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Searching with a thematic focus on Governance, Health
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Development of administrative and financial management capacity for sector-wide approaches (SWAPs): the experience of the Bangladesh Health Sector
HLSP Institute, UK, 2001The health sector programme in Bangladesh – known as the Health and Population Sector Programme (HPSP) – aims to ensure that government action and resources make a cost-effective contribution to the priority health needs of the poor, particularly women and children.DocumentOrientation and training seminars for agency staff: sector-wide approaches for health in a changing environment
HLSP Institute, UK, 2002This handbook, produced by HLSP, is intended to be used to familiarise agency staff with the sector-wide approach (SWAp) through providing modules which address several SWAp-related issues.DocumentCapacity building and systems development for SWAps: the experience of the Ghana health sector
HLSP Institute, UK, 2001The sector-wide approach has been incorporated in Ghana’s approach to health sector development since 1996, although it was not formally labelled as a SWAp.DocumentSector wide programmes and poverty reduction
Centre for Aid and Public Expenditure, ODI, 2001Improving the access to services by poor and marginal groups is a strong or central objective of most of the sector wide programmes reviewed in this working paper.DocumentThe SAP experience in Pakistan
Department for International Development Health Systems Resource Centre, 2000What is the Pakistan Social Action Program (SAP) and what lessons can be learnt from the experiences of this - the longest running example of a sector wide approach (SWAp)?DocumentFighting HIV/AIDS with peanuts: a year in the life of the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria
Christian Aid, 2002The Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria has been feted as a major positive result of 2001’s UN Special Session on HIV/AIDS and G8 summit. Indeed, some policy-makers appear to believe that the existence of the Fund means that the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the developing country health crisis have been ‘dealt with’.DocumentThe Global Fund: which countries owe how much?
Aidspan, 2002The majority of the world's nations resolved at UNGASS, a major United Nations conference on AIDS, to increase annual expenditure on the AIDS epidemic to $7-10 billion by 2005, with much of this money to be raised and disbursed by a new global fund – now known as the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria.DocumentFinance development: invest in children
United Nations Children's Fund, 2002This UNICEF report looks at the financial investments needed to free children from poverty and meet targets set under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The report focuses on the investments needed by governments and international organisations in health, education, and water and sanitation to secure the well-being of children.DocumentDecentralising of health policy and planning using Participatory Rural Appraisal : Indian example
Global Development Network, 2001This paper focuses on the importance of decentralisation in health care provision and how community participation could become a way forward to provide health care to all, using participatory rural appraisal.The paper outlines the present system of health care in India and the current challenges it faces.
