The Africa Infrastructure Development Index (AIDI)AIDI Development Index (AIDI)
May 2013
AfDB
Successes and Limitations of a Top-Down Approach to Governance: the Case of Anti-Corruption in RwandaISPI Analysis
N° 164, March 2013
Alessandro Bozzini, GIZ Technical Advisor, Rwanda
Unblocking results: Using aid to address governance constraints in public service deliveryISBN: 978-1-909464-35-3
© Overseas Development Institute 2013
May 2013
Shared Security And Peace Governance The Malian Experience
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
ISBN: 978-978-923-731-9
February 2012
African Media Barometer 2012The first home grown analysis of the media landscape in Africa
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES)
fesmedia Africa
2012
Policy Brief: What Future for the Joint Africa-EU Strategy?Policy Brief n° 3
Africa Governance Institute
June 2013
Strategic partnerships and sustainable investments: How can China support the African Mining Vision?Strategic partnerships and sustainable investments: How can China support the African Mining Vision?
Centre for Chinese Studies
Policy Briefing
May 2013
The State of Governance in Africa: The Dimension of Illicit Financial Flows as a Governance Challenge Third Meeting of the Committee on Governance and Popular Participation, Economic Commission for Africa, February 2013
The Political Economy of Fiscal Transparency, Participation, and Accountability Around the WorldKhagram, S., de Renzio, P., and Fung, A. (2013).
Overview and synthesis: The political economy of fiscal transparency, participation, and accountability around the world. In S. Khagram, A. Fung, de Renzio, P. (Eds.), Open Budgets: The Political Economy of Transparency, Participation, and Accountability (pp. 1-50).
Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press
Brookings Institution Press
Written by Yash Tandon , published by Pambazuka Press, November 2011, ISBN-13: 9780857490902, 40pgs.
Demystifying Aid is addressed to so-called aid recipients and others interested in understanding that development aid is not what it purports to be. It also aims to dialogue with well-meaning friends in the North who support aid to Africa (and to the ’poor’ elsewhere) for reasons of ethics or solidarity. The effects of their good intentions are, unfortunately, the opposite of their good intentions.
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