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Managing public expenditure for development results and poverty reduction
Overseas Development Institute, 2003This ODI working paper is a survey of the practice of results-oriented – or performance-based – public expenditure management in low income developing countries.DocumentCost-effectiveness of zinc as adjunct therapy for acute childhood diarrhoea in developing countries
Bulletin of the World Health Organization : the International Journal of Public Health, 2004This article from the Bulletin of the World Health Organization reports on a study in Tanzania which examined the costs, effects and cost-effectiveness of adding zinc to standard treatment of acute childhood diarrhoea, including dysentery.DocumentReforms of agricultural research and technology dissemination systems in eastern Africa: Tanzanian experience
Association for Strengthening Agricultural Research in Eastern and Central Africa, 2004This paper charts the reform of agricultural research and technology dissemination in Tanzania with particular reference to the National Agricultural Research System (NARS), including its strengths and weaknesses plus reforming principles and strategies to improve effectiveness.Strengths of the NARS detailed in the paper include:human capacity - the entire NARS has a critical mass of skDocumentTrade and the consolidation of regional economic relations in the Great Lakes Region of Central and Eastern Africa: critical reflections
Institute of Development Studies, University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2002This paper asks whether the Great Lakes Region (GLR) of Central and Eastern Africa, consisting of Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), can be seen as constituting a single political region, and assesses the prospects for economic integration in the region.DocumentCan urban housing regulations be pro-poor?
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005Bureaucracy is a significant barrier to providing affordable shelter. Slums are often the result of inappropriate regulatory frameworks. High standards, restrictive regulations and complex procedures force countless people into informal settlements. What can be done to ensure that formal planning systems become more transparent and start to work on behalf of the poor?DocumentNORAD fellowship programme magazine 2004
Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2004The NORAD fellowship programme magazine provides an insight into the 40 year history of the programme, featuring the present developments for 2004.This edition of the NORAD fellowship programme magazine contains the following features:knowledge is the future - life as a Zambian student in Norwayfrom development aid to knowledge exchange - the history of the fellowship programmeDocumentBridging the gap – can partnerships bring transport services to the poor?
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2004Affordable transport is vital for poor people in developing countries to earn and sustain a living. Most transport services have failed to meet basic needs of the poor, leaving them economically vulnerable. Governments have started to allow private transport businesses to respond to the rising demand.DocumentParticipatory monitoring of PRS and pro-poor expenditure in selected districts and areas of Arusha Region, Tanzania
Hakikazi Catalyst, Tanzania, 2004This report aims to assess the effects of Tanzania’s Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS) Paper and pro-poor government expenditure in selected areas of Arusha Municipal and Arumeru Districts in Arusha Region.DocumentIn_focus: fixing health systems (Tanzania)
International Development Research Centre, 2004This book from the International Development and Research Centre presents the Tanzania Essential Health Interventions Project (TEHIP). The premise of this project is that health reforms should be based not just on increased funding but on more strategic investments in health.DocumentPastoralism on the margin
Minority Rights Group International, 2004This report focuses on the sustainability of pastoralism in the lowlands of the Great Rift of East Africa and the Horn, arguing that pastoralism as a mode of production and a way of life has entered a phase of decline, often accompanied by conflict, drought, famine and flooding.The report details the historic evolution and chief characteristics of pastoralism, discussing the eras of colonialismPages
