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Development Co-operation Report 2001
Efforts and Policies of the Members of the Development Assistance Committee
OECD. Published by : OECD Publishing
Version: Print (Paperback) + Free PDF
Price:   €47 | $61 | £31 | ¥5600 | 
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Availability: Out of print  Publication date:  04 Apr 2002  Language: English  Pages: 292  Tables: 98  Charts: 80  ISBN: 9789264191877  OECD Code: 432002311P1  Frequency: Annual 
 

Other Versions & Languages | Table of contents

The events of 11 September have strengthened the conviction that a world without violence, terrorism and conflict also means a world freed from exclusion, vulnerability and inequality, a world where opportunities exist for all. The 2001 Development Co-operation Report highlights the work over the last year of the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee on the multiple challenges of creating such a world.

Chapter I suggests that the international community has now created the consensus and the instruments needed to address these challenges and that what is needed now is a dynamic process of implementation. Chapter II discusses policy coherence issues. In this respect, the adoption in the DAC last year of the Recommendation on Untying ODA to the Least Developed Countries is a breakthrough.

In the perspective of the March 2002 International Conference on Financing for Development, Chapter III considers the means and structures needed to generate the financing required to support the Millennium Development Goals and thus attack global poverty. Chapter IV describes recent developments in the policies and aid programmes of DAC Members and outlines the work of the new DAC Task Force on Donor Practices.

Chapter V shows how preventing violent conflict can bring enormous benefits in terms of poverty reduction and growth, and in terms of world-wide security.  Chapter VI focuses on the Information and Communication Technology - a vital tool for development -, and on its immense potential to change the "aid business" and create new models for development.

This year’s report also includes a "Special Module" on monitoring progress on the Millennium Development Goals and a new section - "The DAC at Work" - which provides information on the structure and work of the Development Assistance Committee, its subsidiary bodies, and the Development Co-operation Directorate.


Other languages:  French (Out of print)

Superseded by: Development Co-operation Report 2009 - (Available)

Other Versions:  E-book - PDF Format


Table of contents:

Foreword by Jean-Claude Faure
PART I. LOOKING AHEAD
I. New Impetus, New Challenges
-1. Placing development cooperation policies in a political perspective
-2. Sustainaing a long-lasting and dynamic process based on global partnership
-3. Promoting reciprocal commitment and shared responsibility
-Annex I-1. Rising to the Global Challenge: Partnership for Reducing Global Poverty
-Annex I-2. Helping Prevent Violent Conflict
-Annex I-3. Strategies for Sustainable Development
-Annex I-4. Trade and Development in the New Global Context: A Partnership for Building Trade Capacity
II. Policy Coherence for Development
-
1. Policy coherence for development - what is it, why is it important, and what does it mean in an operational sense?
-2. Policy coherence at work
-3. Promoting policy coherence for development in the OECD
-Annex II-1. The DAC Recommendation on Untying ODA to the Least Developed Countries
-Appendix 1. Operational Procedures and Understandings
-Appendix 2. Least Developed Countries as of 1 May 2001
-Appendix 3. Aid Procurement Liberalisation: 1998 DAC HLM Mandate
PART II. REVIEWING DONOR EFFORTS
III. Perspectives on Financing the Millenium Development Goals
-
1. The focus of increasing international attention
-2. Highlights of recent trends in external flows and domestic resource allocation
-3. Financing for Development - opportunities and challenges
-4. Current perspecctives on the demand and supply of ODA
-5. Concluding remarks
-Annex III-1. Recent Assessment of Aid Requirements - Some Observations
IV. Reviewing Donor Efforts and Policies
-
1. Partnership for poverty reduction: The continuing evolution of the DAC policy consensus
-2. Donor practices: Applying the partnership principle
-3. Implementing the policy consensus: How are donors doing?
-4. Assessing progress in evaluation systems
-5. ODA trends in 2000
-6. Notes on individual DAC Members
-7. Notes on non-DAC Members' aid programmes
-Special Module: The Millenium Development Goals
PART III. FURTHER CHALLENGES
V. Countries in Conflict and Poor Performers: What Can Donors Do?
-
1. Violent conflict and development: Towards a shared ision of the role of international cooperation
--Work int he DAC and links with work elsewhere
--Poor performers
-2. The new DAC Guidelines on Helping Prevent Violent Conflict: Orientations for External Partners
--Background
--New Policy Guidance on Conflict Prevention
VI. The Knowledge Economy and Digital Opportunities
-
1. Introduction
-2. ICT as a tool for development and poverty reduction
-3. Development assistance in the digital age
-4. How can ICT help promote development?
-5. Experience and best practices in e-commerce and e-government
-6. Cooperation among stakeholders
PART IV. THE DAC AT WORK 
-1. Development Assistance Committee
--Key Activities
--Structure and Membership of the DAC and its Subsidiary Bodies
--Mandate of the DAC
--DAC Subsidiary Bodies
-2. Development Cooperation Directorate
--Structure
--Staff
Statistical Annex
-Technical Notes
-Tables
-Charts
-Boxes

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