To achieve humanitarian objectives, international development assistance must be structured to insure its effectiveness. The resulting conditionality, however, raises sovereignty concerns as attempts to promote effectiveness may conflict with respect for recipient state sovereignty and indirectly violate individuals\u27 right to self-determination. The paper explores the nature of this conflict and provides guidelines for official donors
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Published online : 29 September 2017Donor governments face a dilemma when providing development aid ...
The following text analyzes legal and political problemsthat arise when donor countries attempt to p...
This article seeks to reconcile the notion of Humanitarian Intervention with that of sovereignty wit...
This article argues that a new generation of Political Conditionalities has emerged during the last ...
Growing links between international governmental organizations and NGO/GROs in developing countries ...
This paper is an attempt to establish a legitimate basis for humanitarian intervention in a world of...
My dissertation is an advocacy of the idea that if aid proved to be ineffective, it is partly becaus...
This rapid literature review collates lessons related to aid (conditionality) and non-state armed gr...
This Note examines the legality of humanitarian intervention by tracing the historical justification...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical framework with a conflict of intere...
Aid conditionality has emerged as a dominant tool by donor countries in nation building efforts in t...
The repeated failure of the United Nations Charter regime to respond to humanitarian crises— and to ...
When does international intervention work? Efforts by external actors to shape the behavior of sover...
Impartiality, one of the guiding principles of humanitarianism, demands that the only criterion in s...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Published online : 29 September 2017Donor governments face a dilemma when providing development aid ...
The following text analyzes legal and political problemsthat arise when donor countries attempt to p...
This article seeks to reconcile the notion of Humanitarian Intervention with that of sovereignty wit...
This article argues that a new generation of Political Conditionalities has emerged during the last ...
Growing links between international governmental organizations and NGO/GROs in developing countries ...
This paper is an attempt to establish a legitimate basis for humanitarian intervention in a world of...
My dissertation is an advocacy of the idea that if aid proved to be ineffective, it is partly becaus...
This rapid literature review collates lessons related to aid (conditionality) and non-state armed gr...
This Note examines the legality of humanitarian intervention by tracing the historical justification...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical framework with a conflict of intere...
Aid conditionality has emerged as a dominant tool by donor countries in nation building efforts in t...
The repeated failure of the United Nations Charter regime to respond to humanitarian crises— and to ...
When does international intervention work? Efforts by external actors to shape the behavior of sover...
Impartiality, one of the guiding principles of humanitarianism, demands that the only criterion in s...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Published online : 29 September 2017Donor governments face a dilemma when providing development aid ...
The following text analyzes legal and political problemsthat arise when donor countries attempt to p...