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This volume addresses the changing nature of the international aid system and the challenges it poses for the multilateral system, donors... Læs mere
Beginning with the premise that democracies are often deeply implicated in their own downfall, The Theory of Democide challenges the conventional view of... Læs mere
Sumner and Mallett review the literature on aid in light of shifts in the aid system and the increasing... Læs mere
As emerging powers deepen their involvement in world trade and global governance, it is crucial to explore the what and the why... Læs mere
Today, a large number of scholars studying development understand this process as involving learning and capability building. A global cast of... Læs mere
Tony Heron examines recent global policy responses to the erosion of non-reciprocal tariff and quota preferences caused trade liberalizing by focusing on a sample of small, middle income countries which have historically enjoyed favourable access to OECD markets.
Drawing from long term ethnographic work and practice in Guatemala, this incisive and interdisciplinary text brings in... Læs mere
Nothing is more important to a new, fragile or developing nation than developing the capacity of its government to support national well-being.... Læs mere
Examining the political legacies of the Duvalier period and after, and revisiting the work of the late David Nicholls, Politics and Power in Haiti provides some of the keys... Læs mere
The contributors provide a comparative analysis of the modern economic development of Japan and... Læs mere
This book provides a new perspective of China's controversial foreign aid strategy. The book also examines China's aid philosophy and strategy through an Asian perspective, instead of the Western perspective that is postulated in existing academic literature.
In public choice theory, the received wisdom has long been that self-organization is an impediment to collective action, whether via the tragedy of the commons or a Hobbesian scenario in which self-interest produces social conflict rather than cooperation.