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Property diversity and its implications
Private property and the domineering right to exclude -- Towards an understanding of public property -- The obviousness and obliviousness of common property -- Seeing property diversity, its core elements -- Seeing property diversity, in theory, place and picture -- Obligation and property monism -- Obligation and property diversity -- Community and the implications of property diversity -- Conclusion
Amelia Thorpe, Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property and Claire W. Herbert, A Detroit Story: Urban Decline and the Rise of Property Informality
In: Legalities: the Australian and New Zealand journal of law and society, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 259-264
ISSN: 2634-3789
Industrial policy in practice: Africa's Presidential Investors' Advisory Councils
Recent writing on industrial policy stresses the need for coordination between the public and private sectors. This paper examines the performance of one such coordination mechanism, Presidential Investors' Advisory Councils, in Ethiopia, Senegal, Tanzania, and Uganda. It finds that the councils have been better at focusing attention on a donor-driven agenda of regulatory reforms than they have been at addressing the binding constraints to private investment. Notwithstanding their name, the actual level of commitment to Presidential Investors' Advisory Councils varies quite substantially. None have established a track record of experimentation, effective implementation, and evaluation of the impact of decisions taken.
BASE
Africa's Growth Turnaround : From Fewer Mistakes to Sustained Growth
After stagnating for much of its postcolonial history, economic performance in Sub?Saharan Africa has markedly improved. Since 1995, average economic growth has been close to 5 percent per year. Has Africa finally turned the corner? This paper analyzes growth accelerations and decelerations-that is, country level deviations from long?run trend growth. Seen from this perspective, Africa's record of slow and volatile growth reflects a pattern of offsetting accelerations and declines, and much of the improvement in economic performance in Africa post 1995 turns out to be due to a substantial reduction in the frequency and severity of growth decelerations. The fall in economic declines since 1995 is largely due to better macroeconomic policies, but changes in such 'growth determinants' as investment, export diversification, and productivity have not accompanied the growth boom. Lack of change in these variables and the significant role played by natural resources in sparking growth accelerations suggest that Africa's growth recovery was fragile, even before the recent global economic crisis. The paper concludes by setting out four elements of a strategy that can help move Africa from fewer mistakes to sustained growth: managing natural resources better, pushing nontraditional exports, building the African private sector, and creating new skills.
BASE
Africa's Growth Turnaround : From Fewer Mistakes to Sustained Growth
After stagnating for much of its postcolonial history, economic performance in Sub?Saharan Africa has markedly improved. Since 1995, average economic growth has been close to 5 percent per year. Has Africa finally turned the corner? This paper analyzes growth accelerations and decelerations-that is, country level deviations from long?run trend growth. Seen from this perspective, Africa's record of slow and volatile growth reflects a pattern of offsetting accelerations and declines, and much of the improvement in economic performance in Africa post 1995 turns out to be due to a substantial reduction in the frequency and severity of growth decelerations. The fall in economic declines since 1995 is largely due to better macroeconomic policies, but changes in such 'growth determinants' as investment, export diversification, and productivity have not accompanied the growth boom. Lack of change in these variables and the significant role played by natural resources in sparking growth accelerations suggest that Africa's growth recovery was fragile, even before the recent global economic crisis. The paper concludes by setting out four elements of a strategy that can help move Africa from fewer mistakes to sustained growth: managing natural resources better, pushing nontraditional exports, building the African private sector, and creating new skills.
BASE
Boom, bust, and the poor: Poverty dynamics in the Middle East and North Africa, 1970–1999
In: The quarterly review of economics and finance, Band 46, Heft 5, S. 832-851
ISSN: 1062-9769
Make it easy on your readers: ideas on environmental impact document focus, organization, and style
In: Impact assessment and project appraisal, Band 24, Heft 3, S. 235-245
ISSN: 1471-5465
Three issues in security and development
In: Conflict, security & development: CSD, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 299-308
ISSN: 1478-1174
Comment on Francois Fouinat's Paper. Three Issues in Security and Development
In: Conflict, security & development: CSD, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 299-308
ISSN: 1478-1174
Commenting on Francois Fouinat's paper (2004), this article suggests that failure to understand & incorporate security concerns into developmental policy may significantly limit the ability of developing countries to achieve acceptable rates of growth & poverty reduction. To illustrate this risk, examples are drawn from three different domains within which security interacts with economic progress: first, at the national level, through civil war, prolonged ethnic or factional violence, & fragmentation of the state; second, at the international level, through the impact of national security policies of OECD countries on international economic relations; & third, at the household or individual level, through the effects of crime, discrimination, or abuse by public officials in relation to economic opportunity & personal dignity. 2 Tables, 9 References. T. K. Brown
The East Asian Miracle: Four Lessons for Development Policy
In: NBER macroeconomics annual, Band 9, S. 219
ISSN: 1537-2642
Impact Assessment Bulletin & Professional Practice: A Call for Contributions
In: Impact assessment, Band 9, Heft 4, S. 1-4
Produktivkraft Education
In: East central Europe: L' Europe du centre-est : eine wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 291-315
ISSN: 1876-3308
A PROTEST AT URBAN ENVIRONMENT
In: The political quarterly, Band 40, Heft 4, S. 436-446
ISSN: 1467-923X