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El. knyga: Adventures in the Aid Trade: Forty Years Practising Development in Forty Countries [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formatas: 224 pages, 4 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white; 5 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Feb-2020
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003002963
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 110,79 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 158,27 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 224 pages, 4 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white; 5 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Feb-2020
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003002963

Adventures in the Aid Trade takes us on a fascinating journey through 40 years of work at the coalface of international development. Drawing on his experiences from long periods in the field, the author reflects on what has worked, what has not and why, and considers how these experiences relate to students and practitioners today.

Looking beyond high-level policy matters and international relations, this book focuses instead on the author’s actual experiences in the field and the inspired local people he encountered. The narrative traces how these people, working through their own organisations, make a difference to the lives of their contemporaries, and learn how to generate the income to do it. Chapters draw on the author’s experiences of working with local practitioners from 40 countries across sub-Saharan Africa, the Caribbean, South, South East and Central Asia, and the South Pacific. Peppered with lively stories and anecdotes, Adventures in the Aid Trade provides valuable lessons from the shifting aid landscape and reflects on where the industry is likely to go next.

Whether you are a current development practitioner or a student just starting out in your understanding of the development and humanitarian sectors, this book provides an invaluable snapshot of the world of civil society organisations, governance and the voluntary sector, and the lived lives of ordinary people in extraordinary times.

List of figures
ix
Acknowledgements x
List of acronyms and abbreviations
xii
Preface xvi
Foreword xix
Robert Chambers
Introduction 1(7)
1 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and street children, 1966-69: trying hard to keep a welfare institution going
8(9)
2 Maun, Botswana, 1970---72: making technical education pay for itself
17(13)
3 South Sudan, 1973---75: reconstructing the country in its one short period of peace
30(10)
4 LSE and Patchwork Community, 1970-76: keeping in touch with the UK
40(7)
5 Dominica, West Indies, 1976-78: demanding assistance from the State or the joys of self-help
47(8)
6 South Pacific, 1979---80: appropriate technology, ideologues and small gains
55(9)
7 Java, Indonesia, 1979---84: more AT ideologues and people's technology
64(9)
8 The far east of Indonesia, 1979-84: Oxfam, famine in East Timor and the amazing growth of Leucaena leucocephala in NTT
73(6)
9 Positive deviance, 1980-81 and 1984-85: nutrition in Indonesia and rice/fish fanning in north-east Thailand
79(10)
10 Bangladesh, 1989-95: NGOs, CSOs, dependence on aid and independence from aid
89(12)
11 Zambia, 1995---99: moving into advocacy from service delivery
101(11)
12 CSOs everywhere, 1990 to the present: trying fundraising and resource mobilisation, not donor dependence
112(11)
13 Indonesia, 1999---2004: never again, neither Suharto nor his corruption
123(10)
14 East Timor, 2002---04: moving from relief and human rights to development and civil rights
133(13)
15 Tajikistan, 2005---10: persuading ex-apparatchiks that citizens can do good without the State
146(9)
16 Different countries in Africa, 2005-10: building integrity and CSO standards as an alternative to fighting corruption
155(11)
17 Nepal, 2010-13: the birth of social accountability, digging down into corruption and half-hearted efforts to control it
166(14)
18 Myanmar, 2015-16: watching a country become aid-dependent and doing nothing about corruption
180(12)
19 East Africa, 2018---19: social accountability neutered by corruption
192(14)
20 Reflections: bringing it all together
206(13)
Index 219
Richard Holloway is an international development professional with more than 40 years experience managing social development projects and programmes in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and the South Pacific. He has extensive experience of working with non-state and state actors to strengthen processes of citizenstate engagement, and over 20 years experience of implementing and managing large donor-funded projects (USAID, DFID, UNDP, EU, World Bank). He is currently an independent consultant after many years as a long-term project manager. His notable books are Beyond NGOs: CSOs with Development Impact, Doing Development: Governments, CSOs and the Rural Poor in Asia and Towards Financial Self-Reliance: Handbook on Resource Mobilization for CSOs in the South.