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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
Mon, 08/05/2013 - 13:41 -- Anonymous (not verified)
Parliament in Accra
Parliament in Accra

Lawmakers meet during a session of Parliament in Accra
License: Creative Commons
Credit: Flickr/World Bank Photo Collection
Source: Flickr

Politicising or depoliticising aid? The political economy of political economy analysis

15 May 2013
Details

‘Politics matters’: this sentiment has increasingly come to accrue normative dimensions across the international development community in the last decade. Development ministers, heads of donor agencies and other government officials have, since the mid-2000s, demonstrated a growing recognition in their public statements and policy papers that understanding the politics of developing countries is integral to the success or failure of their own development interventions – regardless of focus or scope.

The incorporation of ‘politics’ into the design and practice of development, however, has not been as smooth as this rhetoric might suggest. The commissioning and use of political economy analyses (PEA) by donor agencies has been widespread for years but has largely failed to gain traction at the operational level.

This panel explored why this diffusion of politics and development has been so problematic, looking particularly at questions of organizational incentives, inter- and intra-donor dynamics, the sensitive nature of PEA work and the supposed tenacity of an ‘anti-politics’, technicalised mentality at the heart of many development institutions. 

Chair

Paul Jackson, University of Birmingham

Discussant

David Hudson

Speakers

Heather Marquette, University of Birmingham

Jonathan Fisher, University of Birmingham

Wil Hout, Erasmus University Rotterdam, International Institute of Social Studies

David Hulme, University of Manchester UK

Laura M. Routley, Newcastle University

Alina Rocha Menocal, Overseas Development Institute

Politics and Governance
Agenda
Presentations:

Beyond 'the blame game': How the World Bank may offer an alternative vision for PEA

Heather Marquette, University of Birmingham

Jonathan Fisher, University of Birmingham

Political Economy Analysis and the Aid Industry: The Road to Nowhere?

Wil Hout, Erasmus University Rotterdam, International Institute of Social Studies

Negotiating the operationalisation of political economy analysis

David Hulme, University of Manchester UK

Laura M. Routley, Newcastle University

PEA and parliamentary development assistance: Fixing the car or engaging with the driver?

Alina Rocha Menocal, Overseas Development Institute

Presentations