Swedish Foreign Aid Policy

Swedish Foreign Aid Policy
Author: Dunford Mpelumbe
Publisher: LAP Lambert Academic Publishing
Total Pages: 60
Release: 2015-08-18
Genre:
ISBN: 9783659711374

A lot is said and written about foreign aid and international development assistance.Many people contend that national interests underlie most foreign policy frameworks and relations between states.This book attempts to give a different picture altogether;that there are other states that are driven to contribute to humanity and formulate their foreign policies in a way that captures the needs of other countries.Using Swedish international development policy the author argues that relations between Sweden and several developing countries in Africa and elsewhere is not necessarily guided by Swedish commercial interests but rather the genuine concern for global development.

The Peripheral Centre

The Peripheral Centre
Author: Karin Himmelstrand
Publisher:
Total Pages: 228
Release: 1985
Genre: Economic assistance, Swedish
ISBN:

Case studies, evaluation of the role of Sweden in providing development aid and technical cooperation to rural women in Africa South of Sahara - considers the effects of revolution on the sexual division of labour, basic needs satisfaction, and womens rights; looks at water supply and rural development projects, women's work load, living conditions, education of women, income generating activities for female headed households, the role of womens organizations, etc. Bibliography, maps, photographs, statistical tables.

Agencies in Foreign Aid

Agencies in Foreign Aid
Author: Goran Hyden
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 256
Release: 1999-06-03
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1349149829

In contrast to the bulk of the literature on foreign aid, which deals with it as an instrument of foreign policy or focuses on problems of implementation, this book examines the role of the aid agencies themselves, from a recipient's perspective, and provides longitudinal as well as comparative analysis. The principal aid agencies of China, Sweden and the United States began their operations in Tanzania simultaneously in the early 1960s but from very different ideological premises. Nonetheless, they all fell into operational traps that have limited the effectiveness of their contributions to Tanzanian development. The editors draw lessons about how foreign aid, if it is going to continue, needs to be reformed at the agency level.