Strengthening governance through engaged societies lessons from the implementation of poverty reduction strategies / Luca Barbone and Katrina Sharkey
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Bangladesh Public Administration Training Centre Library General Reading Room | 388.15 BAS 2006 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Zahid | WB5223 |
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388.114 WOC 1998 Commercial management and financing of roads / | 388.114 WOM 1995 Management and financing of roads : | 388.15 AYH 2006 How important are financing constraints ? the role of finance in the business environment | 388.15 BAS 2006 Strengthening governance through engaged societies | 388.15 INV 2007 Investing in Indonesia's education : | 388.15 JAO 2006 Openness and Industrial Response in a Wal-Mart World : | 388.15 KEE 2006 Estimating trade restrictiveness indices / |
Title from PDF file as viewed on 4/25/2006.
Includes bibliographical references.
"In December 1999, the Boards of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund approved a new approach to their relations with low-income countries. The approach was centered around the development and implementation of Poverty Reduction Strategies (PRS), which are intended to be country-driven and medium- to long-term in perspective, comprehensive and results-oriented, partnership-oriented, and built on broad-based participation. Against this tall order of business, experience to date has been varied, and much debate is ongoing on whether the approach can be considered more than "old wine in new bottles." This paper-based on the results of a thorough review of the five-year implementation experience-examines the implementation of the PRS approach from the point of view of participation and accountability. For some 50 countries adopting the approach since 1999, it discusses the factors which can facilitate the development of accountability and participatory governance mechanisms. Lessons learned from distinct country circumstances are analyzed, arguing that ownership of the PRS depends on the way countries and their external donor partners handle real tensions in the relationship between country ownership on the one hand, and perceptions of internationally-driven prescriptions on the other. The central message of the paper is that in several countries the PRS initiative has helped open up societies to forms of dialogue and contestability not previously experienced in-country or observed by external partners. This positive outcome, however, has been largely influenced by the extent to which the PRS process has reinforced existing trends and strengthened institutions already prone to open discussion of policy choices. The paper also shows that even in the best cases change has, to date, been largely in the area of process and that impact of participatory governance on policymaking, while emerging, is still a work in progress. The paper concludes with recommendations for how developing country societies might sustain real achievements in participatory governance and domestic accountability going forward, with external partners playing a key supportive role through harmonization and alignment. "--World Bank web site.
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