Development Co-operation Reviews: Japan 1999


Book Description

The OECD Development Assistance Committee's 1999 review of Japans development aid policies and programmes.




Development Co-operation Reviews: Ireland 1999


Book Description

The OECD Development Assistance Committee's 1999 review of Ireland's development aid programmes.




Development Co-operation Reviews: Denmark 1999


Book Description

The OECD Development Assistance Committee's 1999 review of Denmark's development aid programmes and policies.




Development Co-operation Reviews: Norway 1999


Book Description

The Development Assistance Committee's 1999 review of Norway's aid policies and programmes.




Development Co-operation Reviews: Finland 1999


Book Description

The OECD Development Assistance Committee's 1999 review of Finlands development aid programmes and policies.




Development Co-operation Reviews: Luxembourg 1999


Book Description

The OECD Development Assistance Committee's 1999 review of Luxembourg's development aid programmes and policies.




Development Co-operation Reviews: Japan 1996


Book Description

The Development Assistance Committee peer review of Japan's development co-operaton policies and programmes for 1996.







Development Co-operation Report 1999 Efforts and Policies of the Members of the Development Assistance Committee


Book Description

How can aid and private flows interact to produce a high-quality stream of development financing that reduces poverty and fosters sustainable development? Helping developing countries to establish effective systems for mobilising, allocating and ...




Between Export Promotion and Poverty Reduction


Book Description

The end of the Cold War has prompted many donors of Official Development Assistance (ODA) to fundamentally realign their global aid and trade relations. Despite recent progress in untying ODA and a number of related efforts to enhance the overall efficiency of international cooperation with the poorest countries, it remains unexplained why some OECD states have liberalised their bilateral programmes to a considerable extent – whereas others have continued to use foreign aid as a means to promote domestic exports. Jan-Henrik Petermann widens the scope of previous macro-analyses of ‘system-driven’ reorientations in tying practices in the wake of 1989/90, inquiring into donors’ national parameters of policy-making at the strategic nexus between external trade and international development.