
Distributive Politics in Developing Countries
Description
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In some ways, the funds resemble the ad hoc pork barrel policy-making employed in the U.S. Congress for the past 200 years. However, unlike earmarks, CDFs generally become institutionalized in the government's annual budget and are distributed according to different criteria in each country. They enable MPs to influence programs in their constituencies that finance education, and build bridges, roads, community centers, clinics and schools. In this sense, a CDF is a politicized form of spending that can help fill in the important gaps in government services in constituencies that have not been addressed in the government's larger, comprehensive policy programs.
This first comprehensive treatment of CDFs in the academic and development literatures emerges from a project at the State University of New York Center for International Development. This project has explored CDFs in 19 countries and has developed indicators on their emergence, operations, and oversight. The contributors provide detailed case studies of the emergence and operations of CDFs in Kenya, Uganda, Jamaica, and India, as well as an analysis of earmarks in the U.S. Congress, and a broader analysis of the emergence of the funds in Africa. They cover the emergence, institutionalization, and accountability of these funds; analyze key issues in their operations; and offer provisional conclusions of what the emergence and operations of these funds say about the democratization of politics in developing countries and current approaches to international support for democratic governance in developing countries.
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Persons
Michael L. Mezey is professor of political science at DePaul University in Chicago.
Content
Chapter 2: Why CDFs in Africa? Representation vs. Constituency Service, Joel D. Barkan and Robert Mattes
Chapter 3: Money for Small Things: Experience and Lessons of Kenya's Constituency Development Fund, David Ndii
Chapter 4: In Name Only: Uganda's Constituency Development Fund, Nelson Kasfir and Steven Hippo Twebaze
Chapter 5: Earmarks in the United States, Diana Evans
Chapter 6: Drug Dons and the Development of Executive Driven Bi-Partisan CDF's in Jamaica, Horace Bartilow
Chapter 7: Constituency Needs, Constitutional Propriety and Clientelist Patronage: Constituency Development Funds in India, Harry Blair
Conclusion: Constituency Development Funds and the Role of the Representative, Michael Mezey
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