Development Policy Review publishes single articles and theme issues on topics at the forefront of current development policy debate. Coverage includes new thinking and research on such topics as poverty and inequality; gender equity; justice and the rule of law; economic growth at macro and sectoral levels; climate change; the governance of development; the political economy of aid policy; and innovations in global governance, including with regard to fragile states. Informed, rigorous, multi-disciplinary and upto-the-minute, DPR is an indispensable tool for development researchers and practitioners alike.
Edited by Pilar Domingo
Development Policy Review is published in association with Wiley-Blackwell Publishing - for the table of contents, submissions or to subscribe to the journal, visit the Wiley-Blackwell site.
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Authors: Guest edited by Jan Kees van Donge and David Henley
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This theme issue examines the divergent development trajectories of South-East Asian and sub-Saharan African countries, providing insight into the political and social processes that lead to particular policy choices and economic outcomes.
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Published by
ODI and
Wiley-Blackwell
as part of the
Development Policy Review
series.
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Authors: David Booth
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As part of ODI’s 50th anniversary celebrations, DPR has republished nine key articles in the field of aid, institutions and governance, with an introductory essay by former Editor David Booth.
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Development Policy Review
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Full summary
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Authors: Edited by Michael Friis Jensen and Peter Gibbon
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Africa needs to be better integrated into the global economy. Decades of zero or even negative growth have seen its share of world trade fall, despite the relative openness of African economies when measured in terms of their trade/GDP ratio. This theme issue of Development Policy Review addresses whether the WTO Doha Round will help or hinder improved integration.
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Development Policy Review
series.
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Full summaryPurchase
from ordering.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
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Authors: Edited by John Farrington and Mark Robinson
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This theme issue addresses questions which are crucial for growth and poverty reduction in Asia. It argues that conventional aid relations will remain important only in limited contexts, and that the new imperative is towards jointly addressing shared agendas in spheres such as trade, environment, use of natural resources, disaster prediction and management, and security.
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Development Policy Review
series.
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Full summaryPurchase
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Authors: Edited by Marc J. Cohen, Bernard Gunther and Hans Lofgren
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The analysis of macro-poverty linkages has emerged as an important yet contentious area of national and international policy-making. Based on an international workshop, co-organised by the European Network on Debt and Development (EURODAD), the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), the New Rules for Global Finance Coalition and Oxfam International, this Theme Issue provides useful insights into methodological issues as well as policy implications.
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Development Policy Review
series.
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Purchase
from ordering.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
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