Developed countries give foreign assistance for many reasons, one of which is the protection of national interests. Foreign aid gives a donor country leverage in international relations and is used as a tool of foreign policy. The United States and Japan are the two largest aid donors in the world. Each of these countries exert influence over specific regions through foreign assistance. Although the national interests of each country are different, both use foreign aid to protect these interests. This thesis discusses the means by which the United States and Japan use foreign aid in foreign policy. It looks specifically at U.S. food aid to Central America and Japanese aid to Asia
Development assistance is traditionally given by developed countries to developing countries to ass...
Many empirical studies reveal that Japanese aid allocative behaviour is not humanitarian. It is view...
The essential purpose of foreign aid is to reduce poverty and to help millions of people in the deve...
Developed countries give foreign assistance for many reasons, one of which is the protection of nati...
The concept of recipient foreign aid countries that seems so deceptively simple is undergoing tremen...
This paper compares Japan and the US as they provide different types of capital to the developing wo...
Japan has quickly risen to prominence as a donor of official development assistance (ODA), providin...
This thesis examines Japan’s policy of official development assistance (ODA) to the People’s Republi...
Japan's ODA programme is surrounded by controversy regarding the motives that propel it forward and ...
This paper aims to explore a pattern of the nexus between donor aid motivations and national interes...
Foreign aid as its name denotes is suposed to improve mostly developing countries to a better condit...
Foreign aid is defined as technical assistance, capital grants and loans to underdeveloped countries...
This paper examines a new trend in Japan’s Official Devel-opment Assistance (ODA) policy that emerge...
Within the last decade, Russia and China have greatly expanded their presence in Latin America—often...
Foreign aid has become, since the end of World War II, a powerful and cost-effective foreign policy...
Development assistance is traditionally given by developed countries to developing countries to ass...
Many empirical studies reveal that Japanese aid allocative behaviour is not humanitarian. It is view...
The essential purpose of foreign aid is to reduce poverty and to help millions of people in the deve...
Developed countries give foreign assistance for many reasons, one of which is the protection of nati...
The concept of recipient foreign aid countries that seems so deceptively simple is undergoing tremen...
This paper compares Japan and the US as they provide different types of capital to the developing wo...
Japan has quickly risen to prominence as a donor of official development assistance (ODA), providin...
This thesis examines Japan’s policy of official development assistance (ODA) to the People’s Republi...
Japan's ODA programme is surrounded by controversy regarding the motives that propel it forward and ...
This paper aims to explore a pattern of the nexus between donor aid motivations and national interes...
Foreign aid as its name denotes is suposed to improve mostly developing countries to a better condit...
Foreign aid is defined as technical assistance, capital grants and loans to underdeveloped countries...
This paper examines a new trend in Japan’s Official Devel-opment Assistance (ODA) policy that emerge...
Within the last decade, Russia and China have greatly expanded their presence in Latin America—often...
Foreign aid has become, since the end of World War II, a powerful and cost-effective foreign policy...
Development assistance is traditionally given by developed countries to developing countries to ass...
Many empirical studies reveal that Japanese aid allocative behaviour is not humanitarian. It is view...
The essential purpose of foreign aid is to reduce poverty and to help millions of people in the deve...