Archives
- Jun 2020 (1)
- Aug 2019 (1)
- Nov 2018 (1)
- Jul 2018 (1)
- Dec 2017 (1)
- Oct 2017 (1)
- Dec 2016 (1)
- Aug 2016 (1)
- May 2016 (2)
- Apr 2016 (1)
- Feb 2016 (2)
- Dec 2015 (2)
- Oct 2015 (1)
- Sep 2015 (1)
- Jun 2015 (1)
- May 2015 (1)
- Apr 2015 (2)
- Mar 2015 (2)
- Feb 2015 (1)
- Apr 2014 (1)
- Mar 2014 (2)
- Nov 2013 (1)
- Oct 2013 (1)
- Sep 2013 (1)
- Jul 2013 (2)
- Jun 2013 (1)
- May 2013 (1)
- Apr 2013 (3)
- Feb 2013 (2)
- Jan 2013 (2)
- Oct 2012 (2)
- Sep 2012 (1)
- Jul 2012 (3)
- Jun 2012 (1)
- May 2012 (1)
- Mar 2012 (3)
- Feb 2012 (1)
- Jan 2012 (1)
- Dec 2011 (1)
- Nov 2011 (2)
- Oct 2011 (1)
- Sep 2011 (1)
- Aug 2011 (2)
- Jul 2011 (2)
- May 2011 (1)
- Apr 2011 (2)
- Mar 2011 (1)
- Feb 2011 (3)
- Jan 2011 (4)
- Dec 2010 (3)
- Nov 2010 (2)
- Oct 2010 (1)
- Sep 2010 (4)
- Aug 2010 (3)
- Jul 2010 (2)
- Jun 2010 (1)
-
Join 53 other subscribers.
- Follow Ipeanddevelopment's Blog on WordPress.com
Creative Commons Licence
a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.en_GB">
IPE and Development by IPE and Development is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at https://ipeanddevelopment.wordpress.com/.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at https://ipeanddevelopment.wordpress.com/.- 0.7%/GNI
- 0.7% Legislation
- aid effectiveness
- AIIB
- Alan Duncan
- Andrew Mitchell
- Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
- Center for Global Development
- CGD
- CGDev
- China
- David Cameron
- Department for International Development
- DFID
- donors
- economics
- foreign aid
- fragile states
- Ha-Joon Chang
- Harriet Harman
- Human Development
- Human Development Reports
- Humanitarian Aid
- IDA
- IMF
- International Development
- International Development Association
- International Monetary Fund
- International Organisations
- International Political Economy
- IPE
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Mark Lazarowicz
- MCA
- MCC
- MDGs
- Millennium Challenge Account
- Millennium Challenge Cooperation
- Millennium Development Goals
- Multilateral Aid Review
- Multilateral Organisations
- neoliberal
- neoliberalism
- ODA
- ODI
- OECD
- Official Development Assistance
- Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
- Overseas Development Institute
- Owen Barder
- Phil Vernon
- post-MDGs
- post 2015
- Poverty
- Poverty Reduction
- principal-agent theory
- Shadow Front Bench
- Singapore
- UK Conservative Party
- UK Foreign Policy
- UK Labour Party
- UK Liberal Democrats
- UK Parliament
- UN
- UNDP
- United Kingdom
- United Nations
- United Nations Development Programme
- United States
- USAID
- US aid policy
- Value for Money
- Washington Consensus
- World Bank
- World Bank Group
- Agricultural Trade Alan Duncan Andrew Mitchell Campaigning Constructivism David Cameron DFID Economic Thought Ha-Joon Chang Harriet Harman Human Development Human Development Reports Humanitarian Aid IDA IMF International Development International Development Association International Political Economy International Trade IPE Ivan Lewis Joseph Stiglitz Justine Greening Least Developed Countries Lynne Featherstone Mark Lazarowicz MCA MCC MDGs Millennium Challenge Account Millennium Challenge Cooperation Millennium Development Goals ODI OECD Official Development Assistance Organisaiton for Economic Cooperation and Development Overseas Development Institute Paris Declaration Posts Poverty Reduction Rushanara Ali SDGs UNDG UNDP United Nations Development Group United Nations Development Programme USAID World Bank World Trade Organisation WTO
58,578 hits
Tag Archives: United Nations
My Guest Article on Europe Asia Security Forum
Take a look, read and comment please My Guest Article .
Posted in DFID, International Development, International Political Economy
Tagged AIIB, Asia-Pacific, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, China, Department for International Development, DFID, Europe Asia Security Forum, foreign aid, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, India, International Development, International Political Economy, National Security Strategy, NSS, NSS 2015, ODA, Official Development Assistance, post 2015, rule-based system, SDSR, SDSR 2015, Strategic Defence and Security Review, UN, United Nations
Leave a comment
Links for thought 11
Haven’t done this series in a while so here we go: 1) Jin Liqun: From the lines of Lord Byron to AIIB’s corridors of power A Devex article on Jin Liqun,the first leader of the recently created, non-Western dominated, non-neoliberal … Continue reading
Posted in Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, MDGs, SDGs
Tagged 2030, Africa, AIIB, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, Christine Lagarde, Conflict, Conflict Pool, CSSF, Department for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik, DFAT, DIE, fragile states, German Development Institute, Ha-Joon Chang, IMF, IMF Managing Director, International Monetary Fund, Jin Liqun, Malala, Malala Yousafzai, Malcolm Turnbull, MDGs, Migration, Millennium Development Goals, minister for international development and the Pacific, Phil Vernon, post-MDG goals, SDGs, Stability and Security Fund, Steve Ciobo, sustainable development goals, Telegraph, Tony Abbott, UN, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States Agency for International Development, USAID
Leave a comment
Worker’s Party (Singapore) on…International Development!
Disclaimer: I AM NOT a member of any Singaporean political party or any political party in any country. You don’t here this from the government but surprisingly, from the up and coming opposition party in Singapore: Many developed countries in … Continue reading
Posted in International Development, OECD, Official Development Assistance
Tagged 0.7%/GNI, aid, development assistance, foreign aid, Gerald Giam, International Development, ODA, Official Development Assistance, Opposition, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, scholarships, Singapore, technical assistance, UN, United Nations, Worker's Party, Worker's Party (Singapore)
Leave a comment
A Green Economy and Green Jobs? Yes We Can!
This is one of the rare instances that I write about Sustainable Development or Environmental issues, since this is not my forte. Continue reading
Posted in International Development, Poverty Reduction
Tagged economic growth, employment creation, Environment, environmental protection, greeen growth, green jobs, ILO, International Development, International Labour Organisation, Poverty Reduction, Sustainable Development, UNEP, United Nations, United Nations Environmental Programme, Xinxing Li
Leave a comment
STAR night, Star bright…
No this is Christmas-related entry. Continue reading
Posted in Campaigning, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Posts
Tagged Campaigning, Celine, Guild of Students, Human Rights, Refugeees, STAR, Student Action for Refugees, student groups, UN Society, United Nations, United Nations Youth and Student Association, University of Birmingham, UNYSA
Leave a comment
Links for Thought 9
After a while, here are some links for thought Continue reading
Posted in Alan Duncan, Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Joseph Stiglitz, MCC, Millennium Challenge Account, Millennium Challenge Cooperation, OECD, Official Development Assistance, Organisaiton for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris Declaration, Posts, principal-agent theory, Tony Cunningham, World Bank
Tagged Adam Morton, aid effectiveness, aid ministry, AidData, Alan Duncan, America, American Capitalism, Andrea Riccardi, anti-competitive practices, Arthur Muhlen-Schulte, bail outs, bonuses, book, Busan, capitalism, Critical Political Economy, David Hudson, debt, Department for International Development, deregulation, Devex, DFID, Doha Development Round, Donna Lee, European Capitalism, European Union, Eurozone debt crisis, foreign aid, Fourth High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness, free-market, Global Governance, Ha-Joon Chang, Hansard, Huw Macartney, Ian Bruff, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Italy, Jill Steans, Joseph Stiglitz, laissez-faire, Manchester, Mark Lazarowicz, markets, Matthew Watson, MCA, MCC, Michael J. Tierney, Millennium Challenge Account, Millennium Challenge Cooperation, neoliberal, neoliberalism, Occupy London Stock Exchange, Occupy Wall Street, ODA, Official Development Assistance, OLX, OWS, Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, Preventing Suffering and Building Resilience, principal-agent theory, regulation, rent-seeking, Republicans, Rick Perry, Saving Lives, scorecard, Silke Weinlich, Stuart Shields, theyworkforyou.com, Tony Cunningham, umanitarian Leadership Development Programme, UN, United Nations, United States, US 2012 Election, Written Questions
Leave a comment
0.7%? 0.07%? 7%? The lure and wonder over how much aid countries should give
But you can give 0.7, or 0.07 or 7% of your income (as some super rich countries should give), but if you do so along with a fixed set of norms that has been detrimental to the recipient–and you–then is is useless to give the money in the first place… Continue reading
Posted in Campaigning, DFID, Harriet Harman, IMF, International Development, MCA, MCC, Millennium Development Goals, ODI, Official Development Assistance, Posts, Poverty Reduction, USAID, World Bank
Tagged 0.7%/GNI, aid effectiveness, aid reform, bilateral aid, Center for Global Development, Department for International Development, DFID, Doha Declaration for Financing for Development, donors, Ed Miliband, foreign aid, Harriet Harman, Harrod-Domar Model, IMF, International Monetary Fund, International Organisations, Jan Tinbergen, MDGs, Michael Clemens, Millennium Challenge Account, Millennium Challenge Cooperation, Millennium Development Goals, Monterrey Consensus, neoliberalism, ODI, OECD, Official Development Assistance, Overseas Development Institute, Pearson Commission, Poverty, Poverty Reduction, Shadow Front Bench, Todd Moss, UK Labour Party, United Nations, United States, US, US aid policy, USAID, Washington Consensus, World Bank, World Council of Churches
12 Comments
