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World Affairs Online
The government budget: a critical appraisal with reference to transparency and accountability
In: Working paper 7
Poverty in the conflict affected region of Sri Lanka: an assessment
In: Working paper
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Anatomy of the Sovereign Insolvency of Sri Lanka
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Piece of war: narratives of resilience and hope: by Meha Dixit, New Delhi, SAGE (SeLeCT) Publications India Pvt. Ltd., 2020, 284 pp., US$20 (paperback), ISBN 978-93-5388-506-9
In: Global change, peace & security, Band 33, Heft 2, S. 211-213
ISSN: 1478-1166
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The Imperative for Justiciability of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights in Post-Civil War Sri Lanka
In: Law, social justice & global development: LGD, Heft 25
ISSN: 1467-0437
Terrorism' or 'Liberation'? Towards a Distinction: A Case Study of the Armed Struggle of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
In: Perspectives on Terrorism, Band (2), S. 1-18
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Envisioning a Smart Resolution to Fishing Disputes between India and Sri Lanka
In: Maritime Affairs: Journal of the National Maritime Foundation of India, 13 (2), 2019
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Development Outcomes of Old and New Sources of International Development Finance in Sri Lanka
In: Journal of developing societies: a forum on issues of development and change in all societies, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 488-516
ISSN: 1745-2546
This research article compares and contrasts development outcomes of 'traditional' or 'old' and 'emerging' or 'new' sources of international development finance in Sri Lanka during the ceasefire time (2002–2005) when it depended on former sources and the post-civil war period (2009–2012) when it depended heavily on the latter sources. It also compares and contrasts the development outcomes in Sri Lanka (a lower middle income country), which depended heavily on the 'emerging' or 'new' sources of international development finance, and Nepal (a low income country), which depended on 'traditional' or 'old' sources of international development finance, during the first five years after the end of their respective civil wars. Although the causality is difficult to establish, the data presented herein demonstrates that while GDP growth and per capita income growth have been greater under the new international development finance regime in Sri Lanka, positive changes in the rates of inflation, unemployment, and poverty have been greater under the old international development finance regimes in Sri Lanka and Nepal.
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Working paper