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Title
The Development Dance: How Donors and Recipients Negotiate the Delivery of Foreign Aid |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/2066/176465 |
Date
2017 |
Author(s)
Swedlund, H.J. |
Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext - In a book full of directly applicable lessons for policymakers, Haley J. Swedlund explores why foreign aid is delivered in different ways at different times, and why various approaches prove to be politically unsustainable. She finds that no aid-delivery mechanism has yet resolved commitment problems in the donor-recipient relationship; bargaining compromises break down and have to be renegotiated; frustration grows; new ways of delivering aid gain traction over existing practices; and the dance resumes. Swedlund draws on hundreds of interviews with key decision makers representing both donor agencies and recipient governments, policy and archival documents in Ghana, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda, and an original survey of top-level donor officials working across twenty countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. This wealth of data informs Swedlund's analysis of fads and fashions in the delivery of foreign aid and the interaction between effectiveness and aid delivery. The central message of The Development Dance is that if we want to know whether an aid delivery mechanism is likely to be sustained over the long term, we need to look at whether it induces credible commitments from both donor agencies and recipient governments over the long term. |
Subject(s)
Global-Local Divides and Connections (GLOCAL) |
Publisher
Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press |
Type of publication
Book (monograph) |
Identifier
9781501712876 |
Repository
Nijmegen - Radbout University of Nijmegen
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Added to C-A: 2022-08-22;12:10:57 |
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