Giving aid effectively : the politics of environmental performance and selectivity at multilateral development banks /

International organizations do not always live up to the expectations and mandates of their member countries. One of the best examples of this gap is the environmental performance of multilateral development banks, which are tasked with allocating and managing approximately half of all development a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Buntaine, Mark T. (Author)
Published: Oxford University Press,
Publisher Address: New York :
Publication Dates: 2016.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Edition: First edition.
Subjects:
Summary: International organizations do not always live up to the expectations and mandates of their member countries. One of the best examples of this gap is the environmental performance of multilateral development banks, which are tasked with allocating and managing approximately half of all development assistance worldwide. In the 1980s and 1990s, the multilateral development banks came under severe criticism for financing projects that caused extensive deforestation, polluted large urban areas, displaced millions of people, and destroyed valuable natural resources. In response to significant and public failures, member countries established or strengthened administrative procedures, citizen complaint mechanisms, project evaluation, and strategic planning processes. All of these reforms intended to close the gap between the mandates and performance of the multilateral development banks by shaping the way projects are approved. Giving Aid Effectively provides a systematic examination of whether these efforts have succeeded in aligning allocation decisions with performance. Mark T. Buntaine argues that the most important way to give aid effectively is selectivity - moving towards projects with a record of success and away from projects with a record of failure for individual recipient countries. This book shows that under certain circumstances, the control mechanisms established to close the gap between mandate and performance have achieved selectivity. Member countries prompt the multilateral development banks to give aid more effectively when they generate information about the outcomes of past operations and use that information to make less successful projects harder to approve or more successful projects easier to approve. This argument is substantiated with the most extensive analysis of evaluations across four multilateral development banks ever completed, together with in-depth case studies and dozens of interviews. More generally, Giving Aid Effectively demonstrates that member countries have a number of mechanisms that allow them to manage international organizations for results" -- From the publisher.
Carrier Form: ix, 291 pages : illustrations, forms ; 25 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 257-282) and index.
ISBN: 9780190467456 (hardback : alkaline paper) :
0190467452 (hardback : alkaline paper)
Index Number: HC59
CLC: F112.1
Call Number: F112.1/B942
Contents: The problem of performance -- The politics of aid effectiveness -- Addressing the problem of performance -- Administrative procedures : avoiding delays with environmentally risky projects -- Accountability mechanisms : civil society claiims for environmental performance -- Project evaluations : learning what works -- Strategic planning : integrating evaluation into high-level decision-making -- Conclusions and implications.