://worldbank7-prod.atmire.com/handle/10986/39457 English en PEI in Practice;Volume 7 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/38366 CC BY 3.0 IGO World Bank http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo application/pdf application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
English
topic PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
GOVERNMENT-LED GRADUATION PROGRAMS
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
GIRLS EDUCATION
EDUCATION OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS
IMPROVED LIVELIHOOD
PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
GOVERNMENT-LED GRADUATION PROGRAMS
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
GIRLS EDUCATION
EDUCATION OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS
IMPROVED LIVELIHOOD
spellingShingle PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
GOVERNMENT-LED GRADUATION PROGRAMS
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
GIRLS EDUCATION
EDUCATION OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS
IMPROVED LIVELIHOOD
PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
GOVERNMENT-LED GRADUATION PROGRAMS
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
GIRLS EDUCATION
EDUCATION OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS
IMPROVED LIVELIHOOD
Gollin, Maxwell
Miranda, Carolina de
Muriuki, Taddeo
Commins, Steve
Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty
description While governments face significant obstacles in designing and delivering approaches for people living in extreme poverty, a substantial body of research shows that programs can achieve transformative impact by addressing the socioeconomic barriers that often exclude this population. An increasing number of governments are adopting and scaling economic inclusion programs, including Graduation programs, to address the multidimensional vulnerabilities of people living in extreme poverty. By integrating the Graduation approach into their poverty reduction initiatives, governments can increase the impact and scale of their initiatives by investing in the systems, processes, and capacities needed to reach those furthest behind and deliver multidimensional, timebound, and sequenced program interventions. This In Practice paper shares insights and learning from four non-governmental organizations on the potential to scale up government-led Graduation programs for people living in extreme poverty. It contributes to the growing policy space around economic inclusion and identifies good practices for designing and implementing government-led Graduation programs. It makes recommendations and identifies key considerations for governments on how to identify, reach, and deliver impactful programming to individuals and households facing socioeconomic exclusion and marginalization.
format Report
topic_facet PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
GOVERNMENT-LED GRADUATION PROGRAMS
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
GIRLS EDUCATION
EDUCATION OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS
IMPROVED LIVELIHOOD
author Gollin, Maxwell
Miranda, Carolina de
Muriuki, Taddeo
Commins, Steve
author_facet Gollin, Maxwell
Miranda, Carolina de
Muriuki, Taddeo
Commins, Steve
author_sort Gollin, Maxwell
title Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty
title_short Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty
title_full Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty
title_fullStr Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty
title_full_unstemmed Designing and Delivering Government-Led Graduation Programs for People in Extreme Poverty
title_sort designing and delivering government-led graduation programs for people in extreme poverty
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2023-02-21T17:04:16Z
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099524302172325759/IDU04121a9de068fb046e80bab50668f994034fc
https://worldbank7-prod.atmire.com/handle/10986/39457
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