Related Content
Articles related to: national government
Disconnections? Dilemmas around the ‘developmental state’ in Africa
Jan Abbink | 06 July 2025In Ethiopia and many African countries, we need a recalibration of developmentalist authoritarianism that feeds exclusion and conflict.
▶Doing business in Africa: do the poor profit?
Annemarie van de Vijsel | November 12, 2024When the Dutch private sector is involved in development in Africa, a dilemma may arise. The Dutch government claims that businesses could have a positive impact on local economic development on the continent in the longer term. But do their activ...
▶The challenge of the social partnership
Annemarie van de Vijsel | 14 July 2025While establishing partnerships to have a greater social impact, social enterprises also face challenges.
▶Finding the right balance in partnerships
Rik Stamhuis | 19 June 2025If you want to be a genuine agent of change while being financially sustainable you need to be able to truly listen and interact with the people you are trying to serve. In order to do this, the following points are crucial.
▶India’s experience with the right to work
Jetti A. Oliver | 12 May 2025Making people producers of goods is strategic for growth and development.
▶A free trade agreement… for whom?
Pearl Heinemans | 26 November 2024The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, a new free trade agreement, could have adverse effects for public health and development in developing countries.
▶Formalizing the unknown
Gerardo Damonte Valencia | November 05, 2024The Peruvian region Madre de Dios is the scene of an enduring dispute between small-scale miners and the authorities over the use of land. In an attempt to formalize the small-scale mining sector, the Peruvian government has declared all small-sca...
▶State sovereignty and the market
Ahilan Kadirgamar | 04 November 2024The fishing dispute between India and Sri Lanka is not only an issue of sovereignty, but also reflects social and economic problems.
▶Fishing for power
Anthony Charles | 11 November 2024A fisheries conflict in Canada shows how power dynamics affect the lives of an aboriginal community.
▶More is not always better
Markus Loewe | 08 October 2024If we want the new global development agenda to be manageable, it is perhaps better to design a small set of end goals similar to the original MDGs, instead of a new wish list.
▶Avoiding the 'Planning Paradox'
Norman Loayza | 02 October 2024The new World Bank strategy must take risk and uncertainty into account.
▶Participation of the poorest in post-2015
Neva Frecheville | 04 September 2025Without the involvement of the poor and marginalized in the successor framework to the MDGs, it is unlikely that interventions will respond to their problems.
▶Wanted: captains, pilots and mates to navigate to post-2015
Hildegard Lingnau | 14 August 2025Global goals need global policies. Governments have more to win than lose if they join forces and agree upon a single post-2015 agenda.
▶Squaring the circle?
Alina Rocha Menocal | 07 August 2025The High-Level Panel's targets on ensuring good governance and effective institutions need to be further specified.
▶Human inequality puts sovereign equality to the test
Janne E. Nijman | 27 March 2025The notion of sovereign equality as the foundation of the international legal order is showing creaks and squeaks.
▶Interrogating scarcity: a valuable strategy
Ted Schrecker | 26 March 2025For purposes of setting post-2015 goals for development, inequalities should not only involve income and wealth, but also the power to decide on the uses to which resources are, or are not, put.
▶Rising income inequality in Canada
Brenda Lafleur | 07 March 2025Income inequality in Canada has increased over the past 20 years, mainly due to market forces and institutional forces.
▶Rising income inequality in Canada
Brenda Lafleur | March 07, 2025Income inequality in Canada has increased over the past 20 years. While Canada reduced income inequality in the 1980s, it rose sharply in the 1990s and remained at that relatively high level in the 2000s.
▶Lessons of good social policy
Ilcheong YI | 04 March 2025Well-designed transformative social policy in developing countries is particularly needed since it increases individual and social capability to take advantage of initial conditions for catching-up and is one of the most effective measures to stre...
▶Tackling Inequality in Uganda
Lawrence Bategeka | 18 February 2025Tackling inequality in Uganda entails a comprehensive development framework that puts people’s participation in the economic growth process at the centre. People must be viewed as agents of economic growth and transformation and not passive recipi...
▶Reducing international income inequality
Charles Gore | 29 January 2025The specification of a new international income inequality goal will certainly be difficult. However, if rich-country fears of “the rise of the rest” can be replaced with a common commitment to a new economic and ecological convergence, global equ...
▶Continuity, consistency and dedication
Wieck Wildeboer | 16 January 2025In the on-going discussion on inequality, “new” seems to be the magic word. Unfortunately we still have the old problem, being that 1,3 billion people have to live on less than a dollar a day.
▶Down with best practice; up with policy learning!
Simon McGrath | 26 October 2024Aid effectiveness has come to be seen as an empty concept without national ownership being placed at its heart. Yet, in too many aspects of the development field, the notion of national ownership runs up against notions of a set of "int...
▶Prioritising national development plans
Akemi Yonemura | 23 October 2024Put national development plans at the center with clear exit strategies for external funding
▶Bridging the divide
Anthea Mulakala | 11 September 2024In April 2011 the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the OECD released its statement “Welcoming New Partnerships in International Development Cooperation.” The main objective of this statement is to forge a closer partnership between tradit...
▶There is no such thing as a Moroccan exception
Ghassan Dahhan | 21 March 2025The assumption that Morocco is a beacon of stability in a sea of regional hotbeds rests on the wrong premise. Support for the king is higher than that enjoyed by many other leaders in the region, but this support should by no means be taken for gr...
▶Editorial: Reshuffling Power
Frans Bieckmann | February 11, 2025Globalization has blurred the distinction between internal and external affairs. This is equally true for both developing countries and richer countries. Moreover, it could result in a profound reshuffling of administrative power relations within...
▶The future of the MDGs – from global poverty to national development?
David Hulme | 20 September 2024The end of the first day of the MDG-fest at the UN General Assembly and everyone seems to be promising more and better partnerships: between the public, private and civil sectors; between international agencies (the IMF and ILO had a love-in in Os...
▶Keeping the promise – ‘Lower your voice’
Martin Greeley | 20 September 2024The UN Secretary-General’s report speaks firmly on keeping international commitments and this week’s Summit will no doubt produce some strengthening of global commitment towards the MDGs. This is good and important for welfare in poor countries. B...
▶Consensus is still missing
Eugenio Villar | May 07, 2025From my perspective the author’s diagnosis is essentially right. There is overall consensus that recent decades have seen an increase in inequities in general and health in particular. Some LDC countries are even showing deteriorating health outco...
▶





