ORGANIZATION
CEPAUR
The <em>Centre for Development Alternatives</em> Max-Neef founded in Chile — the institutional home of Human Scale Development and the workshop where the nine-needs matrix was deployed with actual communities.
The Centro de Alternativas de Desarrollo (CEPAUR), the institution Max-Neef founded in Santiago in the 1980s as the base for Human Scale Development work. CEPAUR was deliberately positioned outside the orbit of conventional development agencies, national governments, and international NGOs, funded through a combination of small grants and consulting revenue that preserved its independence from the institutional agendas that typically shaped development research. It became the site where the needs-satisfier matrix was tested in practice, where communities across Latin America were convened to populate their own matrices, and where the methodology that produced Max-Neef's 1991 book was refined.
In The You On AI Field Guide
CEPAUR's significance lies less in any single project than in the institutional demonstration that development research could be conducted on terms set by affected communities rather than funding agencies. The workshops produced documentation of specific communities' needs-satisfier ecologies and generated the empirical basis from which Max-Neef's theoretical framework was constructed.
The institute also became a hub for collaboration with ecological economists, post-growth theorists, and
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