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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
Fri, 10/04/2013 - 10:20 -- Anonymous (not verified)

Achieving sustainable governance transitions

November 2011 to November 2015
Details
Leaders: 
Team: 
Marta Foresti, Pilar Domingo, Lisa Denney, Daniel Harris, David Booth, Heidi Tavakoli, Alina Rocha Menocal, Claire Dilliway, Joseph Wales, Claire Bracegirdle
Status: 
Active

This project will focus on understanding how a range of political and governance factors/conditions affect development outcomes or, in other words, the incentives, behaviour and institutional features which can enhance or inhibit the achievement of outcomes in transition contexts.

To be able to capture the range of transmission belts between governance and the outcomes that matter for peace- and state-building and economic reconstruction, the work will focus on the provision of a range of public goods and services.

The main objectives of the project are:

  • To deepen understanding of the incentives and institutional dynamics which affect the provision of public goods and services at different steps of the delivery chain
  • To support external actors to engage meaningfully with domestic political processes which improve public goods and service provision
  • To provide sector specialists with practical guidance on how programmes can respond more effectively to common governance constraints and opportunities

The key questions it sets out to address are:

  • What political economy features can explain variation in the delivery of public goods and services?
  • In light of this, how can public goods and service provision be sustainably improved in transition contexts?
  • How can external actors adopt more realistic and politically informed approaches, strategies and programmes when supporting public goods and services in transition contexts?
Politics and Governance
Department for International Development (DFID)
Outputs
Access to Water and Sanitation in Developing Countries, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Access to Water and Sanitation in Developing Countries, Dhaka, Bangladesh

Contaminated water in Karial slum, one of the urban slums of Dhaka
License: Creative Commons
Credit: UN Photo/Kibae Park
Source: United Nations

Public services for all: the politics of delivery

Event - Public event - 18 September 2013 16:30 - 18:00 (GMT+01 (BST))
Despite significant progress on the MDGs, promising growth patterns, increased financing through aid, private investment and other flows, many citizens still lack access to quality basic services, delivered equitably. This debate will ask why has progress in this area remained slow or uneven, and how can we do better?

The technical is political: understanding the political implications of sector characteristics for education service delivery

Publication - Research reports and studies - 2 September 2013
Daniel Harris, Richard Batley, Claire Mcloughlin and Joseph Wales
The education sector has characteristics that have political as well as technical implications. They affect the ways in which individuals and groups interact in relation to the delivery of education services. Achieving improvements in sector outcomes demands strategies that are politically feasible and effective as well as technically sufficient.

Securing communities: the what and the how of community policing

Publication - Research reports and studies - 24 July 2013
Lisa Denney and Sarah Jenkins
Community policing has gained popularity amongst donors, governments, police departments and communities as a mechanism for achieving a diverse range of goals – from crime reduction to improved state-society relations. Yet while community policing initiatives are widespread across the globe, there is little consensus on its definition, objectives or models. Given the ambiguity surrounding its precise meaning, this paper maps the ‘what’ and the ‘how’ of community policing, setting out what it means and hopes to achieve, and how it manifests and is shaped by factors such as histories of state-society relations.

It's a risky business: aid and new approaches to political risk management

Publication - Discussion papers - 28 June 2013
This paper focuses on political risk and argues that if international assistance is to promote political and institutional reform more effectively, it needs to become smarter – more politically aware, better attuned to context, more pragmatic and flexible, and, crucially, less risk averse. Understanding and managing political risk better and more systematically is essential to this.
Women meeting policy makers in Rabat
Women meeting policy makers in Rabat

Women meet with policy makers in Rabat, Morocco
License: Creative Commons
Credit: Foreign andCommonwealth Office
Source: Flickr

Tackling corruption: can citizens make a difference?

Event - Public event - 14 May 2013 10:30 - 12:00 (GMT+01 (BST))

This event will analyse innovative civil society initiatives to combat corruption and promote greater accountability in different settings across the developing world, seeking to understand when such efforts have been successful and why.

Development Aid Confronts Politics - front cover
Development Aid Confronts Politics - front cover

License: ODI given rights
Source: ODI given rights

The politics of development: the almost revolution?

Event - Public event - 8 May 2013 17:00 - 18:30 (GMT+01 (BST))

ODI are delighted to host Thomas Carothers and Diane de Gramont who will present insights from their new book that assesses the progress and pitfalls of the attempted politics revolution in development aid. The event contributes to ongoing dialogue and analysis hosted by ODI on the politics of public goods and service provision, and provides an opportunity to reflect on a range of experience, from a number of sectors, in developing more politically smart aid approaches.

Diana Cammack

Malawi’s medical emergency

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 31 January 2013

In the past couple of weeks the shortages of medicines in Malawi’s public health facilities has caused a public outcry. Several facts have emerged that draw attention to governance of the medicine sector, and to some of the reasons why shortages, which became worse during Bingu wa Mutharika’s term of office, continue in spite of attempts by government and donors to fix the problem.

Marta Foresti

Inconvenient truths about corruption and development

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 21 November 2012

Corruption has never been more prominent in the development debate.  Here in the UK, eliminating corruption is at the heart of the Prime Minister’s golden thread, and has been a leitmotif of his government’s approach to aid:  we will commit to 0.7%, but we will be tougher on how it is spent. 

Experiencing justice in fragile and conflict-affected contexts

Event - Public event - 7 November 2012 18:30 - 20:00 (GMT+00)

Prof Tim Allen will chair a panel discussion on the politics of practice in security and justice programming in a joint event with the ODI.

This lecture is the closing event of a two day Expert Meeting on Justice and Security held at the ODI, in collaboration with the JSRP, and with support from DFID, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark the Christian Michelsen Institute, the Asia Foundation and Saferworld.

The event is free and open to all on a first come, first served basis.

Politics, state building and service delivery

Event - Round-table - 19 October 2012 14:30 - 18:00 (GMT-01)

This event brought together researchers and practitioners to examine the impact of political context and institutions on service delivery; and the role of service delivery in the process of state building and creating legitimacy.

The political economy of roads: an overview and analysis of existing literature

Publication - Bibliography and literature reviews - 1 October 2012
This piece draws on literature from a range of countries and contexts to provide a structured political economy analysis in relation to the roads sector. It explores how a variety of governance conditions interact with the particular characteristics of the road sector to facilitate or impede positive results and reforms.

The politics of social protection: why are public works programmes so popular with governments and donors?

Publication - Discussion papers - 5 September 2012
This Background Note makes an initial exploration of the political economy of adopting public works programmes to promote social protection and employment in low-income countries and fragile states. It examines the reasons for the popularity of public works programmes, reviews the evidence base and draws implications for both policy choice and programme design.

Common constraints and incentive problems in service delivery

Publication - Discussion papers - 29 August 2012
There is growing recognition that, despite significant increases in resourcing, public service delivery is still failing in many developing countries. This review explores the existing evidence base in three sectors (education, health, water and sanitation) across multiple countries. The review points to a set of five common political economy constraints and incentive problems that affect levels of performance.

The effects of sector characteristics on accountability relationships in service delivery

Publication - Discussion papers - 28 August 2012
Claire Mcloughlin with Richard Batley
Why do different services encounter particular constraints and opportunities in their delivery? This working paper identifies a set of characteristics that can be used to differentiate between services, and between functions within them, and asks how these defining or ‘fixed’ characteristics may influence key relationships of accountability and control.
Daniel Harris

The free rider: collective action failures in cycling and beyond

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 31 July 2012

Following the Men’s Road Race at the London 2012 Olympics this past weekend, the talk amongst the British team (at least as far as it’s been reported in the media) has been of their disappointment with the tactics adopted by other participants in the race. After race favourite Mark Cavendish (GBR) finished 29th, the team criticised the reluctance of other teams to help chase the breakaway group from which the eventual winner emerged.

Vikki Chambers

Health policies alone will not improve maternal health

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 11 July 2012

As the stories start to emerge about the extra billions committed to supporting better family planning at today’s summit, attention should now turn to the problems faced by governments and health workers in fulfilling the laudable aims. A sober assessment reveals that, enthusiastic announcements aside, those involved in the family-planning summit would do well to heed the lessons learnt from wider efforts to improve maternal health.

Lisa Denney

Justice in Sierra Leone: delivering on different levels

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 26 April 2012

Today Sierra Leone’s Special Court, set up to prosecute those most responsible for the atrocities committed in the 1991-2002 civil war, found former Liberian President, Charles Taylor, guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The Special Court will undoubtedly have an impact on the post-conflict landscape in Sierra Leone and, of course, sets important precedents in international law and holding political leaders to account.

Non-state security and justice in fragile states: Lessons from Sierra Leone

Publication - Briefing papers - 25 April 2012
This Briefing Paper looks at the impact of the relative neglect of non-state actors in security and justice assistance in Sierra Leone. It calls for donors to address this state bias in their programming and sets out four rules for more frequent and more effective engagement with non-state security and justice providers in fragile states.
Worker looks at files - Cape Town Port Authority
Worker looks at files - Cape Town Port Authority

Cape Town Port Authority, Susan, in the office where Vessel Traffic Control takes place.South Africa
License: Creative Commons
Credit: Trevor Samson / World Bank
Source: Flickr

Understanding the politics of service delivery

Event - Workshop - 16 January 2012 09:00 - 16:30 (GMT+00)

This event showcased some recent examples of political economy and governance analysis for service delivery, to identify some of the common challenges but also potential solutions for working towards more politically informed aid interventions. A particular focus was on what this means for NGOs and other intermediary organisations which play roles in funding and delivering basic services in developing countries.

Information Documents