The Future of Aid

As 2010 comes to an end, the effectiveness of the fundamental mechanisms of the current foreign aid system has become a much discussed and ever more pertinent issue. Robert Riddle in his 2007 book Does Aid Really Work? highlights the traditional principle that underpins all foreign aid as:

Those who can should help those who are in extreme need…What could be simpler?

However, as Riddle elaborates, the realities of foreign aid are far from simple. Indeed, the current global financial crises, climate change challenges, natural disasters and political volatility are all contributing factors in an increasingly complex international concern.

These issues have resulted in an extensive diversity in both the attitude and approach to aid.  Some, such as William Easterly and Dambisa Moyo, argue that foreign aid has stunted the growth of countries in Africa and instead created a circle of aid dependency, corruption and further poverty.

Other aid practitioners believe that aid can be successful, but only if delivered correctly.

Read more of this post

Anthony Giddens Call for Changes in the Politics of Climate Change

Anthony Giddens gave the opening key-note  speech at the GDN 2010 Conference. After a broad introduction of the various climate change camps (the skeptics, the mainstream (ICCP view), and the radicals) he suggested that the Copenhagen Accord represents an advance: it offers a relatively smaller space for negotiation -with fewer actors involved; and it cuts across the difficulty of the split between developing and industrialised nations.

In fact, in his view, it presents an opportunity for a handful of countries to lead the way in developing a number of bilateral deals and multi-party negotiations. These deals, between the biggest polluters, are crucial if any change is to take place. Read more of this post

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.