A Summary of ONE’s Position for the 4th High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness, Busan MORE
Commitments made at Busan should be carried through and cut across other international forums and initiatives as best practices to guide development activities, improve results in meeting development outcomes in health, education, and agriculture, and speed progress in reducing poverty. MORE
This briefing suggests five key principles which should be applied to any financial promise made by a policy maker. The briefing is aimed at those responsible for making the promises in government, as well as those judging the quality of the promises in the media and civil society. MORE
There are countless examples of SMART Aid programmes achieving results across Africa, whether in fighting disease, promoting literacy, boosting agriculture, helping African countries to trade and attract investment, or empowering African citizens to fight corruption and hold their own governments to account. MORE
If you really want to know what Africans - leaders, policy makers and aid beneficiaries -- think about aid and what many Africans working on the ground to improve the lives of poor people think about Ms. Moyo's prescriptions, read these comments. MORE
With a new Congress and a new Administration in place, there is an opportunity to prioritize development and modernize the U.S. structure for delivering assistance.
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Development Assistance Chapter from DATA Report 2008. PDF Download.
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The Third High Level Forum (HLF3) brings together ministers and officials, civil society organisations and development experts to agree an Agenda for Action (AAA) on aid effectiveness. It is the most high profile gathering in recent years aiming to improve the effectiveness of the US $ 100 billion spent each year on aid.
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The quality of development assistance is just as important as the quantity of resources provided. MORE