Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chapter 11 & 12
- International action to reduce poverty.
- Campaigns such as Make Poverty History & Drop The Debt
- Collective effort in intervention.
- Civil society
movements have
grown to become
'big business'
- Oxfam, World Vision, Care.
- A lot rely on government
funding & undertake
government contracts.
- Are these orgs independent from gov influence?
- More concerned with rasing the big bucks for job
security and less focus on what they are trying to
achieve?
- Why we give aid.
- Altruism, charity, obligation, supporting allies in the Cold
War, political stability, access to natural resources & create
pathways for foreign investments.
- From the 1970's, there was a focus on
developing countries to move forward into
industrialisation & the technological age.
- Lots of developing countries were plunged into lots of
debt with 'pushy' tactics from banks in the North in the
70's.
- In the late 70's,
countries in the
North stopped
lending, and
pushed interest
rates upas the
second oil crisis
happened.
- With the
Cold War -
developing
countries
were
forced to
choose
sides.
- What is aid?
- 'Foreign aid' includes all transfers (money, goods, skills, military & civilian aid, grants & loans.
- ODA - Official Development Assistance - aid coming from states & other official agencies.
- Which contains a
grant element of at
least 25%.
- A lot of bargaining by 'donors' &
'recipients' of aid - conditions
attached.
- Power in aid relationships - aid
is desperately needed
sometimes so the donor has
more power.
- This is the largest
category of aid.
- Followed by NGO &
humanitarian aid (although much
of this comes from gov funds
too.
- Who has legitimacy to develop the capacities of another?
- Interventions can create contention.
- Different voices, interests,
roles & responsibilities
coming together.
- The State, Int Orgs
(UN), NGO's & local
community groups &
associations.
- Poverty agendas change
- more emphasis on the
poor's own agency.
- Although, Moser, states this means that the
poor has responsibility for their own poverty
- causes aren't being tackled.
- From the 1990's -
change.Poverty
was caused by
features of the
world economy that
disadvantaged the
South or some
people thought
problems arose
from within these
countries.
- The World Bank thought it was the latter.
- There was a lot of contention though - which resulted in more reforms in the 90's.
- MDG's
- Riddell wants to see more direct cash transfers
- The Bolsa Familia plan in Brazil