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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)
Alastair McKechnie
Alastair McKechnie

Alastair McKechnie

Senior Research Associate, Centre for Aid and Public Expenditure

Until he retired in October, 2010, Alastair McKechnie was Director, Fragile and Conflict-Affected Countries Group, where he provided leadership and support for the Bank’s work on the fragile and conflict-affected areas, including developing and promoting an agenda for strategic knowledge and research; establishing key partnerships across institutions involved in fragile states; and leading institutional reforms affecting the Bank’s work in fragile states, including the implementation of the rapid response policy and procedures, and reforms to organizational and human resource systems.

Mr. McKechnie worked for twenty eight years in various World Bank positions, his previous position being Country Director for Afghanistan, Bhutan, and Maldives in the South Asia Region. Other positions include Operations Director for the South Asia Region, where in addition to his work on Afghanistan, he assisted the Vice President for the region and oversaw the Bank’s operations in South Asia; Energy Sector Director South Asia region, responsible for the Bank’s energy operations in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka; Division Chief for Energy, Infrastructure and Private-Sector Development in the Mashreq, Egypt and Iran Department in the Middle East/North Africa region. After the Asian tsunami disaster in 2004, he coordinated the World Bank’s response to the South Asia region.

Prior to joining the World Bank he worked for nine years in consulting firms in the United Kingdom that provided policy advice and pre-investment services to clients in multiple countries.

Since retiring from the World Bank, Mr. McKechnie has worked as an independent consultant, providing advice to the World Bank on the forthcoming World Development report, organizational changes, and operations policy on fragility and conflict. He is currently also working for the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) on the Budget Strengthening Initiative providing advice on program implementation, financing and procurement to African governments.

Mr. McKechnie is a New Zealand national with university degrees in economics and engineering.

Outputs
Man on a donkey, Uzbekistan
Man on a donkey, Uzbekistan

License: Creative Commons
Credit: World Bank/Anvar Ilyasov
Source: World Bank

Localising aid – a challenge to the orthodoxy?

Event - Public event - 9 July 2013 16:30 - 18:00 (GMT+01 (BST))

What if much of the orthodox aid effectiveness agenda that has dominated aid discussions for a decade is misguided? And what if the calculations aid givers make when assessing risk are wrong? This event will present the findings of ODI’s Localising aid research and provide a forum to debate the latest thinking on how to make aid more effective.

Localising aid: is it worth the risk?

Publication - Research reports and studies - 1 July 2013
Donors often perceive localising aid (transferring aid to local rather than international actors) as riskier than non-localised aid. But is this perception correct? This report finds that non-localised aid may carry higher risks of programme and strategic failure.

Pages

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CV File: 
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