Which algorithm for international aid and development planning?


Bibliography:

 

Andrews, M., Pritchett, L. and Woolcock, M., 2013. Escaping capability traps through problem driven iterative adaptation (PDIA). World Development51, pp.234-244.

 

Annis, S. and Hakim, P., 1988. Direct to the Poor. Grassroots Development in Latin America, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder and London.

 

Bamberger, M., Rao, V. and Woolcock, M., 2010. Using mixed methods in monitoring and evaluation: experiences from international development. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, (5245).

 

Bass, S., Dalal-Clayton, B. and Pretty, J., 1995. Participation in strategies for sustainable development. London: IIED.

 

Bornstein, A.M. and Daw, N.D., 2011. Multiplicity of control in the basal ganglia: computational roles of striatal subregions. Current opinion in neurobiology21(3), pp.374-380.

 

Carolini, G.Y., 2017. Sisyphean dilemmas of development: Contrasting urban infrastructure and fiscal policy trends in Maputo, Mozambique. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research41(1), pp.126-144.

 

Collier, P. and Dollar, D., 2002. Aid allocation and poverty reduction. European economic review46(8), pp.1475-1500.

 

Cushman, F., 2013. Action, outcome, and value: A dual-system framework for morality. Personality and social psychology review17(3), pp.273-292.

 

Daniels, S. and Walker, G., 1997. Rethinking public participation in natural resource management: concepts from pluralism and five emerging approaches. FAO Working Group on Pluralism and Sustainable Forestry and Rural Development Rome, pp.9-12.

 

Dayan, P., 2012. How to set the switches on this thing. Current opinion in neurobiology22(6), pp.1068-1074.

 

Dent, D., Dubois, O. and Dalal-Clayton, B., 2013. Rural planning in developing countries: supporting natural resource management and sustainable livelihoods. Routledge.

 

Diallo, A. and Thuillier, D., 2005. The success of international development projects, trust and communication: an African perspective. International journal of project management23(3), pp.237-252.

 

DiMaggio, P.J. and Powell, W.W., 1983. The iron cage revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields. American sociological review, pp.147-160

 

Dussauge, M., 2010, April. Reform Transferred or Transfer Reformed?. In Crisis: Challenges for Public Management, 14th Annual Conference of the International Research Society for Public Management, Berne (pp. 7-9).

 

Easterly, W., 2006. The white man's burden. The Lancet367(9528), p.2060.

 

Fengler, W. and Kharas, H. eds., 2010. Delivering aid differently: Lessons from the field. Brookings Institution Press.

 

Fukuda-Parr, S., Yamin, A.E. and Greenstein, J., 2014. The power of numbers: a critical review of millennium development goal targets for human development and human rights. Journal of Human Development and Capabilities15(2-3), pp.105-117.

 

Gaventa, J. and Barrett, G., 2012. Mapping the outcomes of citizen engagement. World development40(12), pp.2399-2410.

 

Graybiel, A.M., 2008. Habits, rituals, and the evaluative brain. Annu. Rev. Neurosci.31, pp.359-387.

 

Gulrajani, N. and Calleja, R., 2019. Understanding donor motivations. ODI Working paper 548, March.

 

Honig, D., 2018. Navigation by judgment: Why and when top down management of foreign aid doesn't work. Oxford University Press.

 

Ife, J., 2009. Human rights from below: Achieving rights through community development. Cambridge University Press.

 

Kenny, C., 2011. Getting Better: why global development is succeeding--and how we can improve the world even more. Basic Books (AZ).

 

Kerr, C., Harbison, F.H., Dunlop, J.T. and Myers, C.A., 1960. Industrialism and industrial man. Int'l Lab. Rev.82, p.236.

 

Kool, W., Gershman, S.J. and Cushman, F.A., 2017. Cost-benefit arbitration between multiple reinforcement-learning systems. Psychological science28(9), pp.1321-1333.

 

Krause, P., 2013. Of institutions and butterflies: is isomorphism in developing countries necessarily a bad thing. Background Note: The Overseas Development Institute, pp.1-4.

 

Krause, P., Mackay, K. and Lopez-Acevedo, G., 2012. ‘Introduction’ in Lopez-Acevedo, G. and Krause, P. eds., 2012. Building better policies: The nuts and bolts of monitoring and evaluation systems. The World Bank.

 

Legacy, C., 2017. Is there a crisis of participatory planning?. Planning theory16(4), pp.425-442.

Levine, R. and Kinder, M., 2004. Millions saved: proven successes in global health (Vol. 3, No. 3). Peterson Institute.

 

Lindblom, C.E., 1959. The science of" muddling through". Public administration review, pp.79-88.

Meehan III, W.F. and Jonker, K.S., 2017. Engine of impact: Essentials of strategic leadership in the nonprofit sector. Stanford University Press.

 

Monno, V. and Khakee, A., 2012. Tokenism or political activism? Some reflections on participatory planning. International Planning Studies17(1), pp.85-101.

 

Morrison, J.K., 2010. From global paradigms to grounded policies: Local socio‐cognitive constructions of international development policies and implications for development management. Public Administration and Development: The International Journal of Management Research and Practice, 30(2), pp.159-174.

 

Pritchett, L., 2012. The Folk and the Formula: Fact and Fiction in Development. WIDER Annual Lecture 16, Helsinki, UNU-WIDER.

 

Pritchett, L., Woolcock, M. and Andrews, M., 2010. Capability traps? The mechanisms of persistent implementation failure. Center for Global Development Working Paper, (234).

 

Quick, K.S. and Feldman, M.S., 2011. Distinguishing participation and inclusion. Journal of planning education and research31(3), pp.272-290.

 

Rodrik, D., 2008. Second-best institutions. American economic review98(2), pp.100-104.

Vandemoortele, J., 2011. The MDG story: intention denied. Development and change42(1), pp.1-21.

Haily TranComment