The Development Dimension Agriculture and Development The Case for Policy Coherence

The Development Dimension Agriculture and Development The Case for Policy Coherence
Author: OECD
Publisher: OECD Publishing
Total Pages: 127
Release: 2005-11-18
Genre:
ISBN: 9264013350

Agriculture and Development, OECD 2005, discusses the extent to which OECD country agricultural and agricultural trade policies are coherent with, and supportive of, the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals, particularly the elimination of extreme poverty and hunger.

The Development Dimension ICTs for Development Improving Policy Coherence

The Development Dimension ICTs for Development Improving Policy Coherence
Author: OECD
Publisher: OECD Publishing
Total Pages: 207
Release: 2010-01-22
Genre:
ISBN: 9264077405

This publication examines access to ICTs in developing countries, broadband Internet access and governments' role in making it available; developments in mobile payments; ICT security issues; ICTs for improving environmental performance; and the relative priority of ICTs in education.

Policy Coherence for Development in the EU Council

Policy Coherence for Development in the EU Council
Author: Christian Egenhofer
Publisher: CEPS
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2006
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9290796537

In recognition of the fact that EU policies in non-development areas, such as trade, energy and migration, can also profoundly affect the poor in developing countries, the EU has affirmed?Policy Coherence for Development? as an important principle for achieving more effective development cooperation. This new CEPS study analyses whether policy-making processes in the EU Council provide sufficient scope for development inputs to be made in 12 key policy areas: trade, environment, climate change, security, agriculture, fisheries, social dimension of globalisation, employment and decent work, migration, research and innovation, information society, transport and energy. The study also includes coverage of the policy-making processes in the European Commission as it initiates and defends most of the policies being discussed in the EU Council. Its findings point to the highly segregated character of EU policy-making and provide interesting insights into the internal challenges the EU will need to address in order to fulfil its goal of achieving greater coherency in its (external) policy-making. To strengthen the potential for PCD the study suggests six proposals for structural reform as well as a set of specific recommendations.