
Knowledge for Development?
Description
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Through an examination of four agencies -- the World Bank, the British Department for International Development, the Japan International Cooperation Agency and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency -- the book explores what this new approach to aid means in both theory and practice. It concludes that too much emphasis has been on developing capacity within agencies rather than addressing the expressed needs of Southern 'partners'. It also questions whether knowledge-based aid leads to greater agency certainty about what constitutes good development.
Reviews / Votes
In this excellent book the authors present a detailed analysis and a balanced assessment of the prospects for knowledge-based aid to achieve the goal of improving aid-effectiveness. Based on conceptual framework setting and a close examination of actual experience they reach the conclusion that success depends on reconceptualizing aid itself, in the direction of capacity building in poor countries. * Ravi Kanbur, Cornell University * Knowledge management is popular. Aid agencies talk easily of sharing stories, communities of practice and double-loop learning. But are they ready to sacrifice a preoccupation with results and a concern to disseminate 'best-practice' - in favour of real partnership and mutual learning across divergent networks? McGrath and King are sceptical. Their case studies and their thesis challenge all of us involved in the production, sharing, and use of knowledge. * Simon Maxwell, Overseas Development Institute, and President of the Development Studies Association of the UK and Ireland *More details
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Persons
Simon McGrath has been a research fellow at the Centre of African Studies, and became Research Director at the Human Sciences Research Council in Pretoria, South Africa in October 2002.
Both authors have published extensively in African Studies and International Comparative Education and have been researching development cooperation for a number of years.
Content
2. The New Aid Agenda
3. Knowledge for Development
4. The World Bank or the Knowledge Bank?
5. From Information Management to Knowledge Sharing: DFID's Unfinished Revolution
6. Knowledge, Learning and Capacity in the Swedish Approach to Development Cooperation
7. Experience, Experts and Knowledge in Japanese Aid Policy and Practice
8. Conclusions and Implications for Knowledge, Aid and Development
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