Aid Effectiveness

Aid Effectiveness

Overview

 

International institutions working to improve the lives of people living in conflict-affected and fragile contexts are under-performing. In too many countries, the threat or experience of violent conflict stands in the way of progress, yet international institutions have often struggled to fully deal with this. Indeed, sometimes their well-meaning interventions have the perverse effect of reinforcing a status quo in which governments can persist in power without heeding the needs and wishes of those they rule. To support the development of peaceful and prosperous societies, international institutions need to change. First of all, their programmes need to be conflict sensitive, i.e. to be based on a thorough understanding of conflicts and power dynamics within the context, and tailored to avoid fuelling violence. But they can and should go further, building peace by strengthening the institutions and systems in society which can resolve conflicts non-violently. This means a major change of approach compared to the way most aid has been implemented in the past, so international organisations need to substantially adapt the way they are set up and the way they work.

Alert has been advocating for and supporting this shift in the international development and peacebuilding sectors for many years, using a combination of research, dialogue, training and quiet advocacy. We have contributed to some important changes, including:

Where

This work cuts right across Alert’s programmes and thus builds on our powerful combination of local and national presence in over 20 conflict-affected countries and our strong links to international organisations and donors.  We gather and analyse data on overseas aid effectiveness and institutional practices in collaboration with colleagues in local and international organisations, in countries such as Burundi, Liberia, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Uganda. Then we use the findings to conduct training and public and private advocacy with international institutions in the countries where they work, and at their headquarters in London, Brussels, Paris, Geneva, Addis Ababa, Washington and New York among others.

How

Our work on aid effectiveness combines empirical research, analytical rigour and an advocacy approach in which we work with staff of international institutions and those who hold them accountable to help develop a common understanding of the need to change and of how to implement the necessary changes. This includes:

Why

A multitude of organisations exist to help improve the lives of people in poor and conflict-affected countries around the world. They do so under various banners such as Aid, Development and Peacebuilding, and they include United Nations agencies, the European Union, the World Bank, the African Union, bi-lateral donors and international NGOs.

They have chalked up a number of successes and a steadily increasing volume of aid over the past few years, and many have become increasingly sophisticated in their analysis of poverty and conflict. But there is a lingering feeling that, taken as a whole, the international development and peacebuilding sector is under-performing. This is especially the case in conflict-affected countries and regions, where it is hardest to achieve the institutional changes in society which are such an essential part of the development process. The pernicious effects of climate change in many fragile contexts will make this even harder.

The reasons for under-performance are rooted not just in the complexity of conflict-affected and fragile contexts or in the lack of recognition and understanding amongst institutions of how to work effectively there, but also in the institutional inertia which affects all big organisations, which has often prevented them from being able to adapt their approaches. Recent work by the UK government and others on Statebuilding and Peacebuilding has provided a logical and potentially useful framework within which international organisations can support the emergence of institutions in fragile societies capable of improving governance and building peace. But this will require a substantial change in the way donors and others work, and one which they are finding it hard to make.  International institutions need to take a hard look at the way they are organised and make substantial changes if they are to become more effective. These include re-examining the way they frame their mission and mandate, the goals for which they are held accountable and their internal systems and practices. Only then will they be able to contribute to the development of peaceful and prosperous societies in the way they wish.

Contact Person : 
Phil Vernon
Title: 
Aid effectiveness, organisational lead

Publications

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Debates and Practice in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal: Summary

Why is development progress difficult in fragile and conflict-affected countries?  International Alert conducted a series of studies in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal to explore this question in terms of how international institutions channel aid to support peace and development progress. The studies focused on two multilaterals: the World Bank and the United Nations. From the country studies, some common institutional challenges and opportunities emerged: governance and political legitimacy; responsiveness to fast-changing contexts; managing organisational mandates; harnessing comparative advantage between institutions; and translating policy commitments into practice. This summary of research findings and analysis includes a series of emerging recommendations. Rather than providing answers, this paper uses evidence to stimulate new conversation, thinking and practice.

Wed, 31/08/2011
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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. Findings inform a synthesis report entitled ‘Peacebuilding, the World Bank and the United Nations: Debates and Practice in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal’, the summary of which is available here. This work is part of Alert’s International Institutions Programme which seeks through research and engagement to strengthen the peacebuilding impacts of international institutions in fragile and conflict-affected countries.

Fri, 03/06/2011
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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. Findings inform a synthesis report entitled ‘Peacebuilding, the World Bank and the United Nations: Debates and Practice in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal’, the summary of which is available here. This work is part of Alert’s International Institutions Programme which seeks through research and engagement to strengthen the peacebuilding impacts of international institutions in fragile and conflict-affected countries.

Thu, 02/06/2011
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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. Findings inform a synthesis report entitled ‘Peacebuilding, the World Bank and the United Nations: Debates and Practice in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal’, the summary of which is available here. This work is part of Alert’s International Institutions Programme which seeks through research and engagement to strengthen the peacebuilding impacts of international institutions in fragile and conflict-affected countries.

Wed, 01/06/2011
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Moving beyond the Millennium Development Goals

A UN Summit in September will review progress towards the Millennium Development Goals. It will find that they are not going to be met by 2015 as planned. But rather than push for an “MDG Rescue Plan” as some are proposing, it is time to ask some hard questions about how societies change, and what we really mean by "development". This report proposes a new model for defining and measuring development progress, and makes practical recommendations about how aid can become more effective in promoting, supporting and enabling human progress, especially in so-called fragile states.

Sun, 05/09/2010
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A Challenge Paper by the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Humanitarian Assistance

In this challenge paper the members of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council propose a new vulnerability and protection business model for humanitarian assistance. This new model should have six requirements: A comprehensive risk framework; A reworked balance of spending between response, prevention and recovery; A big investment in national and local capacity; Fuller engagement of the private sector; Linking of the humanitarian to broader social and economic development issues; and Regional and international readiness to address cross-border humanitarian issues.

Sun, 01/11/2009
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‘How’, not ‘how much’

This study outlines the particular development challenges confronting international actors in fragile and conflict-affected countries, and gives a summary of the World Bank’s evolving approach to those challenges. The study then sets out certain key problems which, despite recent improvements, continue to reduce the quality of the Bank’s impacts. Noting the inconsistencies in the Bank’s approaches, it assesses the factors that determine the Bank’s ability to deal with, and help address, the immense complexity of its operating environments. It concludes with recommendations for improving approaches to those complexities.

Thu, 01/05/2008
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How EU Strategies and Programming can Better Prevent Violent C0onflict

New strategy papers for the EU's engagement with developing countries will soon be agreed. The activities under them will have fundamental impacts on the contexts in which they will be applied, and many of these are prone to, or affected by, violent conflict, or experience some kind of societal or state fragility. Recognising the importance of the strategy papers, and the programming which will flow from them, International Alert, Saferworld and the European Peaceubilding Liaison Office, have come together to produce this briefing paper, providing analysis and advice for decision-making in Brussels and in the field.

Sun, 01/04/2007
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International Lessons and Recommendations for Donors in Nepal's Transition Period

This paper aims to provide a think-piece for how donor strategies might respond in support of Nepal's future prospects for sustainable peace. It does this recognising that Nepal is still suffering from the causes and consequences of 10 years of debilitating violent conflict and a history of multiple, parallel governance systems

Fri, 01/12/2006
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This paper grows from the meeting between IA and the Donor Group on 23rd November 2006 on how to respond effectively and appropriately in the changed political context in Nepal. Drawing on the comments and analysis at the meeting, this paper offers recommendations on priorities for donor engagement. The basic theme is that short-term goals can be achieved, but only if addressing the culture of power in Nepal is the starting point.

Fri, 01/12/2006
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News

Improving impact in fragile and conflict-affected places
A blog by our Secretary General
Alert responds to High Level Panel communique on post-2015 development agenda
A blog by our Director of Programmes
A blog by our Director of Programmes
A blog post by our Senior Policy Advisor
Alert and EU support Liberia’s civil society in reconciliation process
Is it time to stop this 0.7% nonsense?
Alert’s response to the UNDP 2011 Annual Report
The New Deal Framework and Citizens’ Security
Envisioning a more comprehensive, more stable peace in South Sudan and Sudan
International Alert is interviewed by US broadcaster PBS
The World Bank on violence, conflict and peacebuilding
MPs debate "working effectively in conflict affected and fragile states"
Time for international institutions to think and act differently
Interview with Dan Smith, Secretary General
A celebration of peacebuilding
Our submission to the International Development Select Committee
Reflections on the UN Summit
Building long-term sustainable peace
Alert’s Secretary General responds to The Guardian