In 2015 Old Fadama the largest informal community in Accra was a government 'no-go zone.' Armed guards accompanied a participatory action research team and stakeholders as they began an empirical research project. Their goals: resolve wicked problems advance collaboration theory and provide direct services to vulnerable beneficiaries. In three years they designed a collaboration intervention based on rigorous evidence Ghana's culture and data from 300 core stakeholders. Sanitation policy change transformed the community and government began to collaborate freely. By 2022 the intervention was replicated in Accra Kumasi and eleven rural communities providing health services to more than 10000 kayayei (women head porters) and addressing complex challenges for 15000 direct and hundreds of thousands of indirect beneficiaries. This collaboration intervention improved community participation changed policy and redefined development in theory and practice. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
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