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The Politics of Aid
African Strategies for Dealing with Donors
Edited by Lindsay Whitfield
422 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-956017-2
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Hardback
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27 November 2008
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- Clear historical narrative of the aid system following its evolution into the current international aid system
- In-depth country case studies on donor-recipient aid relations
- Challenges the dominant assumptions and arguments in the aid debate
This book presents an original approach to understanding the relationship between official aid agencies and aid-receiving African governments. The first part provides a challenge to the hazy official claims of aid donors that they have stopped trying to force African governments to do what 'we' think is best for 'them' and instead are now promoting African 'ownership' of the policies and projects which foreign aid supports. The authors tease out the multiple meanings of the term 'ownership', demonstrating why it became popular when it did, but also the limits to this discourse of ownership observed in aid practices. The authors set out to defend a particular vision of ownership-one that involves African governments taking back control of their development
policies and priorities. Based largely on interviews with the people who do the negotiating on both sides of the aid relationship, the country case studies put the rhetoric of the new aid system to a more practical test. The authors ask how donors seek to achieve their policy objectives without being seen to push too hard, what preconditions they place on transferring authority to African governments, and what effect the constant discussions over development policy have on state institutions, democracy and political culture in recipient countries. It investigates the strategies that African states have adopted to advance their objectives in aid negotiations and how successful their efforts have been. Comparing the country experiences, it points out the conditions accounting for the varying
success of eight African countries: Botswana, Ethiopia, Ghana, Mali, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania and Zambia. It concludes by asking whether the conditions African countries face in aid negotiations are changing.Readership: Scholars and students of international relations, international political economy, and development studies.
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Edited by Lindsay Whitfield, Research Fellow at the Global Economic Governance Programme, Department of Politics and International Relations and University College, University of Oxford. Contributors: Isaline Bergamaschi is a doctoral candidate in Politics and International Relations at Institut d'Etudes Politiques in Paris (Sciences-Po). Rachel Hayman is an ESRC post-doctoral fellow at the School of Social and Political Studies, University of Edinburgh. Alastair Fraser is a doctoral candidate at the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford. Xavier Furtado is with the Canadian
International Development Agency (CIDA). Joe Hanlon is a Senior Lecturer in Development Policy and Practice at the Open University, UK. Graham Harrison is Reader in Politics and Director of the Political Economy Research Centre at the University of Sheffield, UK. Duncan Holtom is a Senior Researcher at the People and Work Unit, a voluntary sector organization based in the UK. Emily Jones is Trade Policy Adviser for Oxfam GB where she leads advocacy work on regional and bilateral trade agreements. Gervase Maipose is an Associate Professor and currently Head of the Department of Political and Administrative Studies at the University of Botswana. Sarah Mulley is coordinator of the UK Aid Network, a coalition of NGOs
advocating for more and better aid. Paolo de Renzio is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford, and a Research Associate of the Centre for Aid and Public Expenditure at the Overseas Development Institute. James Smith is retired following a 24-year career at the World Bank dealing with aid and poverty issues, where his last position was Lead Economist for Poverty Reduction and Economic Management in Africa. Lindsay Whitfield was a Research Fellow at the Global Economic Governance Programme (2005-2008), and is currently a Research Fellow at the Danish Institute for International Studies, Copenhagen, Denmark.
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Lindsay Whitfield and Alastair Fraser: Introduction: Aid and Sovereignty
1: Lindsay Whitfield and Alastair Fraser: Negotiating Aid
2: Alastair Fraser: Aid Recipient Sovereignty in Historical Perspective
3: Alastair Fraser and Lindsay Whitfield: Understanding Contemporary Aid Relationships
4: Gervase Maipose: Botswana: The African Success Story
5: Xavier Furtado and Jim Smith: Ethiopia: Retaining Sovereignty in the Face of Aid
6: Rachel Hayman: Rwanda: Milking the Cow? Creating Policy Space in Spite of Aid Dependence
7: Lindsay Whitfield and Emily Jones: Ghana: Breaking out of Aid Dependence? Economic and Political Barriers to Ownership
8: Isaline Bergamaschi: Mali: Origins, Patterns and Limits of Donor-driven Ownership
9: Paolo de Renzio and Joe Hanlon: Mozambique: Contested Sovereignty? The Dilemmas of Aid Dependence
10: Graham Harrison and Sarah Mulley with Duncan Holtom: Tanzania: A Genuine Case of Recipient Leadership in the Aid System?
11: Alastair Fraser: Zambia: Back to the Future?
12: Lindsay Whitfield: Aid and Power: A Comparative Analysis of the Country Studies
Lindsay Whitfield: Conclusion: Changing Conditions?
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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