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Searching with a thematic focus on Governance in Mozambique
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A new agenda to eradicate poverty in Africa
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006Over 75 million more Africans lived in poverty at the end of the 1990s than a decade earlier. Increasing aid and reforming trade through international campaigns and donor programmes is not working. The role of the state must be changed if poverty in Africa is to be reduced.DocumentAvante consulta!: effective consultation
Policy Power tools, 2005This tool proposes a set of steps that aim to empower communities in local consultations intended to identify:who has the rights to manage natural resources in an area, andhow this management should be carried out and monitored.The tool has been written within the context of the policies regarding land and forestry rights in Mozambique.DocumentGleanings on governance
Forestry and Land Use Programme, IIED, 2004This report describes the successes and failures of recent efforts to improve forest governance in Mozambique, and outlines some important lessons for future implementation of good forest policy.Good forest governance involves shaping what people and institutions do, above and beyond what they say they will do. In Mozambique the content of forest policy is new.DocumentService delivery in countries emerging from conflict
Department for International Development, UK, 2005This report, published by the Department for International Development (DFID), examines service delivery in countries emerging from conflict, asking what types of service delivery systems are appropriate, sustainable, and can help to prevent future conflict. It is based on evidence from case studies in Mozambique, Uganda, Cambodia and East Timor.DocumentMozambique’s cashew industry: a better deal needed for women
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005Cashew nuts are one of the world’s most valuable processed nuts. Mozambique, once the world’s largest producer, works with communities and the private sector to raise output. However, trade liberalisation, falling prices, new quality requirements and the buyer-driven nature of the cashew-nut supply chain are worsening working conditions.DocumentImproving water resource governance in southern Africa
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005The main causes of disease and poor health in southern Africa are water related. Management of water resources is difficult however, because of low water availability and poor quality.DocumentThe political economy of the budget process in Mozambique
Oxford Policy Management, 2005This paper discusses the nature of the budget process in Mozambique, a highly aid-dependent developing country with weak institutions.DocumentEducation For All (EFA) - Fast Track Initiative (FTI) status report
Education for All Fast Track Initiative, World Bank, 2004This report looks at the progress of the FTI.DocumentReport of the Southern Africa civil society consultation
Southern African Regional Poverty Network, 2004This paper reports on the Southern Africa regional consultation conference on the Commission for Africa (CFA). Participants came from civil society groups from Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zimbabwe and Zambia. At the conclusion of the two day meeting the participants released a communiqué of the meeting and its deliberations.DocumentHow Northern donors promote corruption: tales from the new Mozambique
The Corner House, UK, 2004This policy briefing explores the growth of corruption in Mozambique over the last three decades with a special emphasis, on the role that Northern donors have played in that process.The brief finds that increasing intervention by international financial institutions and bilateral aid donors, facilitated by tacit alliances between donors and a predatory faction of the Mozambican elite, has beenPages
