did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

We're the #1 textbook rental company. Let us show you why.

9781842770382

Aid Understanding International Development Cooperation

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9781842770382

  • ISBN10:

    1842770381

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2003-08-02
  • Publisher: ZED BOOKS
  • Purchase Benefits
  • Free Shipping Icon Free Shipping On Orders Over $35!
    Your order must be $35 or more to qualify for free economy shipping. Bulk sales, PO's, Marketplace items, eBooks and apparel do not qualify for this offer.
  • eCampus.com Logo Get Rewarded for Ordering Your Textbooks! Enroll Now
List Price: $104.95

Summary

In this comprehensive study on global aid, the authors argue that no better alternative exists to replace taxpayer-financed aid as the main mechanism for promoting greater equality between North and South and within the countries of the South. It should therefore be continued while at the same time being made more effective and efficient, and the authors present ideas to achieve this. They conclude by examining new modes of financing development and new modes of international cooperation aimed at bringing about growth and human development.

Author Biography

John Degnbol-Martinussen is Dean of the Graduate School of International Development Studies, Roskilde University in Denmark.

Poul Engberg-Pedersen is with the Governance and Public Sector Reform Group of the World Bank, Washington D.C.

Table of Contents

Figures, Tables and Boxes
viii
Abbreviations x
Preface xiii
Introduction
1(6)
The logic of the presentation
1(2)
Central themes
3(4)
Motives and Interests
7(18)
Historical background
7(3)
Moral and humanitarian motives
10(2)
Political and economic motives and interests
12(3)
Environmental considerations
15(1)
Summary of motives for giving development assistance
16(1)
Theoretical arguments for and against foreign aid
17(3)
The micro level and arguments for aid to the poor
20(1)
Recipient countries' motives for receiving foreign aid
21(2)
Foreign aid after the end of the Cold War
23(2)
Development Goals
25(14)
Development goals of foreign aid organizations: historical background
25(2)
Poverty eradication and other development goals for foreign aid since the 1990s
27(1)
Women and gender equality
28(2)
Democratization and good governance
30(2)
Human development and focus on poverty
32(1)
Foreign aid to the private sector
32(1)
Foreign aid to institutional development
33(2)
Development goals in NGO cooperation
35(2)
Summary of development goals
37(2)
Aid Strategies
39(17)
Intervention types, aid forms and levels of society
40(4)
The 1960s: Trickle-down
44(1)
The 1970s: Integrated rural development projects and fulfilment of basic needs
45(2)
The 1980s: From projects to structural adjustment programmes
47(2)
The 1990s: Political, economic and institutional society-building
49(3)
1960--2000: Constant elements and new challenges
52(1)
Foreign aid strategies and donor groups
53(3)
Size and Distribution of Foreign Aid
56(18)
Official development assistance
56(2)
The size of development assistance
58(4)
Development assistance from Eastern and Southern countries
62(2)
Multilateral and bilateral aid
64(2)
Distribution among regions and countries
66(1)
Distribution by sector and type of aid
67(2)
Foreign aid's significance for recipient counties
69(1)
Foreign aid and other transfers between industrialized and developing countries
70(4)
Official Bilateral Assistance
74(20)
Cooperation among the DAC countries
74(2)
The USA's foreign aid and national security policy
76(4)
Japan's foreign aid and foreign economic policy
80(3)
France's foreign aid and foreign policy
83(3)
The United Kingdom's foreign aid and development policy
86(3)
Denmark's foreign aid and development policy
89(3)
Summary of the variations in bilateral aid
92(2)
Multilateral Aid
94(49)
Multilateral aid: Complexity in goals and organization
95(3)
Political expectations for multilateral aid
98(4)
Size and composition of multilateral aid
102(4)
Financing multilateral aid
106(3)
The UN system: Strengths and weaknesses
109(9)
The World Bank: Strengths and weaknesses
118(7)
The European Union: Strengths and weaknesses
125(6)
Active multilateralism by small countries
131(4)
Multilateral aid since the 1990s
135(8)
The Role of NGOs in Development Cooperation
143(31)
Four generations of NGOs and their strategies
144(3)
Third-party and first-party organizations
147(1)
Choice of partners and forms of cooperation
148(3)
Catalysts for development
151(2)
Empowerment strategies
153(2)
Multi-pronged strategies
155(2)
NGOs' comparative advantages under debate
157(1)
Convergence and competition between NGOs and official aid organizations
158(2)
Long-term effects and sustainability
160(2)
NGOs' development education and advocacy activities
162(1)
NGOs' relationship to states in the North
163(2)
NGOs' relationship to states in the South
165(1)
Variations regionally and over time
166(2)
Variations among NGOs
168(2)
`Small is beautiful' -- is it also effective?
170(4)
Actors in Aid Interaction
174(25)
Professionalism and distance
176(2)
Participation and institutions
178(3)
Popular support and aid policy-making in donor countries
181(4)
The institutional framework for aid in developing countries
185(3)
Survival of the project aid form
188(2)
Donor coordination and aid integration
190(3)
Aid management and politics
193(2)
Actor interaction on different levels of society in developing countries
195(4)
Emergency Relief and Humanitarian Assistance
199(17)
Disasters and relief: Myths and realities
201(4)
The multilateral response to complex emergencies
205(3)
Aid, society and conflict
208(2)
Challenges to the effectiveness of humanitarian assistance
210(6)
Evaluation
216(14)
Evaluating aid
217(2)
Different types of evaluations
219(3)
Participatory evaluations
222(2)
Challenges for evaluation work
224(1)
Use of evaluations in North and South
225(2)
Aid for capacity-building in the South
227(1)
Aid for learning to learn
228(2)
The Impact of Aid
230(37)
Aid impact assessment: A neglected and difficult research field
233(2)
Aid and other development factors
235(4)
Macro-effects of aid
239(3)
Assessing Aid -- overview of the debate
242(4)
Assessing Aid -- implications for selectivity in aid allocations
246(5)
The impact of policy-oriented programme aid
251(5)
Aid and poverty reduction
256(2)
Aid projects and poverty reduction
258(3)
Evaluation of institutional performance in poverty reduction
261(3)
Conclusions
264(3)
Problems and Challenges of Development Cooperation with States in the South
267(18)
Changed global conditions for development
267(2)
Weak states under external paternalism
269(2)
Aid forms and ownership
271(2)
Corruption and political culture
273(6)
Democratization, human rights and aid
279(2)
The state as a development problem
281(4)
Perspectives and Prospects for Development Cooperation in the Twenty-first Century
285(32)
Aid through an international development fund
286(3)
International payments for services
289(1)
Compensation for harmful international behaviour
290(2)
Financing through earmarked taxes
292(1)
Aid to promote private capital transfers
293(1)
National ownership, donor demands and sustainability
294(3)
Aid and governance: Between politics and management
297(4)
Performance-based aid: Goals and country circumstances
301(5)
Performance-based aid: Aid forms and agencies
306(5)
Future aid models
311(6)
Appendix Donor Countries and Recipient Countries 317(3)
References 320(18)
Index 338

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Rewards Program