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Rethinking Canadian Aid /

In 2013, the government abolished the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), which had been Canada?s flagship foreign aid agency for decades, and transferred its functions to the newly renamed Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development (DFATD). As the government is rethinking Ca...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Brown, Stephen, 1967- (Editor ), Den Heyer, Molly, 1972- (Editor ), Black, David R. (David Ross), 1960- (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Ottawa : University of Ottawa Press, [2015]
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title Page; Table of Contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction: Why Rethink Canadian Aid?; Section I: Foundations of Ethics, Power and Bureaucracy; Chapter I: Humane Internationalism and the Malaise of Canadian Aid Policy; Chapter II: Refashioning Humane Internationalism in Twenty-First-Century Canada; Chapter III: Revisiting the Ethical Foundations of Aid and Development Policy from a Cosmopolitan Perspective; Chapter IV: Power and Policy: Lessons from Aid Effectiveness
  • Chapter V: Results, Risk, Rhetoric and Reality: The Need for Common Sense in Canada's Development AssistanceSection II: The Canadian Context and Motivations; Chapter VI: Mimicry and Motives: Canadian Aid Allocation in Longitudinal Perspective; Chapter VII: Continental Shift? Rethinking Canadian Aid to the Americas; Chapter VIII: Preventing, Substituting or Complementing the Use of Force? Development Assistance in Canadian Strategic Culture; Chapter IX: Why Aid? Canadian Perception of the Usefulness of Canadian Aid in an Era of Economic Uncertainty
  • Chapter X: The Management of Canadian Development Assistance: Ideology, Electoral Politics or Public Interest?Section III: Canada's Role in International Development on Key Themes; Chapter XI: Gender Equality and the "Two CIDAs": Successes and Setbacks, 1976-2013; Chapter XII: From "Children-in-Development" to Social Age Mainstreaming in Canada's Development Policy and Programming? Practice, Prospects and Proposals; Chapter XIII: Canada's Fragile States Policy: What Have We Accomplished and Where Do We Go from Here?
  • Chapter XIV: Canada and Development in Other Fragile States: Moving beyond the "Afghanistan Model"Chapter XV: Charity Begins at Home: The Extractive Sector as an Illustration of Changes and Continuities in the New De Facto Canadian Aid Policy; Chapter XVI: Undermining Foreign Aid: The Extractive Sector and the Recommercialization of Canadian Development Assistance; Conclusion: Rethinking Canadian Development Cooperation
  • Towards Renewed Partnerships?; Contributors; Index