1st Edition
The Politics of Public–Private Partnerships and International Development Insights from Ethiopia
Chapter 1: Unravelling the Ps in public–private partnerships for development
Paul Beaumont, Jon Harald Sande Lie and Marit Østebø
Chapter 2: Tracing the travels of a development model: PPPs and Ethiopia’s selective learning
Paul Beaumont
Chapter 3: The ‘private’ in Ethiopia’s PPPs: a history of the present
Yonas Ashine Demisse
Chapter 4: In search of alternative development funding: PPPs between technocratic restraint and political urgency
Lovise Aalen
Chapter 5: Theorising points of convergence and divergence: Perspectives on PPPs and other public–private collaborations in Ethiopia
Christina Tekie Collins
Chapter 6: The virus is good to think with: reimagining PPPs in Ethiopia and beyond
Marit Tolo Østebø
Chapter 7: From synergy to subsidy: the cultural problem of public–private partnerships in international development
Jon Harald Sande Lie
Chapter 8: Industrialisation and industrial development policies in Ethiopia: the unfinished search for alternatives
Teshome Emana Soboka
Chapter 9: Productive boundaries: the public–private divide in Ethiopia’s SEZs
Anna Eriksen Rio
Chapter 10: Conclusion: public–private relations in the wild
Marit Tolo Østebø, Paul Beaumont and Jon Harald Sande Lie
Biography
Jon Harald Sande Lie is a social anthropologist and research professor at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI) in Oslo, where he also heads the Research Group for Peace, Conflict and Development. Through his research focus on the international development apparatus and its effects and articulations in Ethiopia, Uganda and the World Bank, he explores issues related to state formation, politics, power and resistance, and partnerships and public–private relations. He is the project manager and principal investigator of the Public–Private Development Interfaces in Ethiopia project, funded by the Research Council of Norway (grant no. 315356).
Paul Beaumont is a senior researcher at NUPI and leads the European Research Council-funded research project Navigating the Era of Indicators (2025–2030). His research interests include the (dis)functioning of international institutions, dubious quantified performance indicators and hierarchies in world politics. Paul has published two monographs: Performing Nuclear Weapons: How Britain Made its Bomb Make Sense (2021) and The Grammar of Status Competition: International Hierarchies and Domestic Politics (2024).
Marit Tolo Østebø is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Florida. Her focal point of interest is the anthropology of policy, international development and critical global health. Her work explores the relationships between the normative frameworks, policies, models and stories that circulate within the policy world and the complex realities that exist on the ground. She integrates perspectives from multiple specialties including anthropology of policy, anthropology of religion, gender studies, digital anthropology, medical anthropology and science and technology studies and has focused on policy models and modelling communities, translations of gender equality, the interplay between religion and development, the relationship between politics and health research and – more recently – global oncology and PPPs. Her research is usually multi-sited and transnational in nature, with a primary geographical focus in Ethiopia, where she has conducted anthropological fieldwork since 2005.






