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Searching with a thematic focus on Conflict and security, Aid and debt
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The politics of gender and reconstruction in Afghanistan
United Nations [UN] Research Institute for Social Development, 2005The central objective of this paper is to put the discussion of women’s rights in Afghanistan in the context of the multiple transitions entailed by the process of post-conflict reconstruction: a security transition (from war to peace), a political transition (to the formation of a legitimate and effective state) and a socioeconomic transition (from a "conflict" economy to sustainable growth).TDocumentHelping women help themselves: lessons from the Kosovo Women’s Initiative
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005The Kosovo Women’s Initiative (KWI) was launched following the NATO campaign that ended Serbian control over Kosovo. KWI aimed to promote the recovery of traumatised women and help them find sustainable ways to support themselves, but had limited success.DocumentGender equality in disasters: six principles for engendered relief and reconstruction
Southern African Regional Poverty Network, 2005This paper offers six recommendations for engendering relief and reconstruction programmes. These strategies include:think big: gender equality and risk reduction principles must guide all aspects of disaster mitigation, response and reconstruction.DocumentToward a conflict sensitive poverty reduction strategy: lessons from a retrospective analysis
World Bank, 2005This report aims to determine how causes and consequences of violent conflict can best be addressed within a country’s poverty reduction program. It is based on a a retrospective analysis of the poverty reduction strategy (PRS) experience in nine conflict affected countries namely, Bosnia-Herzegovina (BIH), Burundi, Cambodia, Chad, Georgia, Nepal, Rwanda, Sierra Leone and Sri Lanka.DocumentAid instruments in fragile states
Department for International Development, UK, 2005This paper by the UK Department for International Development (DFID) describes the limitations of current approaches to aid instruments and discusses the emerging understanding of their use within fragile states.DocumentOccupation is not (women's) liberation: part I
ZNet, 2005This essay examines the US government's intervention in Iraq, looking particularly at the rhetoric and action surrounding the US's involvement and the status of women in Iraq. The author frames this essay as a plea for greater feminist intervention in the U.S. anti-imperialist, anti-war movement.DocumentEvaluation of ECHO’s 1999 to 2002 funded actions in Sudan
European Commission Humanitarian Office, 2003This report, published by the European Commission Humanitarian Office (ECHO), evaluates the expected results, relevance, efficiency, effectiveness, impact, and sustainability of ECHO-financed projects in Sudan. The programmes included health and nutrition, water and sanitation, food security, and emergency preparedness and response.DocumentPeacebuilding in post-war situations: lessons for Sudan
Chr. Michelsen Institute, Norway, 2004This report examines lessons from peacebuilding efforts during the last decade that are relevant to the current challenges in the Sudan.It broadly discusses themes such as economic recovery and reconstruction; post-war government interventions including criminal justice procedures, security sector reform and the prospects for democracy in the Sudan; and cross-cutting issues and challenges suchDocumentService delivery in a difficult environment: the child-friendly community initiative in Sudan
Department for International Development, UK, 2005This report, published by the Department for International Development (DFID), sets out the main findings and conclusions of a study of the UNICEF-sponsored Child-Friendly Community Initiative (CFCI) in Sudan. It examines the effectiveness of an integrated, multi-sectoral and community-driven approach for the delivery of basic services to poor and vulnerable people in a conflict-affected country.DocumentHow important are difficult environments to achieving the MDGs
Department for International Development, UK, 2004This working paper, published by the Department for International Development, argues that countries defined as "difficult environments” are the single biggest challenge to the MDGs and to the elimination of poverty.Pages
