The Africa Infrastructure Development IndexAIDI Development Index (AIDI)
May 2013
BAD
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, Rwan
Unblocking results : Using aid to address governance constraints in public service deliveryISBN : 978-1-909464-35-3
© Overseas Development Institute 2013
May 2013
Gouvernance partagée de la sécurité et de la paixDr Zeïni MOULAYE / IGP Mahamadou NIAKATÉ
ISBN : 978-978-923-364-9
February 2012
Baromètre des médias africains 2012Première analyse locale du paysage médiatique en Afrique
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES)
fesmedia Africa
2012
Policy Brief : Quel avenir pour la stratégie commune Afrique-UE ?Policy Brief n° 3
Institut Africain de la Gouvernance
Juin 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 ChallengeThird 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
Inclusive Growth and a Post-2015 Framework
Gina Bergh ; Claire Melamed, Overseas Development Institute (ODI), Research reports and studies, May 2012, 111 Westminster Bridge Road, London, 9 pages
One of the recurring themes in the debate about the post-2015 agenda is the role that growth and employment issues should play. While there is a great deal of discussion about how to include growth in a new global development framework after 2015, specific proposals remain relatively thin.
Current debates point to three, not mutually exclusive, approaches, tackling different parts of the policy agenda on inclusive growth.
Despite broad consensus that it is desirable to include economic growth and employment in a post-2015 agreement, it is clear that there will be both practical and political challenges to achieving this. Any post-2015 agreement will need to do three things :
Be useful, at a national level or global level, in either driving changes which would otherwise not happen, or in enabling better accountability between governments and people.
Incentivise better policies, by taking on board the learning to date in relevant areas, focusing particularly on those for which negotiations and agreement have proved fruitless in the past.
Be technically viable, by starting with a good understanding of the measurement difficulties in this area and by having a strategy to overcome them.
Achieving all three will not be easy. But the prize, in the form of a new global consensus that brings together both the economic and the social aspects of development change, is considerable. And the task at hand is to chart a course to get there.
Published by ODI
