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Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt in Uganda

Showing 81-90 of 117 results

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  • Document

    Scaling up antiretroviral therapy: experience in Uganda: case study (Perspectives and Practice in Antiretroviral treatment)

    World Health Organization, 2003
    This case study is part of a series entitled Perspectives and Practice in Antiretroviral treatment, which aims to analyse how governments, civil society organisations, private corporations and others are successfully providing antiretroviral treatment and care to people with HIV/AIDS, even in the most resource-constrained settings.
  • Document

    Poverty, Knowledge and Policy Processes: A Case Study of Ugandan National Poverty Reduction Policy

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2002
    This report concerns the poverty reduction policy process in Kampala, Uganda. It describes and analyses the actors involved in policy processes at national level, the kinds of knowledge on which the processes draw, and the spaces, formal and informal, in which policy actors engage with each other.
  • Document

    Poverty Knowledge and Policy Processes in Uganda: Case Studies From Bushenyi, Lira and Tororo Districts

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2003
    This report concerns the poverty reduction policy process in three Ugandan districts, Bushenyi, Lira and Tororo.
  • Document

    Lessons from conflict: a participatory review of a Ugandan refugee project

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    As violence in northwest Uganda seemed to be waning in 1994, international agencies and Ugandan authorities agreed to provide Sudanese refugees with land to grow their own food. The Ikafe project ultimately fell prey to ongoing conflict and the refugees fled back to Sudan. What can we learn from its demise?
  • Document

    The consequences of refugee flows and managing the aftermath

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    Is the impact of refugees always negative? Are governments that accept refugees justified in depicting them as a burden? Or are refugees potential agents of development? Could support of livelihood activities enable refugees to lessen their dependence on aid and reduce tension with their hosts? Could locals benefit from refugee camp infrastructure when refugees go home?
  • Document

    Strengthening democracy: can CSOs help?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    The creation of a workable democracy is a prime concern for many conflict-torn societies. A challenge faced in the past by Bosnia and Uganda, it is one that Afghanistan is likely to have to face in the near future. How far can civil society organisations (CSOs) help (re)-build democracy?
  • Document

    Is aid in crisis?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    Are aid agencies addressing the causes of conflict in dysfunctional states? Can humanitarian assistance be neutral when aid is an instrument of foreign policy wielded by powerful donor states? In an era of disintegrating state authority are aid providers succeeding in attempts to make relief more development-oriented?
  • Document

    Escaping poverty: Can policy reach the chronically poor?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    The past few years have seen remarkable consensus on and commitment to poverty reduction from governments around the world. This has resulted in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) which seek to reduce global absolute poverty by 50 per cent by 2015 and to reduce other forms of human deprivation.
  • Document

    Working for God?: evaluating service delivery of religious not-for-profit health care providers in Uganda

    World Bank, 2003
    This paper exploits a unique micro-level data set on primary health care facilities in Uganda to address the question: What motivates religious not-for-profit (RNP) health care providers?The literature provides two general explanations for what drives not-for-profit actors.
  • Document

    Public expenditure for development results and poverty reduction

    Overseas Development Institute, 2003
    Review and case studies of "Results-oriented (or ‘performance’ or ‘output’) budgeting": the planning of public expenditures for the purpose of achieving explicit and defined results. These policies have often been first implemented through sector-wide approaches (SWAps), particularly in health and education.

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