Civil Society, Public Action and Accountability in Africa

January 7, 2013
An important new paper from some big development names – Shanta Devarajan and Stuti Khemani from the World Bank, and Michael Walton (ex Bank, now at Harvard Kennedy School) – directs a slightly fierce (but welcome) political economy gaze at donor efforts to strengthen civil society (one of the more recent developmental fads). As with most such papers, after a
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What does a 'rights-based approach' look like in practice? A new Oxfam guide

December 10, 2012
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What have we learned from 5 years of research on African power and politics?

November 12, 2012
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What can political economists tell us about Africa, aid and development?

June 8, 2012
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How can aid agencies promote local governance and accountability? Lessons from five countries.

May 31, 2012
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Building accountability in Tanzania: applying an evolutionary/venture capitalist theory of change

April 27, 2012
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Can Cities build local 'developmental states'? Some surprising good news from Colombia

August 26, 2011
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What use are models of change? An experiment in Tanzania

May 23, 2011
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Africa Power and Politics – David Booth responds

April 22, 2011
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The World Bank breaks its promises on Africa’s voting power

April 27, 2010
The World Bank went backwards in Washington last week, when it announced a set of reforms on ‘voice’ (the different countries’ share of voting power at the Bank) that reversed many of the gains for African countries from the previous voice reform, at the Bank’s last Annual Meeting in Istanbul in September 2009. In last week’s rejig, of 47 countries
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Lifting the Resource Curse (or how to make finding oil a blessing)

February 25, 2010
‘Lifting the Resource Curse’, a new Oxfam paper, revisits the difficult question of how to ensure natural resources are a blessing, and not a curse, for poor countries. Countries like Angola, where oil revenues (which represent 80 per cent of national income) are estimated at $10bn per year, yet 70 per cent of the population live on less than $2
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Natural Resources and Development Strategy after the crisis: useful (but flawed) new World Bank paper

February 18, 2010
The World Bank’s influential PREM (Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Network) team has a new series of topical notes, pulling together its research on breaking issues (they’ve obviously been reading the literature on using research for influence – rehashing existing research at the right moment for policy makers is one of the most effective forms of influencing). It’s called ‘Economic
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