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Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt in Mozambique
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The civil society organisation’s role in global budget support in Mozambique
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2007This document presents a discussion on the role played by Civil Society Organisations (CSO’s) in global budget support in Mozambique. One of the areas highlighted are the dimensions of relations between CSOs from the north and the Mozambican CSOs. Key findings include:DocumentFollowing the funding for HIV/AIDS: a comparative analysis of the funding practices of PEPFAR, the Global Fund and World Bank MAP in Mozambique, Uganda and Zambia
Center for Global Development, USA, 2007Donor funding for HIV/AIDS has skyrocketed in the last decade: from US$ 300 million in 1996 to US$ 8.9 billion in 2006; yet, little is understood about how these resources are being spent. This paper analyses the policies and practices of the world’s largest AIDS donors as they are applied in Mozambique, Uganda and Zambia.DocumentOwnership in practice (Paris, 27-28 September 2007)
OECD Development Centre, 2007Experts agree that a development finance system must be owned by developing countries in order to reduce poverty and achieve sustained economic growth. Ahead of the 2008 High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Accra (Ghana), the OECD’s Global Forum on Development invited experts from South and North to an informal workshop to share their views on developing-country ownership.DocumentDoes the IMF constrain health spending in poor countries? Evidence and an agenda for action
Center for Global Development, USA, 2007This paper reports on an investigation into whether the IMF constrains health spending in poor countries. With a focus on developing a framework of lessons and recommendations, it draws upon a range of background papers on different aspects of IMF programmes, including detailed case studies for Mozambique, Rwanda, and Zambia.DocumentMore aid for Africa is only a mixed blessing
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2007The donor community has pledged to double aid to Africa by 2010. This presents Africa with great opportunities. But it can also make life harder for exporters and the private sector. Their production costs will have to be lowered but can aid help achieve that?DocumentEuropean aid to strengthen governance, democracy and human rights
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2007The European Union is committed to promote democracy, good governance and human rights while furthering sustainable development and poverty eradication. This requires specific interventions and making this agenda an essential part every project and programme, and in political dialogue.DocumentUnjust waters: climate change, flooding and the protection of poor urban communities: experiences from six African cities
ActionAid International, 2007Six years ago, at the UN Millennium Summit, world leaders set a specific target for realising the right to adequate housing and ‘continuous improvement of living conditions’. However, in Africa climate change is already threatening that goal, causing massive rural-urban migration and bringing chronic flooding to the cities.DocumentConfronting the contradictions: the IMF, wage bill caps and the case for teachers
ActionAid International, 2007IMF restrictions on recurrent government spending are working against the MDGs, and Education for All, this report argues.DocumentChanging aid delivery and the environment: can general budget support be used to meet environmental objectives?
Overseas Development Institute, 2007This paper examines how environmental objectives are pursued by donors in a context where aid delivery mechanisms are changing. It cites General Budget Support (GBS) as an example of an increasingly important aid instrument that emphasises domestic commitment to achieve better environmental outcomes.
