International Development Cooperation Today : A Radical Shift Towards a Global Paradigm
Over the past 60 years high-income countries have invested over 4000 billion euros in development aid. With varying degrees of success, these investments in low-income countries contributed to tackling structural problems such as access to water, health care, and education. Today, however, internati...
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leuven :
Leuven University Press,
2021.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Contents
- List of figures
- Figure 1: Trend in official development cooperation of all rich countries combined
- Figure 2: Historically, ODA is the most stable external resource for developing countries
- Figure 3: ODA grant equivalent for 2019 (30 countries)
- Figure 4: ODA grant equivalent as a percentage of GNI for 2019 (30 countries)
- Figure 5: The Gavi Alliance
- Figure 6: Inflows of external finance to ODA-eligible countries
- Figure 7: Towards a new development cooperation model
- Figure 8: Visual representation of the Paris Declaration
- Figure 9: Sustainable Development Goals (doughnut visualisation)
- Figure 10: Countries whose SDG Index score has improved or decreased the most since 2015
- Figure 11: Whole-of-Society approach
- Figure 12: Bilateral ODA composition: all DAC countries, 2014
- Figure 13: Trends in decentralised development cooperation
- Figure 14: Trends in official decentralised development cooperation (DDC) financing, net disbursements, USD million, constant 2015 prices
- Figure 15: IGOs in the world system, 1816-2014
- Figure 16: Step by step towards an Africa-EU alliance
- Figure 17: Africa and Europe: a unique and unparalleled strategic proximity
- Figure 18: The UN system
- Figure 19: Resources beyond ODA funds from DAC countries account for between 12% (for the Global Fund) and 60% (for the International Development Association [IDA])
- Figure 20: Non-ODAble contributions make for a large part of financing to the United Nations Development system
- Figure 21: TGI growth 1955-2018
- Figure 22: ODA to and through CSOs, 2010-18 (USD million, disbursements, constant 2018 prices)
- Figure 23: Four types of NGDO strategies to address global challenges
- Figure 24: Saferworld's localisation spectrum
- Figure 25: Sustainable Development Goals: distance to target
- Figure 26: Distribution of ODA by income group (2017-2018) in millions of USD
- List of tables
- Table 1: Overview of an expanding community of development actors (examples)
- Table 2: Top 10 ODA recipients (2018)
- Table 3: The colonial preference (2007-2017)
- Table 4: Fragmentation of aid
- Table 5: New donors' development cooperation agencies and their multilateral aid
- Table 6: Voting weightings in the World Bank Group (2020)
- Table 7: The six largest NGDOs in the US
- Table 8: Percentage of Europeans regarding development aid as an important issue
- Table 9: ODA by income category, 1990-2018
- List of boxes
- Box 1. No definition of development cooperation?
- Box 2. ODA is the most stable external resource for developing countries
- Box 3. How relevant is the 0.7% target?
- Box 4. Who owns this well? Partners in problems!
- Box 5. Development impact bonds: private investors and conventional donors join forces
- Box 6. Colonialists, colonisers, colonists, colonials and the colonised