Tanzania and Governance
- 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 governance collection
Search for the latest governance-related print documents on this country from the British Library for Development Studies collection
- Selected papers on human resources for agriculture and rural development
- Sustainable Development Department, FAO SD Dimensions, 2001
- Papers on several main developments and issues that either persist or are emerging in the area of human resources for agricultural and rural development. Topics are: the struggle of some regions to shift from centralise...
- The IMF and World Bank's emphasis on good governance in African countries is ironic
- Bretton Woods Project, 2001
- This article discusses the recent trip of President James Wolfensohn and IMF Managing Director Horst Koehler to Mali and Tanzania to meet 22 African leaders in February. The theme of their visit was discussions concerning good governa...
- Donors should be more discriminating when deciding which African countries will benefit from aid
- World Bank, 2001
- This article explores comparatively, the effect and effectiveness of aid in different African countries (10 case studies). More specifically the article investigates the following questions: are there common char...
- Community-based participation represents the best option for woodland management
- L. Alden Wily; P.A. Dewees / World Bank, 2001
- This paper begins by discussing Tanzania's increasing recognition of the need to bring individuals, local groups, and communities into the policy, planning, and management process if woodlands are to remain productive in the coming de...
- Of saviours and punks: the political economy of the Nile perch marketing chain in Tanzania
- Peter Gibbon / Danish Institute for International Studies, 1997
- The paper is a fieldwork-based case study of the commodity chain for the Nile Perch fish from Lake Victoria, Tanzania. This fish first began apperaring in significant numbers in the lake in the early 1980s and within a few years a lar...
- The poor relation: a political economy of the marketing chain for dagaa in Tanzania
- Peter Gibbon / Danish Institute for International Studies, 1997
- Dagaa is the collective name in Tanzania for various types of sardine-like fish eaten in a dried form by poor and middle-income groups throughout eastern and southern Africa. This paper is a fieldwork-based case-study of the com...
- Determinants of educational achievement and attainment in Africa: findings from nine case studies
- R.G. Ridker / Africa Bureau Information Center, USAID, 1997
- This paper presents an overview and discussion of nine studies that attempt to explain educational achievement, attainment, and participation in different African countries. Available information on school, household, child, and commu...
- Insuffient measures taken by UNHCR to address violence against women in Tanzanian refugee camps
- Human Rights Watch, 2000
- Documents UNHCR's and the Tanzanian host government's failure to address violence against women refugees in a timely and effective manner, despite ample evidence that women's lives were in danger in their homes and in the general camp...
- Limping towards a Ditch without a Crutch: The Brave New World of Tanzanian Cotton Marketing Cooperatives.
- P. Gibbon / Danish Institute for International Studies, 1998
- Describes developments in cotton marketing cooperatives in Tanzanias major cotton growing area between 1991 and 1997. During this period cooperatives underwent voluntarisation, lost state and donor financial support and (from 19...
- Aid and Reform in Africa
- S Devarajan; D. Dollar; T. Holmgren / Aid Effectiveness Research, World Bank, 1999
- Since the early 1980s, virtually every African country has received large amounts of aid aimed at stimulating policy reform. The results have varied enormously. Ghana and Uganda were successful reformers that grew rapidly and reduced ...
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