Human Rights and Foreign Aid

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aid allocation criteria
AidWatch
Australia's Aid Program
Australian Aid
Australia’s Aid Program
Author_Bethany Barratt
B9 Recipient
Canadian Aid
Canadian Foreign Policy
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Category=JPS
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Category=KCM
Category=QDTS
DAC Donor
decision
decisions
development policy analysis
donor
donor country comparison
East Timor
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Follow
foreign policy decision making
gatekeeping
Hr Violation
Human Rights
human rights impact of development aid
Japan's Oda
Japan’s Oda
Li Ne
love
money
Ne Ga
NGO Community
Norwegian Aid
OECD 1994b
policy
Potential Recipients
poverty reduction strategies
Private Sector Development
recipient
recipient state rights
state
Ta Te
Tied Aid
UK Foreign Policy
UK's Overseas Territory
UK’s Overseas Territory
UN
untied
Violates

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415543460
  • Weight: 470g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Feb 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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By trying to alleviate poverty abroad, foreign development assistance tries to meet, among other things, basic human needs, which some schools of thought classify as basic human rights. However, because development abroad has often been treated as a tool for the pursuit of donor interests, rather than as an end to itself, it often ends up not only neglecting basic human rights, but making them worse.

Bethany Barratt develops this argument by presenting a systematic external examination of the internal documentation of aid rationale in three major donor countries (Britain, Canada and Australia). The book sets the discussion of these documents in the context of the foreign policy process and structure of each donor, and contrasts it with the results of statistical analyses of key factors in aid. It shows that different criteria are applied to the various categories of recipient states, resulting in an inconsistent treatment of recipient rights as an aid criterion.

While the book demonstrates important gulfs between rhetoric and reality, between elected policymakers and aid implementing agencies, and between the donors themselves, it comes to relatively optimistic conclusions about the general direction of foreign assistance and its increasingly pure focus on poverty alleviation.

This substantive and important book will be invaluable to students, researchers and policymakers in the fields of politics, economics and development.

Bethany Barratt is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Roosevelt University, Illinois, USA

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