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Advocacy
is a feature often associated with NGOs and civil society, but
many also have the capacity to produce compelling and valuable
research, which underpins their advocacy work. This section carries
examples of recent civil society and NGO research.
Measuring the Impact of Humanitarian Aid: A Review of Current
Practices
Overseas Development Institute (UK) - 17 August 2004
This report
investigates current practices in measuring and analyzing the
impact of humanitarian assistance. It looks at questions around
how the impact can be measured, why this is increasingly being
demanded and whether it is possible to do it better. Special focus
is given to the health and nutrition sectors. (read)
On Relations Between the NGOs of the North and Mozambican Civil
Society
Southern African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN) - 2004
José Negrão
This paper
looks at changing relations between civil society, the state and
international organizations in Mozambique. The author investigates
Southern and Northern NGOs' participation in constructing an alternative
view of globalization and also discusses the need to redefine
civil society within this context. (read)
Learning in Partnerships: Improving Learning Between Northern
and Southern NGOs
British Overseas NGOs for Development (BOND) - July 2004
According
to the authors of this report, a need remains for development
practitioners to enhance their facilitation expertise, to become
more flexible in their implementation of standardized procedures
and to create more opportunities to reflect and transform experience
- that is, learning how to learn from experience. This paper provides
general guidance on how development practitioners can take simple
and practical steps towards becoming better learners, as organizations
and in partnerships. (read)
Gender, Minorities and Indigenous Peoples - Issues of Multiple
Discrimination
Minority Rights Group International - August 2004
Fareda Banda and Christine Chinkin
The aim of
this report is two-fold: first, to encourage those working on
minority and indigenous peoples' rights to consider the issues
from a gender perspective, and second, to encourage those working
on gender equality and women's rights to include minorities and
indigenous peoples within their remit. (read)
Kids as Commodities? Child Trafficking and What to do About It?
International Federation Terre des Hommes - August 2004
Kids as Commodities
explains the complexity of child trafficking, and examines the
responses of both governments and inter-governmental organizations,
and pays particular attention to the actions taken by NGOs to
prevent child trafficking or to protect children who have been
trafficked. The study is chiefly aimed at NGOs that are involved
in running counter-trafficking programmes. It also contains information
on good (and bad) practices. (read)
Consumer Rights, Poverty and Trade Liberalization: Key Consumer
Concerns for the Commission for Africa
Consumers International Regional Office for Africa (CI-ROAF) -
August 2004
In its latest
paper, Consumers International's Regional Office for Africa outlines
the role of consumer issues in the fight against poverty in Africa.
It emphasizes the importance of empowering consumers and the need
to implement mechanisms to better protect the welfare of consumers
and their access to basic goods and services. The paper argues
that enforcing legitimate consumer protection can only be achieved
through a strong legal and regulatory framework. (read)
'We the Peoples
' A Call to Action for the UN Millennium
Declaration
North-South Institute and World Federation of United Nations Associations
- September 2004
We the peoples.2004
is the third annual report on civil society engagement with the
Millennium Declaration and its Development Goals (MDGs). This
report is based on an extensive survey directed to civil society
organizations -- 270 organizations, from over 82 countries. The
findings highlight the strengths and weaknesses of UN efforts
to involve civil society organizations at a country level and
calls for a scaling up of financial and political commitments
towards the MDGs. (read)
Transforming the Mainstream: Seminar Report on Mainstreaming and
inclusive approaches in EU Development Cooperation
Aprodev, Help Age, One World Action and Network Women in Development
Europe (WIDE)
Drawing on
case studies from various countries and on institutional as well
as NGO experiences and practices in relation to gender mainstreaming
and inclusive approaches, this report identifies a number of critical
issues -- in the areas of human rights and sustainable development
-- and recommends that the EU take on a leadership role in integrating
gender, ageing, disability and minority issues into its development
cooperation agenda. (read)
Reflections
on NGOs in Tanzania: What We Are, What We Are Not, and What We
Ought to Be
Development in Practice - August 2004
Issa G. Shivji
According
to Issa Shivji, NGOs and social activists run the risk of following
the policy directions favored by foreign donor agencies to the
detriment of their own organizational and moral capacity to act
in solidarity with those whose interests they claim to support.
With specific reference to Tanzania, this paper argues that while
NGOs readily take action to protect their own interests, they
do not consistently stand up for the basic freedoms of working
people. (read)
The Mennonite
Central Committee (MCC) and Faith-based NGO Aid to Africa
Development in Practice - August 2004
Susan Dicklitch and Heather Rice
The authors
examine the role of international faith-based NGOs in foreign
aid and development assistance for Africa, with special reference
to the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC). A strong case is made
for the MCC's successful contribution to development in the 20
African countries in which it works because of its philosophical
and programmatic focus on accountability, its holistic approach
to basic rights, and a 'listen and learn' approach which embraces
empowerment and social justice. (read)
Counting
Chicken When They Hatch: The Short-Term Effect of Aid on Growth
Center for Global Development - July 2004
Michael Clemens, Steven Radelet and Rikhil Bhavnani
The results
of past research on aid and growth have led some to the conclusion
that positive aid-growth relationships only exist when the quality
of institutions and policies in a given country is high. This
report, however, detects a powerful relationship between short-impact
aid and growth across all countries on average, not just those
with strong institutions or policies, and finds a slightly larger
relationship in the presence of good institutions. (read)
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