In our latest episode, we interviewed Niharika Srivastava, an international development professional from India who specialises in evaluations and research. She has moved from the corporate world to impactful work in development and with a rich background in community theatre, economics and a passion for participatory learning, Niharika shares her insights on the critical role of context in development practices. She emphasizes that effective development work cannot be a one-size-fits-all approach. Instead, it requires a deep understanding of the unique challenges and opportunities present in each context. Sharing her experiences across Africa and Asia she highlights the necessity of unlearning and relearning to ensure that solutions are tailored to the specific needs of communities. Niharika advocates for use of local knowledge and experiences in creating equitable and effective programmes that truly reflect the needs of those it aims to serve. Throughout the episode she shares practical steps for professionals in the sector, urging them to engage with local communities and understand the political economy that shapes development agendas. Her insights serve as a powerful reminder that at the heart of global development lies the need for collaboration, respect, and a commitment to social justice
If you’re interested to find out more about Niharika Srivastava’s work, take a look here:
A suggested reading for the audience:
Reading
“Big Aid Is Over” – Kevin Starr (SSIR, 2025)A provocative essay on why the era of large-scale donor-driven aid is ending. Starr argues that governments in the Global South must own and finance solutions that are affordable, scalable, and context-specific – challenging one-size-fits-all aid models and pushing forward localisation and sustainability. Read here.
Listening
Interventions from the Global South (Podcast) brings together activists, community organisers, change makers, and intellectuals from/of the Global South to imagine registers for theorising communication and co-creating transformative practices that address inequalities, climate change, depleted democracies, and the precarity of labour. Drawing inspiration from the Non-Aligned Movement and communication rights movements, it foregrounds Southern concepts of solidarity, resistance, and Indigenous knowledge systems.
DevHub Podcast - Disrupting the Development Sector from the Global South.
In this episode, Priyanthi Fernando (IWRAW Asia Pacific) speaks about her ‘disruptive’ approach to development, continuously asserting Global South perspectives and challenging entrenched power dynamics. A great complement to ongoing debates about decolonising aid and shifting power within the sector.