Development policy and Management The foreign Aid Debate

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The EU as a global actor by 2030 Context –Multipolar world with China, India and U.S. as the most important players. –Globalization –More regionally organized.
Advertisements

30. Peacebuilding II The UN System. 30. Peacebuilding II: The UN System Learning Objectives: – Understand the management of peacebuilding in the UN system.
Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies.
Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government.
Canada’s International Relationships Unit 5 – Global Systems Lesson 25 – Canada’s International Relationships.
Fletcher Courses: Substantive Regional Coverage 2015.
American Government and Politics Today
Conceptual definition of the European Union as a security actor
The Cold War [ ]: An Ideological Struggle Soviet & Eastern Bloc Nations [“Iron Curtain”] US & the Western Democracies GOAL  spread world- wide.
American Foreign Policy
The Cold War Cold War Defined First used in 1947 Political, economic and propaganda war between US and Soviet Union Fought through surrogates.
Middle East and North Africa The Military Implications Sir Tim Garden.
Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies Dr. Louis A. Picard Senior Research Fellow and Director of.
Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies Dr. Louis A. Picard Senior Research Fellow AFRICOM: The Three.
CAPSTONE AND READING SEMINAR: FOREIGN AID, FOREIGN POLICY AND DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT PIA 2096/PIA Week Two.
Foreign Policy and National Defense Chapter 17
Section Outline 1 of 12 American Foreign Policy Section 3: Foreign Policy in Action I.Foreign Policy Through World War II II.The Cold War III.Today’s Challenges.
Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 PIA 2096/2504 Capstone and Seminar.
GSPIA Health Policy Seminar Seminar One Dr. Louis A. Picard Professor of Public and International Affairs and African Studies Graduate School of Public.
Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government.
Copyright © 2014 Cengage Learning FOREIGN POLICY AND NATIONAL SECURITY Chapter Seventeen.
Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 Africa Center for Strategic Studies Tuesday, 10 July 2007 PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government.
What is foreign policy? Foreign Policy: everything a nation's government says and does in world affairs Location, desire for certain natural resources,
Saferworld Working for the prevention of armed violence Presented by Virginie Giarmana 19 March 2008 Mainstreaming SALW in European policies and debates.
Important Global Organizations/Agreements
Maritime Security as an Integral Part of an
BELLWORK: 3/21 How is the Cold War different than previous wars of study? What is a proxy war? Describe the main economic and political difference between.
Foreign Policy GOVT Module 16.
1- Introduction ii-. Part ONE : foreign and security policy.
The changing world since the end of the Cold War
Cold War Era (Part I) Page 26
Transatlantic Relations and the Obama Presidency
Peacebuilding Priority Plan Heads of Mission
Threats to World Security Chapter 33 Section 3.
7th Grade Civics Miss Smith *pgs (23.3)
My Life as a Korean Diplomat ( )
Foreign Policy.
Pick up handouts Open notebooks to page 25
Containment & Soviet Control in Eastern Europe
U.S. FOREIGN POLICY.
The Cold War United States (US) vs
The Cold War Part #1.
The Cold War Part #1.
International Systems
Political Geography: State Cooperation and Competition
SA Army Seminar 21 Change and Continuity in Global Politics and Military Strategy (with special reference to Human Rights, the Nature of War and Humanitarian.
The Jews needed a homeland after holocaust.
Containment & Soviet Control in Eastern Europe
Public Policy Foreign and Domestic.
The Korean War
Africa Center for Strategic Studies
The United States and the World
The Origins of the Cold War
CONFLICT AND CHANGE Involvement in Korea War Standard: SS7H3.e
Foreign Policy Since 1988 With the end of the Cold War, the United States changed its goals and policies.
* What are containment, the Truman Doctrine, and the Marshall Plan?
Foreign Policy: Protecting the American Way
How did WWII change the world? (politically and economically)
PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society:
Third Geneva Convention (1949)
Foreign Policy and National Defense
7th Grade Civics Miss Smith *pgs (23.3)
Diplomacy and Foreign Policy
Barack Obama.
Cold War Chapter 18 U.S. History.
PRESENTATION ON AFRICA COMMAND: BENEVOLENT OR MALEVOLENT US INTERESTS IN AFRICA? 20 FEBRUARY 2007.
The Cold War [ ]: I. An Ideological Struggle
Bell Ringer QUESTION #124 QUESTION #125 QUESTION #126 QUESTION #127
Foreign Policy and National Defense
Barack Obama.
Presentation transcript:

Development policy and Management The foreign Aid Debate PIA 2501 Development policy and Management The foreign Aid Debate

Niccolò di Bernardo dei Machiavelli (May 3, 1469 – June 21, 1527) Machiavelli emphasized the need for the exercise of brute power where necessary and rewards, patron- clientelism to preserve the status quo. THE CARROT AND THE STICK

FDR’s Good Neighbor Policy Roosevelt created the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (OCIAA) in August 1940 and appointed Nelson Rockefeller to head the organization. Largest Project- Pan-American Highway Set the model for foreign aid in post-WWII world

Review: Foreign Aid During World War II- Lend Lease

The Problem- 1950 The goal of foreign aid was the reduction of material poverty through economic growth and the delivery of social services, the promotion of good governance and support for social institutions (Education and Health)

India 1950

The Assumption- 1950 It was assumed that this would be done through democratically selected, accountable institutions, and reversing negative environmental trends through strategies of sustainable development. But there was also the cold war.

George C. Marshall and the Marshall Plan

The Point Four Program: 1949 Inaugural Address

Harry Truman and Joseph Stalin The Cold War and the Search for Allies

Three Views of Foreign Aid 1. Part of Balance of Power- Carrot and Stick Approach (based on exchange Theory) 2. Commercial Promotion: Focus on International Trade 3. Humanitarian Theory: Moral Imperative

Reminder: The Issue and the Goal Here The issue of sustainable International development should be examined from both a policy and an ethical dimension. The thesis is that ultimately there have both been policy problems and moral ambiguities that have plagued technical assistance and foreign aid.

Ostensibly the Goals are the same- The Problem in 2011 Ostensibly the Goals are the same- However…

The Problem In addition to (or because of) the Cold War Ultimately, as a number of economists have noted, “universal models of growth [did] not work well.” Quote David Sogge, Give and Take: What’s the Matter with Foreign Aid? (London: Zed Books, 2002), p. 8.

Foreign Aid Structures 1. Technical Cooperation Agency (Truman) -1950 2. Mutual Defense Administration (Eisenhower) -1953 3. U.S. Agency for International Development (Kennedy to Obama) -1961

Domestic Management Systems and International Influences Historical periods of budgetary and fiscal management: 1951-1970- Industriial Growth (Take Off Theory) 1975-1981: Basic Needs 1981-1990: Structural Adjustment After 1991: Collapse of the Soviet Union and the “End of History” “Clash of civilizations” September 11, 2001: Three D’s- Defense, Development and Diplomacy

Peacekeeping, and international organizations- Issues of DDD Northern State mechanisms: NATO and EU Mediators Unilateral vs. Multilateral (U.S., France and U.K.)- Why Iraq is important

Former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan

National or Transnational Groups? Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula Al Qaeda in Iraq Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb Boko Haram Al Shabaab

Peacekeeping and international organizations- Issues Multi-lateral and bi-lateral- Continental vs. International Regional Groups: ECOWAS, Africa Union, SADC What is NATO? United Nations Peacekeeping vs. Monitoring vs. Conflict control (Rules of Engagement)

Liberian Civil War

Peacekeeping and international organizations- Issues from the Cold War Role of “proxy” states/armies (Ethiopia) Impact of Foreign and Military assistance Programs (Horn, Sahel and War on Terror) Special Role: Mediation Centers (Institute of Peace, Leadership and Governance at Africa University, Zimbabwe)

Terrorism and Counter Terrorism. Is it an Issue? Terrorism and Counter-terrorism (Includes regional, sub-regional, national and sub-national levels of activity) – U.S. and Europe Global vs. non-global How Relevant to LDCs?

North vs. South?

Counter-Terrorism Strategies Legislation, Finance, Border Security (including passports and travel documents Control) Police, military and security, combating ideological Support for Terrorism Strengthening Traditional Leadership Information and Intelligence and International Cooperation Offensive Combat

Sector Reforms and Counter-Terrorism Evolution of U.S. CT Policy in Africa Since September 11 Impact of ethnic and religious identification on Terrorist threats Challenges of parallel governance and the Arab Spring (Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya) AFRICOM

Popular Appeals

Regional Threats The threat of Collapsed States and crime- Diamonds, Drugs, guns (Columbia, Guinea Conakry) Paramilitary Violence (Philippines, Great Lakes) Organized Crime, and Piracy (Air, Land and Sea)- Indian Ocean and gulf of Guina Religious Fundamentalism and CVE (Countering Extreme Violence)

V. Post-Conflict Governance The Role of Negotiated Pacts Truth and Reconciliation vs. Justice International Courts Issues

Liberian Truth and Reconciliation Commission Conflict Resolution vs. Justice Bishop Desmond Tutu

Post-Conflict Governance Demilitarizing societies State Rebuilding and Institutional Development Shift from Development to Democracy and Governance

Nation-Building, United Nations Style

Foreign Aid and Foreign and Security Policy- Two Historical Views So Called “Whole of Government” Approach- The Method Historical Debate about “Hearts and Minds”- The Problem

“Whole of Government” in Foreign Policy Definition: Integrated Approach to Conflict and Post-Conflict Situations in Fragile States

“Whole of Government” (DDD) Focus: Diplomacy, Development and Defense Usually Add Information/ Intelligence, Trade and Finance, Environmental, etc.

The Trade Issue and DDD

Whole of Government Countries: Extent of Integration Scandinavia Canada U.K. Australia France U.S.

Australia

Netherlands “Development, Defense and Diplomacy should be the three legs of any stabilization operation, says the recently returned commander of the first Netherlands-Australian Task Force in southern Afghanistan.” Brigadier General Theo Vleugels, of the Royal Netherlands Army

“Hearts and Minds Debate” Phrase Widely Used re. AFRICOM- Development Linked to Ideological Change- Rural Development, Collective Villages, Militias Five “Classic” Variations

Counter-Insurgency (COIN) in Afghanistan

“Hearts and Minds” Five Examples a. Origins- Malayan Emergency- (But Not Kenya)- Malaya Only clearly agreed upon Success re. “Hearts and Minds.” Next three failed to meet “goals” b. French Military Theory- Best Represented in debates about Indo-China not Algeria c. U.S. Goal: Vietnam- “Third Force” (Quiet vs. “Ugly” American literary image)

Kenya: Not so friendly

“Hearts and Minds” Examples Cold War- Successfully ended (1948-1989). WHAM- “Winning Hearts and Minds” P.W. Botha- So-Called “Total Strategy”

Iraq, Afghanistan and North and West Africa

Whole Government vs. Hearts and Minds in AFRICOM Issues: a. Cold War- Focus re. Hearts and Minds was on States. Key- Political Leadership was Coordinating b. Now since 2001, there is a perception “World Wide” re. U.S. that there is military and security which is driving AFRICOM- Focus: Non-State Actors (Terrorist Groups) and Community Loyalty

Is that all there is in Foreign Aid? Hearts and Minds and Whole of Government?