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- USAID-State
Strategic Plan 2007-2012
- National
Security Strategy of the United States, March 2006
- Policy
Framework for Bilateral Foreign Aid, January 2006 [PDF,
440 KB]
- White Paper:
US Foreign Aid: Meeting the Challenges of the Twenty-first Century,
January 2004 [PDF, 353 KB]
- Fragile
States Strategy, January 2005 [PDF, 305 KB]
- Democracy
and Governance Strategic Framework [PDF, 343 KB]
- Mitigating
the Development Impacts of HIV/AIDS [PDF, 406 KB]
- Foreign Aid in the National
Interest [PDF, 353 KB]
- Nine Principles,
February 2005
- Business
Transformation
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You are here » Home » Policy » US Government Coordination
USAID-US Government Coordination
USAID is the principal agency for U.S. bilateral development and humanitarian
assistance to foreign countries. The
National Security Council (NSC) coordinates foreign assistance
policies and programs among all U.S. government agencies.
USAID works with other agencies through the National Security
Council’s Policy Coordination Committee (PCC) process. The
PCC is the day-to-day forum for interagency coordination on
a variety of issues related to international development and
humanitarian assistance. The PCC process provides policy analysis
for other senior committees and ensures timely responses to
decisions made by the President. It includes representatives
from departments, offices and agencies represented in the
NSC. Development programs and expenditures depend upon authorizing
legislation and appropriations enacted by Congress. Over 50
separate government units carry out aid-related activities
overseas.
In effort to build public awareness about the future of foreign assistance,
USAID recently published a report, Foreign
Aid in the National Interest: Promoting Freedom, Security
and Opportunity, that focuses on six key development themes.
The government links below are organized under those broad
themes then separated under appropriate sub-themes.
PROMOTING DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE
In many developing and post-communist countries, people are losing confidence not just in elected officials but also in democratic institutions. Democracy and good governance are required to spur development and reduce poverty in poorly performing countries
Corruption, Crime Control, and Narcotics
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (State)
Democracy and Human Rights
The
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (State)
Foreign Policy
White House
Policy
Planning Staff (State)
House Committee on International Relations
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
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DRIVING ECONOMIC GROWTH
To reduce poverty, developing countries must sustain conditions that promote growth over long periods. Increasing agricultural productivity reduces rural poverty and enhances food security. Promoting trade and investment can help countries develop their microeconomic agendas and improve the climate for business.
Agriculture and Food Security
Foreign Agricultural Service
International Economics
Department of Treasury
Bureau
of Economic and Business Affairs (State)
International Funding
Department
of Treasury International Programs
Office of Management
and Budget (OMB)
International Trade and Development
United States Trade Representative (USTR)
Bureau
of Economic and Business Affairs' Trade Policy and Programs
Division (State)
U.S. Trade and Development Agency
Office
of Foreign Asset Controls (Treasury)
United States Court of International Trade
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IMPROVING ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTH
Improving the global environment is a major issue. Fundamental
to economic growth is improving everyone's health and education.
Diseases that cause illness and premature death must be identified,
prevented and managed - including future health problems which
will be more diverse.
Environment
EPA Office of International
Affairs
United
States Trade Representative (USTR)
Bureau
of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs
(State)
Health and HIV/AIDS
Center for Disease Control
National Institutes of Health
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MITIGATING AND MANAGING CONFLICT
Conflict is the product of deep grievances, political and economic competition,
irresponsible political leaders, and weak and unaccountable
institutions. Given the devastation caused by conflict, the
United States needs to do much more to mitigate it - and when
that is not possible, to help manage it. Preventing conflict
requires long-term interventions that make states and societies
better able to manage tensions.
USAID and Interagency National Security Cooperation
The 2002 National Security Strategy mandated increased interagency cooperation and coordination in the Global War on Terror (GWOT). USAID has taken a number of external and internal actions to fulfill this mandate.
Externally, USAID is a member of the U.S. Government Counter-Terrorism Team and coordinates with the State Department's Counter-Terrorism Office to design and implement targeted development assistance programs to deny support and sanctuary for terrorists and diminish the underlying conditions they seek to exploit.
USAID is also a partner in the State Department's Regional Strategic Initiative (RSI). The goal of this interagency and inter-country program is to develop flexible regional networks of interconnected country teams that undermine, marginalize, and isolate terrorists; discredit their violent ideology; and empower groups opposed to extremism through threat identification and joint collaboration strategies, policy recommendations and actionable initiatives. For example, the US works with Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines to diminish terrorist movement in the Sulawesi Sea and with countries of the Trans-Sahara region to counter cross border terrorists' activities.
Our terrorist enemies are highly adaptable; defeating them requires both centralized coordination and field authority. Resources and responses must be applied in a rapid, flexible and focused manner. RSI helps to accomplish this task.
To support these programs, USAID has designated the Office of Conflict Management and Mitigation (CMM) as its lead office for conflict and counter-terrorism issues. CMM has taken a lead role in the development of inter-agency conflict and extremism assessments that are used to identify the root causes of conflict and insurgency. These assessments provide the foundation for counter-terrorist programming. In addition, USAID established the Office of Military Affairs (OMA) in 2005 to serve as the focal point for interactions between USAID and the Department of Defense. Working closely together, CMM and OMA improve USAID's ability to work with the interagency to create integrated and synchronized national-security programming.
These actions have already contributed to a number of interagency counter-terrorism initiatives in which USAID expertise is being used to diminish the underlying conditions terrorist seek to exploit and improve the effectiveness of the US government to combat these threats. Examples include the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership (TSCTP); integrated counter-extremism programming in the Horn of Africa (HOA); joint USAID/State/DOD field training; and the development of a Tactical Conflict Assessment Framework (TCAF). Based on USAID's Conflict Assessment Framework, the TCAF will be used by the military to identify the underlying causes of instability/conflict in their areas of operations and to provide guidance on improving the effectiveness of their operations to diminish these causes.
Conflict and Foreign Assistance
USAID, through the Office of Conflict Management and Mitigation coordinates with the State Department's Office for the Coordinator of Reconstruction and Stabilization on issues relevant to the role that Foreign Assistance programs play in conflict environments. It regularly works with the Departments of Defense, Commerce, Justice, Heath and Human Services and others to ensure that Foreign Assistance programming is utilized effectively. CMM, together with USAID's Bureau of Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance (DCHA), Regional Bureaus and the Inter Agency, identifies and supports stabilization and reconstruction programs.
National Security
White House
Bureau
of Political-Military Affairs (State)
Human Trafficking
Office
to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (State)
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PROVIDING HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE
The need for humanitarian assistance shows no signs of abating, and new dimensions
of disasters will create new demands. Trends indicate a larger,
more complex role for humanitarian assistance in the coming
decades. The United States has a critical role in addressing
current and future trends in disaster assistance.
Humanitarian Assistance
White House
Famine Early
Warning Systems Network (USAID)
United States Department of Health and Human Services
Refugees and Migration
Bureau
of Population, Refugees, and Migration (State)
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
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ACCOUNTING FOR PRIVATE FOREIGN AID
U.S. official aid is set to rise from $10 billion a year today to $15 billion
in 2006 and thereafter as a result of the Millennium
Challenge Account, a major new policy initiative announced
by President Bush in March 2002. But many nongovernment sources
also provide foreign aid: foundations, corporations, private
and voluntary organizations, universities, religious organizations,
and individuals. All these other resources provide nearly
$60 billion a year (six times the official assistance). With
private assistance predominating, U.S. official assistance
will have to develop stronger partnerships with the full array
of private resources.
Foreign Investment and International Business
Department of Commerce
Export-Import Bank of the United States
Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC)
U.S. Trade and Development Agency
U.S.
Business Advisor Portal (SBA)
U.S. Government
Export Portal
USAID has provided economic and humanitarian assistance worldwide for more
than 40 years.
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