000 01456nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c513371
_d513371
008 200213b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aRahman, Mohammad Mizanur
_916114
245 _aParticipation as aid conditionality: Parliamentary engagement in Bangladesh's poverty reduction strategy
260 _bAsia Pacific Journal of Public Administration
300 _a41(4), Dec, 2019: p.230-236.
520 _aStakeholder engagement in the formulation process was a major condition of donors to make Bangladesh’s poverty reduction strategy nationally owned. In response, this article focuses on the engagement of the parliament as the most representative political institution in the country. The analysis shows that there was no political posture to ensure parliamentary engagement in the development of the strategy, with the nature and extent of the parliament’s involvement being significantly limited. The lack of real parliamentary engagement was the outcome of the country’s historical dependence on donors and the parliament’s historically weak contribution to development strategies. The experience highlights the need for a collaborative approach to policy-making aimed at ensuring the active and meaningful involvement of parliament as a core means of facilitating national ownership of the development agenda. - Reproduced.
773 _aAsia Pacific Journal of Public Administration
906 _aPoverty - Bangladesh
942 _cAR