Search

Reset

Searching with a thematic focus on Governance in Mozambique

Showing 51-60 of 158 results

Pages

  • Document

    Gender Responsive Budgeting and Aid Effectiveness Knowledge Briefs

    United Nations Development Fund for Women, 2010
    This series investigated how gender responsive budgeting (GRB) tools and strategies had been used in the context of aid modalities, such as general budget support (GBS) and sector budget support (SBS). Research was carried out in ten countries: Cameroon, Ethiopia, India, Morocco, Nepal, Mozambique, Peru, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda.
  • Document

    Displacement and dispossession through land grabbing in Mozambique: the limits of international and national legal instruments — Refugee Studies Centre

    Refugee Studies Centre, Oxford, 2014
    The scale and speed of coordinated land grabs over the past five years has created a new avenue through which people are being displaced and dispossessed of their lands.  This paper looks at what limits international and national law in addressing displacement and dispossession due to land grabs in Mozambique.
  • Document

    A local vision of climate adaptation: Participatory urban planning in Mozambique

    Climate and Development Knowledge Network, 2014
    This report explores the outcomes of the project, Public Private People Partnerships for Climate Compatible Development (4PCCD) which ran from 2011 to 2013 and asked: can local views be represented fairly in national and municipal planning processes through a partnership approach?
  • Document

    Innovation, solidarity and South-South learning: the role of civil society from middle-income countries in effective development cooperation

    2014
    Civil society organisations (CSOs) from middle-income countries can play multiple strategically important roles in effective development cooperation. Beyond demanding transparency and accountability around the aid that their own countries still receive, they can add signifi cant value to development cooperation provided to other countries.  
  • Document

    Study of fisheries and aquaculture value chains in Mozambique: how to reduce gender discrimination in the fisheries and aquaculture sectors

    Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2014
    A fact-finding mission about the role women play in fisheries and aquaculture in Mozambique was conducted between January 28 and February 14, 2014. The mission’s objective was to document the participation of women in two value chains: The smallscale capture fisheries value chain and the aquaculture value chain.
  • Document

    Ticking time bombs: ineffective weapons stockpile management in Africa

    Institute for Security Studies, 2011
    The history of explosions in countries around the world illustrates the increased risk posed by improper ammunition management. This paper illustrates the importance of monitoring and controlling conventional weapons (CW) and ammunition stockpile management in Africa, paying particular attention to small arms and light weapons (SALW).
  • Document

    China in Mozambique: a cautious approach

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2009
    China's engagement with Africa has taken a different form in its relations with Mozambique, which are characterised by caution and compromise. China's engagement with Africa has taken a different form in its relations with Mozambique, which are characterised by caution and compromise.
  • Document

    Mozambique’s foreign policy: pragmatic non-alignment as a tool for development

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2013
    In October 2012 Mozambicans celebrated the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Rome General Peace Accord (GPA), which brought an end to the 15-year civil war that broke out two years after the country gained independence from Portugal in 1975.
  • Document

    A boom for whom? Mozambique’s natural gas and the New Development Opportunity

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2013
    In the two decades since the end of Mozambique’s civil war the country has depended heavily on international donors to fund its development. Although the economy grew at record rates from the mid-1990s, poverty levels remain above 50%. Mozambique has now discovered natural gas deposits in large commercial quantities.
  • Document

    Chinese banking interests in Mozambique

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2011
    Unlike in most other African countries, Chinese financial involvement in Mozambique includes state-owned banks (Export–Import Bank of China – Exim Bank, and the China Development Bank – CDB) and private commercial interests, in the form of Geocapital, a Luso-Chinese fund.

Pages