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Shaping policy for development

An overview of Lagoro IDP camp in Kitgum District, northern Uganda, 20 May 2007. Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Thu, 10/03/2013 - 09:36 -- Anonymous (not verified)
Marta Foresti
Marta Foresti

Marta Foresti

Head of Programme, Politics and Governance
Marta Foresti leads the Politics and Governance programme at ODI. Her interests include the political economy of development - with a focus on service delivery, justice, and rights - as well as conflict and fragility. She has an interest in applied social research methodologies and policy evaluation in particular . She has over ten years of research, evaluation, policy and management experience. Before joining ODI in 2006, Marta gained practical policy experience, including as a senior policy advisor in the Department of Development Policy of the Italian Treasury and as head of the Learning and Impact Assessment team at Save the Children UK and at Amnesty International. She has extensive country experience in West Africa, South and South East Asia, as well as in several European countries, including Italy and the UK.
Outputs

Why accountability matters

Publication - Briefing papers - 12 May 2010
Leni Wild, Marta Foresti and Dan Harris

Strengthening accountability is fundamentally a political activity, requiring a robust understanding of local politics (and not just party politics) combined with smarter and more flexible ways of delivering aid and technical support.

Lessons for the Health Sector on Aid and Accountability

Projects - May 2010 to July 2010

This project looks at aid and accountability in the health sector in Uganda, through an examination of the roles played by vertical funds, the nature of accountability for drugs procurement and supply, and issues of transparency and access to information.

Marta Foresti

Fragile states: next steps for the international community

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 10 March 2010
Fragile states are at the top of the policy and political agenda for donors, and at the heart of the UK electoral debates on the future of international development. In its 2009 White Paper, the UK Department for International Development (DFID)  commits to substantially increase bilateral aid to fragile states; in their Green Paper, the Conservatives define conflict as a development issue and peace and stability as pre-requisite of development.

Pages

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