Doing Development Differently: Understanding the Landscape and Implications of New Approaches to Governance and Public-sector Reforms
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Fritz, Verena (Author)
- Kirsch, Renate (Editor)
- Siehl, Elke (Editor)
- Stockmayer, Albrecht (Editor)
Title
Doing Development Differently: Understanding the Landscape and Implications of New Approaches to Governance and Public-sector Reforms
Abstract
Seeking to accelerate development, the agencies and individuals involved have regularly advanced new ideas of how external support can function better, deliver more, and achieve greater impact. There has been a particular flourishing of new ideas within the broad field of governance and public-sector reforms in the 2000s. This chapter starts off with a review of the “landscape of new ideas,” focusing on five proposed approaches in particular: political economy analysis (PEA), Problem-Driven Iterative Adaptation (PDIA), Doing Development Differently (DDD), Thinking and Working Politically (TWP), and the “science of delivery.” It sets out the “problem-diagnostic” that underpins each of these
Book Title
Transformation, Politics and Implementation
Series
Smart Implementation in Governance Programs
Edition
1
Publisher
Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH
Date
2017
Pages
75-98
ISBN
978-3-8487-3738-3
Short Title
Doing Development Differently
Accessed
11/12/2020, 11:55
Library Catalogue
JSTOR
Citation
Fritz, V. (2017). Doing Development Differently: Understanding the Landscape and Implications of New Approaches to Governance and Public-sector Reforms. In R. Kirsch, E. Siehl, & A. Stockmayer (Eds.), Transformation, Politics and Implementation (1st ed., pp. 75–98). Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv941tdt.8
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