1st Edition

Evaluation and Development The Partnership Dimension World Bank Series on Evaluation and Development

By Osvaldo N. Feinstein Copyright 2004
    466 Pages
    by Routledge

    260 Pages
    by Routledge

    Partnership is of growing importance in development work. Partnerships among state, private business, and civil society organizations are increasingly used to deliver the goods and services required for balanced growth and poverty reduction. Aid activities have shifted from a project focus to a more strategic and holistic focus on programs, sectors, and policies. With this new orientation, partnerships are often essential to deal with the added complexity and the larger number of agencies, groups, and stakeholders involved.The Partnership Dimension takes on the issues in a series of chapters divided into two general parts: Part 1, "Foundations of Partnership and Their Evaluation," covers the types of development partnership and critical issues involved, and Part 2, "Partnerships in Practice," then illustrates the aspects and lessons of partnership experience through a series of case studies. Many of the studies focus on the benefits of partnerships between institutions of government and civil society. Benefits include effective knowledge transfer, greater cross-national cooperation, the creation of new networks and capacity, and penetration of new markets. Private firms use partnerships with competitors to learn or reduce risk.There is much to learn about when, where, and how best to use partnerships, and, in particular, partnerships that involve less traditional combinations of actors, such as global partnerships for public policy, country-focused aid partnerships, private sector partnerships for knowledge creation, and partnerships for community development involving business, nongovernmental organizations, and government.Relatively little is known about the costs and benefits, and the risks and rewards, of different types of partnerships, or about how best to conduct partnerships for different purposes. This is why the current volume in the World Bank series is relevant for both development practitioners and policy analysts.

    1: Foundations of Partnerships and Their Evaluation; 1: Partnership as a Means to Improve Economic Performance; 2: Theoretical Foundations of Partnership; 3: Foundations of Partnerships: A Practitioner’s Perspective; 4: Evaluating Partnerships; 5: Evaluation of, for, and through Partnerships; 6: The Logic of Partnership; 2: Partnerships in Practice; 7: Partnership, Mutual Accountability, and Evaluation; Different Perspectives and Types of Development Partnership; 8: Global Public Policy Partnerships; 9: Regional Partnerships in the European Union; 10: Country-Focused Partnerships—Lessons from Experience; 11: Country and Donor Partnerships; 12: Partnerships for Knowledge Creation; Critical Issues; 13: Partnerships: The Critical Role of the State 1; 14: Challenges for Governance in Partnerships for Delivering Services 1; Case Studies; 15: Partnership for Poverty Reduction: ActionAid Ethiopia; 16: Research Partnerships and Their Evaluation; 17: Tactical Partnerships—A Philippine Case Study; 18: Local Governments and Community-Based Partnerships; 19: Partnerships for Integrated Community Development in Southern Africa; 20: Partnerships for Community Development—World Vision; 21: Partnerships between International Organizations and Private Foundations 1; 22: Partnerships among Business, Government, and NGOs: Lessons from the South African National Business Initiative

    Biography

    Osvaldo N. Feinstein