Aid Effectiveness

Is overseas aid an instrument of soft power?

A blog by our Director of Programmes

I was giving evidence to a UK House of Lords select committee on aid as an instrument of soft power yesterday (watch the meeting here), so spent a bit of time researching what “soft power” actually means.

Ma, 30/07/2013

Revolutions of aspiration and expectation

Opportunities for building peace in Arab transition states

Protestors oppose Mubarak verdicts, Tahrir Square, Egypt, 2012. Photo by Lorenz KhazalehPolitical transitions from autocracy to democracy are a dangerous time. Risks of conflict are high as new regimes struggle to build or rebuild vital institutions and manage public expectation for rapid change – both political and economic.

Rebecca Crozier – Head of Development, Emerging Programmes
Me, 29/05/2013

Development banks and peace

Improving impact in fragile and conflict-affected places

Road building in South Province, Sri Lanka. Photo by Deshan Tennekoon/World BankIn April the Asian Development Bank (ADB) released a new operational plan to improve how it works in fragile and conflict-affected situations (FCAS).

Joe Whitaker - Programme Officer, International Institutions
Je, 23/05/2013

New Deal - real deal?

A blog by our Secretary General

In both low and middle income countries, well established arguments and solid evidence confirm that there is no real development without peace and only the peace of the graveyard without development. These conclusions have shifted the fulcrum of discussion about development over the past several years. But they have not yet added up to telling anybody how to do it.

Je, 18/04/2013

The welcome richness and diversity of debate about the post-2015 goals

A blog by our Director of Programmes

Back in mid-2010, in time for the MDGs-plus-10-years summit, International Alert published a review of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) which criticised the MDGs for being too narrow and too technical; for confusing ends with means; for being top-down and for being used in statistically illiterate ways; and for creating perverse and unhelpful policy incentives.

Ve, 29/03/2013

Development aid and peacekeeping: what can the money be spent on?

A blog post by our Secretary General

Crown Copyright 2010This week it was confirmed that in 2013 the UK will hit the target of spending 0.7 per cent of GDP on official development assistance (ODA). A long-standing campaigning goal for development NGOs and a moral goal for the country have been achieved.

Ve, 22/03/2013

Peacebuilding central to post-2015 development agenda

Alert responds to High Level Panel communique on post-2015 development agenda

Group photo of High-Level Panel on Post-2015 Development AgendaThe panel established by the Secretary General of the United Nations to determine a new global approach to international development has concluded that peacebuilding is a central part of that new vision for human progress.

Chris Underwood, Senior Policy Advisor
Lu, 04/02/2013

Tufaidike Wote (Win/Win) Project

Tufaidike Wote (Win/Win) Project

Location

1° 13' 1.8984" S, 27° 58' 55.8408" E

This project, carried out by a consortium composed of CARE, FAO and International Alert, provides a combined response to the problems of poverty and instability in eastern DRC.

Project Partners: 
Donors: 
USAID

It's not really such a great aid mystery

A blog by our Director of Programmes

Copyright: Crown copyright 2010The latest edition of The Spectator carries an opinion piece by Jonathan Foreman entitled 'The great aid mystery'. In a diatribe laced with rather tired tropes, and whose style undermines the argument he makes, Foreman’s main points when stripped of rhetoric can be summarised quite simply as:

Je, 03/01/2013

The end of aid effectiveness?

A blog by our Director of Programmes

I took part in a round table discussion in a post-conflict country recently, looking at aid effectiveness there.

Among the salient details on the table, and which will be familiar from elsewhere:

Je, 06/12/2012

London High Level Panel: Reflections

A blog post by our Senior Policy Advisor

It had been a long time coming. Since the first meeting of the High Level Panel, set up by Ban Ki Moon and co-chaired by the British, Liberian and Indonesian Heads of State in New York the massed ranks of civil society had been looking forward to this meeting with expectations and anxiety in equal measure.

Sa, 03/11/2012

Unpicking the language of the New Deal

A blog by our Director of Programmes

International aid donors and the poorer governments they fund have overlapping, but far from identical interests. They overlap in their common desire to spend donor money in support of development progress, broadly put. But they often differ on what are the best development choices, and on issues like the need or opportunity for compliance with human rights and good financial stewardship norms.

Insights: International Institutions, Aid Effectiveness and Peacebuilding in Nepal

Nisha Pandey
International Alert
Juin, 2011
International Alert
18 pages
London, UK
978-1-906677-16-9

This series of three country “Insights” identifies peacebuilding priorities in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal, and discusses the response of the international institutions operating there. The focus institutions are primarily the World Bank and the UN. The insights provide a brief snapshot and analysis of each country’s particular peacebuilding needs, as well as the dynamics that either facilitate or hinder institutional ability to address these needs.

This series of three country “Insights” identifies peacebuilding priorities in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal, and discusses the response of the international institutions operating there.

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Insights: International Institutions, Aid Effectiveness and Peacebuilding in Burundi

Ruth Simpson
International Alert
Juin, 2011
International Alert
14 pages
London, UK
978-1-906677-14-5

This series of three country “Insights” identifies peacebuilding priorities in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal, and discusses the response of the international institutions operating there.  The focus institutions are primarily the World Bank and the UN. The insights provide a brief snapshot and analysis of each country’s particular peacebuilding needs, as well as the dynamics that either facilitate or hinder institutional ability to address these needs.

This series of three country “Insights” identifies peacebuilding priorities in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal, and discusses the response of the international institutions operating there.

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Insights: International Institutions, Aid Effectiveness and Peacebuilding in Liberia

Catriona Gourlay
International Alert
Juin, 2011
International Alert
14 pages
London, UK
978-1-906677-13-8

This series of three country “Insights” identifies peacebuilding priorities in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal, and discusses the response of the international institutions operating there. The focus institutions are primarily the World Bank and the UN. The insights provide a brief snapshot and analysis of each country’s particular peacebuilding needs, as well as the dynamics that either facilitate or hinder institutional ability to address these needs.

This series of three country “Insights” identifies peacebuilding priorities in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal, and discusses the response of the international institutions operating there.

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