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Inter-Organisational Cooperation of Haitian NGOs in Education – A Haitian Perspective

In Haiti, around 90% of the schools are operated by non-public providers. Many NGOs are active in the domain of education. Coordination and cooperation is a big challenge, especially in the transition phase from humanitarian relief to development, one year after the devastating earthquake in January 2010.

In this project report submitted in part of an MSc in Development Management the author – after an exploration of the problem from a theoretical perspective – the outcomes of semi-structured interviews with NGO directors and education coordinators in Haiti provides an insight into six different inter-organisational cooperation trajectories with NGOs.

The reasons why organisations enter and participate in inter-organisational cooperation trajectories include objectives in the following domains: improved coordination, increased effectiveness, more technical capacity and shared curriculum development, shared policy development, stronger advocacy and increased chances for fundraising.

However this report highlights the fact that the most important condition for inter-organisational cooperation is the development of a shared vision.

Report Author: Marike de Kloe

HD PDF NewInter-Organisational Cooperation of Haitian NGOs in Education – A Haitian Perspective (3671)

Globalization, Regulation and Geography: The Development of the Bahamas and the Cayman Islands Offshore Financial Centres

This Ph.D. thesis – completed in 1996 – used the development of the Bahamas and Cayman Offshore Financial Centres as a lens to understand the evolving relationship between globalization and sovereignty.

Chapter one asks: “what explains the emergence of these new places – offshore financial centres – on the map of international political economy?” Chapter two critically reviews the literature around the themes of globalization, regulation and geography. Chapter three is a “methodology” chapter. Chapter four begins to explore the development of the Bahamas and Cayman OFCs, examining the regulatory construction of place. Chapter five expands the focus to consider the relationship between the Bahamas and Cayman OFCs and how this relationship has affected their development. Chapter six explores the wider regulatory landscape, looking at the relationship of the Bahamas and Cayman OFCs with the USA and at their place within the regulatory framework for international banking provided by the Basle Committee. Chapter seven brings together some of the insights from earlier chapters and puts the “regulatory landscape” metaphor to work, moving towards an explanation for the development of OFCs and processes of financial globalization.

It is argued that the development of stateless monies, particularly since the late 1960s, produced an economic space of flows, increasingly divorced from the political space of states and the productive economy. The OFCs, through the practice of unbundling sovereignty, articulate the economic and political spaces of capitalism.

Author: Alan Hudson

HD PDF New Globalization, Regulation and Geography: The Development of the Bahamas and the Cayman Islands Offshore Financial Centres (32877)

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