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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. Fletcher Tembo

    Accountability is based on relationships, but data helps too

    Opinion - Articles and blogs - 9 November 2012
    'Turning away from ‘us versus them’, what works is often to think of social accountability as an opportunity for building relationships so that as transparency increases, the less powerful do not lose traction because of informal relations and power networks.'
  2. Case studies on development co-operation and accountability: Uganda, Peru, Mozambique and Mali

    Publication - Research reports and studies - 6 July 2012
    Leni Wild, Daniel Harris and Diana Kizza
    The OECD’s Development Assistance Committee (DAC), through its Network on Governance (GOVNET), has spent three years researching ways to improve donor support to domestic accountability. This included a series of case studies (in Uganda, Peru, Mali, and Mozambique) to explore the realities of aid and domestic accountability. ODI contributed a case study on Uganda, which looks at aid and accountability in the health sector and around the budget process.
  3. Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
    Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

    The streets of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
    License: ODI given rights for use on localising aid project
    Credit: Flickr/Adam Thyer
    Source: Flickr

    Localising aid

    Projects - July 2012 to July 2013
    ODI looks at one of the most hotly debated issues in aid effectiveness: whether and how to provide direct funding to local actors.
  4. Haitians in Cité Soleil Queue for Food
    Haitians in Cité Soleil Queue for Food

    License: Creative Commons
    Credit: UN Photo
    Source: Flickr

    Views amidst violence: can perception surveys improve aid in fragile states?

    Event - Public event - 14 June 2012 16:00 - 17:30 (GMT+01 (BST))

    Aid policy and programming in fragile and conflict-affected situations often assumes that investing in improved service delivery, justice and security can contribute to state-building and peace-building.  Surveys are increasingly used to better understand the attitudes and perceptions of people in conflict-affected countries but their impact on decisions about aid interventions is less clear.  This public meeting, organised by the Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium (SLRC) and hosted by ODI will explore the challenges associated with delivering perception surveys in fragile and conflict-affected situations (FCAS), share findings from two surveys in Haiti and Afghanistan and assess how far these two perceptions surveys have successfully influenced aid policies.



  5. Why politics matters: aid effectiveness and domestic accountability in the health sector - a comparative study of Uganda and Zambia

    Publication - Discussion papers - 1 June 2012
    This paper was part of International IDEA’s work on “Democracy and Development” in 2011. It was selected as a contribution to stimulate debate on and increase knowledge about the impact of democratic accountability on services. The study highlights the implications of aid for domestic accountability relationships.
  6. Kwakavisi community meeting
    Kwakavisi community meeting

    Kwakavisi community meeting - poverty ranking conducted by Shadrack and Beryl as part of the cash transfer project
    License: Hanna Alder
    Source: Hanna Alder

    Transforming cash transfers: beneficiary and community perspectives on social protection programming

    Projects - May 2012 to March 2013
    This project investigates community perceptions of cash transfer programmes in five countries using innovative participatory and qualitative approaches. Interactive resources and publications can be accessed at transformingcashtransfers.org
  7. Kony 2012: from advocacy to ‘badvocacy’

    Opinion - Articles and blogs - 9 March 2012

    The internet and twittersphere are abuzz with commentary on the documentary film Kony 2012 by Invisible Children calling for action against the leader of the rebel group the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA). The documentary has garnered the attention of millions through social media, exposing new audiences to Kony, a brutal warlord of mythic proportions. The video had 52 million hits on youtube as of today.

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