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Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt in Mozambique
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China in Mozambique: a cautious approach
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009China's engagement with Africa has taken a different form in its relations with Mozambique, which are characterised by caution and compromise. China's engagement with Africa has taken a different form in its relations with Mozambique, which are characterised by caution and compromise.DocumentWhat does hydrocarbon wealth mean for foreign aid in Mozambique?
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2012Recent discoveries of vast gas and mineral resources in Mozambique are attracting unprecedented levels of foreign investment and could transform the country into a major African energy producer.DocumentEnhancing the integrity of the Oil for Development Programme: Assessing vulnerabilities to corruption and identifying prevention measures - case studies of Bolivia, Mozambique Uganda. Final report.
2012The overall objective of the OfD program is to promote economically, environmentally and socially responsible management of petroleum resources which safeguards the needs of future generations. To achieve this, the OfD program works towards supporting good management of petroleum resources through sound legal frameworks, implemented by the relevant institutions, with accountability.DocumentDocumenting good practices at partner level
HelpAge International, 2011During the period 2006 – 2010, a regional HIV and AIDS advocacy programme was implemented in the sub Saharan African countries. In this respect, HelpAge and its partners undertook a number of activities under the thematic areas of HIV prevention to address the impact of AIDS on older people.DocumentAid and budget transparency in Mozambique
European Network on Debt and Development, 2010External donors contributed some US$1.6 billion in aid to the Government of Mozambique in 2009. These donors have all committed to making aid more effective by adhering to the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness and to the Accra Agenda for Action. However information about how much money is available, how it is being spent and what are the results of that aid are still poor.DocumentMoving beyond gender as usual
Center for Global Development, USA, 2009In the 1980s, at the beginning of the HIV and AIDS epidemic, it was estimated that about a third of all people infected worldwide were women. After just one decade this had risen to more than half and now today in sub-Saharan Africa, 61% of all people infected with HIV are female. This report examines national policies and then focuses on how three influential donors, the U.S.DocumentEvaluation of technical assistance to post-conflict countries-Mozambique and Rwanda
International Monetary Fund, 2009This evaluation of technical assistance (TA) in statistics covers two post-conflict countries, namely, Mozambique and Rwanda during the period 2000–08.DocumentMutual Accountability at country level: emerging good practice
Overseas Development Institute, 2009Mutual accountability is a practical response to recent experiences in building greater transparency and accountability at country level - and the lessons learned about the role of country ownership in delivering development results.DocumentReforming foreign aid practices: what country ownership is and what donors can do to support it
Department of International Development (Queen Elizabeth House), University of Oxford, 2008In the last decade there has been a significant shift in the paradigm for foreign aid, embodied in the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness in 2005. Recipient governments are urged to take ownership of development policies and aid activities in their country, to establish their own systems for coordinating donors, and only to accept aid that suits their needs.DocumentWestern policies are responsible for Africa’s failure to develop
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2008Development policies are based on a flawed analysis of the history of development by the West. African development strategies need to solve local problems with the existing material and intellectual resources of local people. Africa does not need big social goals but small policies that make everyday life more predictable.Two ideas are central to the concept of development.Pages
