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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

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  1. New build in Ehtiopia
    New build in Ehtiopia

    License: Creative Commons
    Credit: Overseas Development Institute
    Source: Flickr

    The age of choice: developing countries in the new aid landscape

    Event - Public event - 27 March 2013 12:30 - 14:00 (GMT+00)

    Amid the cut and thrust of high-level discussions on global goals and the architecture of development finance at the international level, a fundamental shift is taking place in developing countries. This event will present the findings of new research into how the changing aid landscape looks from the perspective of developing countries.    

  2. Building blocks for equitable growth: lessons from the BRICS

    Publication - Discussion papers - 14 January 2013
    Milo Vandemoortele, Kate Bird, Andries Du Toit, Minquan Liu, Kunal Sen and Fábio Veras Soares
    This ODI Working Paper examines the experiences of four of the BRICS – Brazil, China, India and South Africa – and identifies four key factors shaping the countries’ pattern of growth: people having access to assets; investment in productive activities; social transfers; and a political-economic context where inclusion is a priority.
  3. Leaping and learning: strategies for taking agricultural successes to scale in sub-Saharan Africa

    Event - Workshop - 9 - 13 July 2012

    ODI's joint project with Agriculture for Impact, Firetail and the Glasshouse Partnership'Leaping and Learning: Taking Agricultural Successes to Scale' has focused on providing development partners with access to independent, evidence-based recommendations that set out practical policy options and approaches for scaling up smallholder agricultural development in sub-Saharan Africa to ensure food and nutrition security and poverty reduction.

  4. Exploring the impact of climate change on children in South Africa

    Publication - Research reports and studies - 19 November 2011
    Lindsey Jones, Patricia Martin, Paola Pereznieto, and Sarah Standley
    The study highlights the likely impact of climate change on children’s health, education, nutrition, safety and access to adequate housing and sanitation in South Africa – both directly and indirectly. The study presents a body of evidence that South Africa’s climate is already changing.

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