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  • Document

    Local to Local Dialogue: A Grassroots Women's Perspective on Good Governance

    United Nations Human Settlements Programme, 2004
    Despite their contributions to the survival of their households and the well-being of their communities, low-income women are often excluded from planning and decision-making processes. These women are instead perceived as either 'beneficiaries' or 'clients'. In either case, poor women are not seen as citizens who can play an important role in transforming governance.
  • Document

    Making matters worse: links between HIV/AIDS and mental health

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005
    HIV/AIDS sufferers and children whose families are infected with the virus may suffer mental health problems arising directly or indirectly from living with the virus. HIV infected people have to deal with the stigma attached in some communities to being HIV positive.
  • Document

    Harmonization and MDGs: a perspective from Tanzania and Uganda

    High-Level Forum on the Health Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), 2003
    Harmonisation through the Sector-Wide Approach (SWAp) and increased budget support has increased the resources available to the health sector over the past five years. This draft paper from the High-Level Forum on the Health Millennium Development Goals looks at the examples of Tanzania and Uganda.
  • Document

    Managing public expenditure for development results and poverty reduction

    Overseas Development Institute, 2003
    This ODI working paper is a survey of the practice of results-oriented – or performance-based – public expenditure management in low income developing countries.
  • Document

    Trade and the consolidation of regional economic relations in the Great Lakes Region of Central and Eastern Africa: critical reflections

    Institute of Development Studies, University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2002
    This paper asks whether the Great Lakes Region (GLR) of Central and Eastern Africa, consisting of Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), can be seen as constituting a single political region, and assesses the prospects for economic integration in the region.
  • Document

    Pastoralism on the margin

    Minority Rights Group International, 2004
    This report focuses on the sustainability of pastoralism in the lowlands of the Great Rift of East Africa and the Horn, arguing that pastoralism as a mode of production and a way of life has entered a phase of decline, often accompanied by conflict, drought, famine and flooding.The report details the historic evolution and chief characteristics of pastoralism, discussing the eras of colonialism
  • Document

    The social sciences in Mozambique, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe: a report of an inventory conducted by the universities of Dar es Salam, Eduardo Mondlane, Makerere and Zimbabwe

    Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, 2004
    This report is an inventory of the social science teaching and research in Mozambique, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zimbabwe.
  • Document

    Higher education reform in East Africa

    Center for International and Development Education, University of California, Los Angeles, 2003
    This brief report looks at the educational reforms which are transforming higher education in East Africa. An overview is given on privatisation, expansion, standardisation, and technological development.Despite positive trends in the developments of education reform, and the strong desire for education and improvement in the region, challenges remain.
  • Document

    Projects – no way to deliver development?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2004
    The conventional project based approach is a tried-and-tested, convenient and simple mechanism for the transfer of aid resources. However, development practitioners are increasingly realising that implementing a project is not an effective way to address the needs of poor people.
  • Document

    Shared aquatic ecosystems of East Africa: status and trends

    African Centre for Technology Studies, 2002
    The East African Community (EAC) initiated a process to prepare common guidelines for the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of shared aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems of East Africa.

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