1st Edition

The Reality of Aid 1998-1999 An independent review of poverty reduction and development assistance

    274 Pages
    by Routledge

    274 Pages
    by Routledge

    NOW IN ITS SIXTH ANNUAL EDITION, The Reality of Aid has for the first time analysed the 'fair share' of bilateral aid for basic social services � basic education, basic health, reproductive health, nutrition, clean water and sanitation - that should come from each donor; an analysis which shows only two donors meeting their fair share and the G7 nations (Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK, US) falling behind by over US$5 billion. This year and next, The Reality of Aid focuses on basic education, as a right and not a privilege, and its role in development cooperation and poverty elimination. A key feature of The Reality of Aid 1998/1999 is the ten chapters offering analysis of development cooperation from the perspective of southern NGOs. Many of these focus on basic education and raise issues around transparency, gender and civil society. 'If policies were programmes and promises were dollars, The Reality of Aid could report great progress on the road to eradicating global poverty this year. But at a time when donors acknowledge that ending poverty is possible, it seems that commitments are being offered instead of resources and real change.' From the Summary Part I presents a useful Summary, highlighting the steps that donors could take now to make progress towards poverty eradication, and reviews the trends in development cooperation, debt relief measures targeted towards the new millennium and commitment to the goal of ensuring basic education for all. Part II gives a full report on the overseas aid performance of OECD country aid donors and the European Union over the last year. Part III sets out a Southern perspective on development cooperation. Part IV provides 'at a glance' comparisons of donors' aid outlook and commitment to development cooperation in the 21st Century, poverty eradication, gender and public support. Part V contains handy reference material. Throughout the book, information is presented in easily interpreted diagrams and graphs. The Reality of Aid has established itself as a unique source of independent evaluation and comment on aid policies and development. It is indispensable for all in the field, whether in the official or voluntary sectors. 'Indispensable ... it gives you most of the hard facts you need to know about the major issues' New Internationalist 'The most comprehensive and rigorous independent analysis of the aid and development policies of the world's wealthiest nations ... Essential reading' Charity World 'The Reality of Aid remains an essential purchase by the libraries of development institutions and an invaluable reference for development practitioners' Development & Change 'A reliable 'watchdog' for anyone interested in this important aspect of international relations' ORBIT 'An accessible reference ... [it] encompasses many key issues and stimulates further research' Commonwealth & Comparative Politics Originally published in 1998

    List of Boxes and Tables Acknowledgements Part I Trends in Development Cooperation The Reality of Aid in 1998: Summary World aid in 1997 Targeting the End of Absolute Poverty Trends in Development Cooperation by Tony German and Judith Randel Towards a Jubilee for Foreign Debt by Mariano Valderrarna Basic Education Compiled by Tony German and Judith Randel Part II A Review of Aid Donors Australia by Gaith Luke, ACFOA Canada by Brian Tomlinson, CClC Japan by Akio Takayanagi, JANIC New Zealand by Pat Webster and Jan Engels, CID Norway by Gunnar Garbo, NPA Switzerland by Christophe Bellman, SWISS Coalition United States by Carol Lancaster Interaction The European Community programme by Mirjam van Reisen, Eurostep Auslria by Helmuth Hartmeyer, KommEnt, Karin Kublbock, aid Michael Obrovsky, OFSE Belgium by Melanie Schellens, NCOS Denmark by Bibi Linder, MS Finland by Folke Sundman and Marc Waller, KePa France by Oliver Blamangin, CRID Germany by Birgit Dederichs-Bain and Thomas Fues, DWHH and tdh Ireland by Maire Matthews and Hugh Byrne, Concern Italy by Jose Luis Rhi-Sausi and Marco Zupi, Movimondo The Netherlands by Caroline Wildernan, Novib Portugal by Goncalo Paes Parente, OlKOS Spain by Gonzalo Fanjul, lntermon Sweden by Svante Sandberg, Forum Syd United Kingdom by Sarah Collinson and Nicola Crawhall, ACTIONAID Part Ill Perspectives from the South on Development Cooperation Latin America: Trends in International Cooperation by Mariano Valderrama Latin America, International Cooperation and Basic Education in Peru, Guatemala and El Salvador by Mariano Valderram Latin America: Capacity-building and Change In NGOs by Mariano Valderrama Cuba Education during the Special Period by Mercedes Arce, NPA Kenya Financing Education by David Aduda, ACTlONAID Namibia: Best Practice in Education by Jesper Oisson Kristensen, Ibis Nepal: Foreign Assistance, Information and Transparency by Sriram Raj Pande, New Era Philippines: Targeting Poverty? by CODE-NGO Uganda: Aid and Education Development by Zie Gariyo, Uganda Debt Network Zimbabwe: A Gender Perspective on Non-formal Education by Munhamo Chisvo, ZWRCN Part IV Donors Compared At a Glance The Outlook for Aid, at a Glance Donor Commitments to 21st Century Development Goals: at a Glance Mainstreaming Poverty Reduction: at a Glance Measuring Aid for Poverty Reduction: at a Glance Approaches to Gender in Development Cooperation at a Glance Public Support for Development Cooperation: at a Glance Part V Reference Section The Reality of Aid Project Participating Agencies Glossary Source Notes Exchange Rates

    Biography

    Randel, Judith ; Ewing, Tony German with Deborah