How to Make Poverty History: The central role of local organizations in meeting the MDGs

Reports/papers (non-specific)
, 192 pages
PDF (733.81 KB)
11000IIED.pdf
Language:
English
Published: September 2005
ISBN: 9781843695400
Product code:11000IIED

Whether or not most of the MDGs are met depends on more effective and pro-poor local organizations being engaged in all aspects – from determining what should be done, to doing it, and to monitoring progress. So it also depends on donor agencies changing to support this. If this is neglected, it is unlikely that most of the MDGs will be met. If the poor lack voice and influence, rights and protection by the rule of law, then much-increased donor flows and even debt relief and fairer global markets are unlikely to bring them much benefit. The people on whose poverty the programmes of all donor agencies are justified surely have a right to a greater influence on what is done and by whom. As the examples given in this book show, this greater influence can transform the quality, scale and cost-effectiveness of development assistance. It can also contribute much to building more effective governance systems, but doing so from the bottom up – which is where it is most needed.

Cite this publication

Bigg, T. (eds) and Satterthwaite, D. (eds) (2005). How to Make Poverty History: The central role of local organizations in meeting the MDGs. .
Available at https://www.iied.org/11000iied