Search
Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt, Governance
Showing 691-700 of 955 results
Pages
- Document
Agricultural marketing in developing countries: the role of NGOs and CBOs
Natural Resources Institute, UK, 2001Reviews the experiences of non-governmental and community-based organizations (NGOs and CBOs, respectively) in agricultural marketing initiatives. Many NGOs target the rural poor, whose ability to access remunerative markets is a critical determinant of incomes and well-being.DocumentImproving the management of sustainable development: towards a new strategic framework for large developing countries: China, India, and Indonesia
Institute of Advanced Studies. United Nations University,, 2002Based on the case study analyses of China, India, and Indonesia, this report introduces and examines some of the important issues related to developing a national strategy for sustainable development.DocumentChanging roles of non-governmental organisations in education in Malawi
Development Experience Clearinghouse, USAID, 2002Looks at the role NGOs are currently playing or are intending to play in strengthening education and civil society in MalawiLessons learned include:Regulation of NGOs within the sector is weak.DocumentUser’s guide to poverty and social impact analysis of policy reform
PovertyNet, World Bank, 2002Draft guide to in undertaking poverty and social impact analysis (PSIA) of policy reforms.DocumentAfrican Scholars' Forum for Envisioning Africa: focus on NEPAD
WSSD Web Site of the Heinrich Boell Foundation, 2002Collection of papers from a forum organised by the Heinrich Boell Foundation, together with the Mazingira Institute and the African academy of Sciences.DocumentA conceptual framework for implementing biosafety: linking policy, capacity and regulation
International Service for National Agricultural Research, 2002This paper brings together contributions to a meeting held in July 2001 entitled “A Framework for Biosafety Implementation: A Tool for Capacity Building.” The purpose of this meeting was to devise a conceptual framework to address regulatory implementation and capacity-building needs of developing countries and Parties to the Biosafety Protocol. This framework consists of five elements1.DocumentNew strategies, old loan conditions: the case of Uganda
Bretton Woods Project, 2002Based on secondary materials and interviews with leading officials within the Government of Uganda, bi-lateral and multi-lateral institutions and civil society organizations in Uganda and Washington DC over 2001, this study presents evidence that crucial policy prescriptions within the PRSC and PRGF may impair Uganda’s ability to effectively realize its antipoverty and growth goals.Uganda's PovDocumentWorld Development Report 2003: sustainable development in a dynamic economy (draft)
World Development Report, World Bank, 2002This year's WDR looks at how to manage the substantial growth in output and productivity which is predicted for developing countries in the next 50 years.The problem:Key change processes are technological innovation, income growth, demographic change and urban transitions.DocumentLimitations of grassroot organisations
Governance and Development Review, IDS, 2002A recent review has focused on how authority and control are exercised within civil society institutions and between civil society and the state.
