The news-media has been identified as an influence on donor nations’ overseas aid allocations, acting as a site where decisions are justified to ‘domestic constituencies’ and through which resistance is mobilised. Mediated pressures on aid allocations amplified between 2008 and 2011 in three donor countries experiencing domestic economic difficulties: Ireland, the UK and the US. This study suggests that each country’s print-media positioned the macro resourcing of aid primarily as an inward concern, neglected recipient country needs, and made weak connections to international policy frameworks to benchmark, contextualise and rationalise aid allocations. The research suggests that the explanatory limitations of the countries’ news-models in ...
This study compared 50 years of the New York Times’ international news (N = 20,765) with U.S. foreig...
I was surprised by an excellent Panorama tonight on why so much aid to developing countries is waste...
E conomic research on foreign aid effectiveness and economic growth fre-quently becomes a political ...
The news-media has been identified as an influence on donor nations’ overseas aid allocations, actin...
Through quantitative content analysis and qualitative framing analysis, this study examines how a br...
Since 2010, successive Conservative-led Coalition and Conservative governments in the UK have impose...
IN SEPTEMBER 2006 THE GOVERNMENT’S newly published White Paper on Irish Aid was presented to the med...
Economic crises generally lead to reductions in foreign aid. However, the widely held view that budg...
We examine if and how news coverage influences governments’ humanitarian aid allocations, from the p...
Researchers from Hans Morgenthau and Bruce Bueno de Mesquita have suggested that donor countries vie...
The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mór) was one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the ninete...
SummaryThis is an introduction to the UNU-WIDER special issue of World Development on aid policy and...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via http://dx.d...
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has often asserted that its programs encourage aid by signalin...
Rich countries spend about $100 billion a year on poor countries. But details about how this money i...
This study compared 50 years of the New York Times’ international news (N = 20,765) with U.S. foreig...
I was surprised by an excellent Panorama tonight on why so much aid to developing countries is waste...
E conomic research on foreign aid effectiveness and economic growth fre-quently becomes a political ...
The news-media has been identified as an influence on donor nations’ overseas aid allocations, actin...
Through quantitative content analysis and qualitative framing analysis, this study examines how a br...
Since 2010, successive Conservative-led Coalition and Conservative governments in the UK have impose...
IN SEPTEMBER 2006 THE GOVERNMENT’S newly published White Paper on Irish Aid was presented to the med...
Economic crises generally lead to reductions in foreign aid. However, the widely held view that budg...
We examine if and how news coverage influences governments’ humanitarian aid allocations, from the p...
Researchers from Hans Morgenthau and Bruce Bueno de Mesquita have suggested that donor countries vie...
The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mór) was one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the ninete...
SummaryThis is an introduction to the UNU-WIDER special issue of World Development on aid policy and...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via http://dx.d...
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has often asserted that its programs encourage aid by signalin...
Rich countries spend about $100 billion a year on poor countries. But details about how this money i...
This study compared 50 years of the New York Times’ international news (N = 20,765) with U.S. foreig...
I was surprised by an excellent Panorama tonight on why so much aid to developing countries is waste...
E conomic research on foreign aid effectiveness and economic growth fre-quently becomes a political ...