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Tanzania and Aid and debt

Tanzania
  • Capital: Dodoma
  • Population: 41892895
  • Size: 945087.0 Km2

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Content from selected partners can be found by following the relevant links in the central panel below - or check out our editor's selection of the best sector specific information from other websites.

The BLDS aid collection
The BLDS aid collection

Search for the latest aid-related print documents on this country from the British Library for Development Studies collection

 

Latest from Eldis aid


Items 21 to 30 of 124

Importance of political support for the effective development of JAS
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Danida, Denmark, 2005
This study focuses on the on-going process of developing Joint Assistance Strategies (JAS) in Tanzania, Zambia and Uganda. JAS are national, medium term frameworks for managing development cooperation between governments and developme...
Aid effectiveness and the Paris Declaration: African concerns
Reality of Aid, 2008
This paper presents an overview of the inter-regional consultation on aid effectiveness and the Paris Declaration (PD) held in Lusaka, Zambia. The workshop was convened to discuss progress on aid effectiveness in the region and recomm...
‘Phantom aid’: why technical assistance is ineffective, over-priced, imposed and outdated
Romilly Greenhill; Jesse Griffiths; Patrick Watt / id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2007
In 2005 the international community promised unprecedented levels of aid. It is doubtful that rich countries will deliver on their promises. Also, between a quarter and a half of all aid is in the form of so-called technical assistanc...
Evaluating Norway's collaboration with Tanzania on Natural Resource Management
B. Cooksey; L. Anthony; J. Egoe / Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2007
This paper presents the findings of the final evaluation of the Management of Natural Resources Programme (MNRP) in Tanzania. The evaluation consisted of site visits to the programme’s eleven projects, interviews with project ma...
More aid for Africa is only a mixed blessing
Tony Killick; Mick Foster / id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2007
The donor community has pledged to double aid to Africa by 2010. This presents Africa with great opportunities. But it can also make life harder for exporters and the private sector. Their production costs will have to be lowered but ...
Mainstreaming good practice grant mechanisms
K. Wiseman; R. Griffiths (ed) / CARE International, 2006
This paper explores questions around best practice for competitive grant-making mechanisms for supporting civil society. It particularly focuses on three case studies built around programmes from Zambia, Tanzania and Bangladesh. ...
Can NGO’s, the government of Tanzania and donors successfully fight poverty and achieve development?
Research on Poverty Alleviation, Tanzania, 2007
This paper presents findings from a survey of a section of Tanzanian NGOs on their perceptions of their relationships with the government and donors, and their views on their roles and impacts on poverty reduction and development. ...
Country Strategy Papers are less effective than other mechanisms for aid harmonisation
Department for International Development, UK, 2006
This study examines the role which the Country Strategy Papers (CSPs) and similar policy documents of the EC play in improving coordination and complementarity between EC and member states’ aid programmes. The study also assesses...
Donor coordination: allowing recipient countries to take the lead may produce better governance outcomes
P. de Renzio; S. Mulley / Global Economic Governance Programme, University College Oxford, 2006
Donor coordination, and its more formal expression in the 'Harmonisation and Alignment' agenda, has been the focus of increasing attention in aid debates. This paper takes a critical look at these recent trends, and assesses two alter...
What factors enable countries to pursue their own development agendas?
A. Menocal; S. Mulley / Overseas Development Institute, 2006
This paper reviews the efforts of five countries seen as relatively successful examples of recipient-led aid policies and donor management. These countries are Afghanistan, Mozambique, Tanzania, Uganda, and Vietnam. From this r...
Items 21 to 30 of 124

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