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Peter EpsteinOlga KaganovaKatharine Mark
Sally R. MerrillGretchen MikeskaRitu Nayyar-Stone
Rudolph G. PennerGeorge E. PetersonJuliana H. Pigey
Carol RabenhorstClare Romanik

 

Publications on International Issues

Viewing 1-5 of 361. Most recent posts listed first.Next Page >>

Aid Effectiveness in the Infrastructure Sector: Final Report (Research Report)
Harry Garnett, Ritu Nayyar-Stone, Sarah Polen

In response to the challenges posed by the Millennium Development Goals, the key stakeholders in international development set out a new agenda to improve the effectiveness of aid. This agenda, embodied in the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, articulates a series of commitments reflected by the following tenets: ownership, alignment, harmonization, managing for results, and mutual accountability. The goal of this study was to identify lessons learned from the application of the Paris Declaration tenets in the infrastructure sector and, specifically, to determine whether the unique characteristics of this sector result in unique challenges and opportunities for implementing the tenets. This report, submitted to the Steering Committee by The Urban Institute, presents detailed findings on the Study on Aid Effectiveness in the Infrastructure Sector.

Posted to Web: March 16, 2009Publication Date: January 01, 2009

Integrating Public Property in the Realm of Fiscal Transparency and Anti-Corruption Efforts (Book Chapter)
Olga Kaganova

The area of government property asset management is relatively new in public management. Most public wealth is concentrated in public property, and expenses associated with it constitute a substantial part of public budgets. The chapter ventures into two international "hot topics": practical enhancement of public financial resources through better management of property asset and curbing corruption in the historically corrupt area of government-owned property. The chapter provides a conceptual and methodological framework for governmental decision-makers and their advisors and ends by formulating and discussing a number of issues that require further professional and public debate.

Posted to Web: January 16, 2009Publication Date: April 15, 2008

Introducing More Transparent and Efficient Land Management in Post-Socialist Cities: Lessons from Kyrgyzstan (Policy Report)
Olga Kaganova, Abdirasul Akhmatov, Charles Undeland

The Urban Institute worked with five cities in post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan to apply better management practices through the development of Strategic Land Management Plans. UI worked with local governments to make an inventory of municipal land, publicize the results, and develop a strategy that articulated principles for land management. This led to several improvements including proper registration of parcels and proactive policies to lease and sell land through open competition. It also established a model for determining public policy that countered corruption and public deliberation of costs and benefits in the use of local assets. Donor involvement was also critical to success.

Posted to Web: January 16, 2009Publication Date: June 02, 2008

Legislating-for-Results Municipal Action Guides (Document)
Harry P. Hatry, Katharine Mark, James Fountain, Chris Hoene, Katherine Bates

The Urban Institute and National League of Cities developed this series of 10 guides for city and county elected officials, and their staffs, to help them obtain and use information about the results of their governments' services in helping their citizens. The Guides address such issues as: improving strategic planning; improving budgeting decisions; reviewing programs throughout the year; helping motivate their government's employees and contractors; and two-way communications with citizens on what citizens are getting for their money. Specific actions are suggested, and examples are provided.

Posted to Web: December 02, 2008Publication Date: October 01, 2008

The Broader Movement: Nonprofit Environmental and Conservation Organizations, 1989-2005 (Research Report)
Baird Straughan, Thomas H. Pollak

This study, the first comprehensive look at IRS data on more than 26,000 environmental and conservation organizations – 8,000 of which had revenues of $25,000 or more – reveals a core of prominent national organizations and a larger, more rapidly growing universe of regional, local, and other specialized groups. Taken as a whole, the environmental movement expanded in number of organizations, members, and in total revenues almost every year since 1960. It focused less on advocacy than on projects and education, and was younger, more densely networked, and more dependent upon grants and contributions than was the nonprofit sector in general.

Posted to Web: December 01, 2008Publication Date: December 01, 2008

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