Transforming Development: Foreign Aid for a Changing World

Front Cover
Jim Freedman
University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2000 - Business & Economics - 296 pages

The practice of rich countries providing financial assistance to developing countries has become increasingly controversial. Foreign aid is now characterized more by its failures than its successes, making foreign assistance budgets easy targets for politicians. In academic and policy circles the claim is made that foreign aid has outlived its usefulness. The original essays in Transforming Development take a more optimistic view, and instead of foreseeing the end of foreign aid, show how it might be revived.

The essays in this volume argue that foreign aid is, first and foremost, a humanitarian enterprise. The contributors suggest ways to reform the practice of development assistance including new approaches to development financing and novel strategies for increasing the effectiveness of foreign aid, maintaining that development assistance must continue to receive donor support.

This forward-looking collection is an ideal text for undergraduate and graduate courses in international development and a valuable resource for practitioners and policy-makers in the field.

 

Contents

The Canadian Context
13
Competing
37
Conditionality and Freedom
61
External Conditionality Local Ownership and Development
82
Beyond Donor Agencies
99
Crisis and Opportunity in the New World Order
114
Foreign Assistance and Globalization
135
The Small the Big and the Ugly
153
A Case for Equity
192
Democratizing Research
209
Rethinking Participation Empowerment and Development from
222
Food and Information
235
Challenges of the
255
Conclusion
269
REFERENCES
275
CONTRIBUTORS
291

The Payoffs of Social Capital
169

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About the author (2000)

JIM FREEDMAN is on leave from the University of Western Ontario, serving as an analyst in the Office of the Iraq Programme at the United Nations in New York.

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