Click to have a closer look
About this book
Contents
Customer reviews
Biography
Related titles
About this book
Assesses the extent to which participation of the poor has been successfully incorporated into the development initiatives of large donor organizations.
Contents
The World Bank and NGOs; participation in projects and policy formation; mainstreaming participation in international agencies; institutionalizing participation in government agencies; lessons learned and future implications.
Customer Reviews
Biography
Carolyn Long is an independent consultant on the roles of civil society organizations in development. The Institute for Development Research is a non-profit research body dedicated to increasing the capacity of civil society groups to achieve just and sustainable development
By: Carolyn M Long
192 pages, Figs, tabs
'A well researched, well argued book.' Aubrey Williams, former Participation Coordinator, World Bank 'This is a superb account of the efforts undertaken by international development agencies to introduce the simple but powerful notion that the poor must participate if development is to succeed.' Brian Atwood, President, Citizens International, former Administrator, USAID 'The book comes up with a number of lessons which are worthwhile to be considered.' Habitat International 'Carolyn Long's rich, historical and comparative analysis of efforts by civil society to mainstream participation in the development paradigm is an excellent and practical addition to arguments for placing the poor at the centre of development efforts.' Lisa Jordan, Program Officer, Governance and Civil Society, Ford Foundation, former Executive Director, Bank Information Center 'This book is a thoughtful analysis of the progress made by donors and agencies during the past decade to embrace participation as an imperative, and makes an important contribution to our understanding of how to effectively involve citizens in the donor-assisted social and economic development programmes of their governments. It sounds a hopeful note for what donors, governments and civil society can do together to foster participatory development in the future, and shares useful lessons on how to improve development practices.' Sadig Rasheed, Director, Programme Division, UNICEF