The Palgrave handbook of development cooperation for achieving the 2030 Agenda : : contested collaboration / / edited by Sachin Chaturvedi, Heiner Janus, Stephan Klingebiel, Xiaoyun Li, André de Mello e Souza, Elizabeth Sidiropoulos, Dorothea Wehrmann.

This open access handbook analyses the role of development cooperation in achieving the 2030 Agenda in a global context of ‘contested cooperation’. Development actors, including governments providing aid or South-South Cooperation, developing countries, and non-governmental actors (civil society, ph...

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Place / Publishing House:Cham : : Springer International Publishing :, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,, 2021.
Year of Publication:2021
Edition:1st ed. 2021.
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (XXXII, 730 p. 34 illus., 21 illus. in color.)
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Table of Contents:
  • 1.Development cooperation in the context of contested global governance
  • 2.Maximising goal coherence in sustainable and climate-resilient development? Polycentricity and coordination in governance
  • 3.Development finance and the 2030 goals
  • 4.Transnational science cooperation for sustainable development
  • 5.An evolving shared concept of development cooperation: Perspectives on the 2030 Agenda
  • 6.The globalisation of foreign aid: Global influences and the diffusion of aid priorities
  • 7.The untapped functions of international cooperation in the age of sustainable development
  • 8.The difficulties of diffusing the 2030 Agenda: Situated norm engagement and development organisations
  • 9.Diffusion, fusion, and confusion: Development cooperation in a multiplex world order
  • 10.Conceptualising ideational convergence of China and OECD donors: Coalition magnets in development cooperation
  • 11.Measuring development cooperation and the quality of aid
  • 12.Interest-based development cooperation: Moving providers from parochial convergence to principled collaboration
  • 13.Monitoring and evaluation in South-South cooperation: The case of CPEC in Pakistan
  • 14.The implementation of the SDGs: The feasibility of using the GPEDC monitoring framework
  • 15.Counting the invisible: The challenges and opportunities of the SDG indicator framework for statistical capacity development
  • 16.Building a global development cooperation regime: Necessary but failed efforts
  • 17.Failing to share the burden: Traditional donors, Southern providers, and the twilight of the GPEDC and the post-war aid system
  • 18.Should China join the GPEDC? Prospects for China and the Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation
  • 19.South Africa in global development fora: Cooperation and contestation
  • 20.Middle powers in international development cooperation:Assessing the roles of South Korea and Turkey
  • 21.The SDGs and the empowerment of Bangladeshi women
  • 22.Russia’s approach to official development assistance and its contribution to the SDGs
  • 23.US multilateral aid in transition: Implications for development cooperation
  • 24.“The Asian century”: The transformational potential of Asian-led development cooperation
  • 25.South-South development cooperation as a modality: Brazil’s cooperation with Mozambique
  • 26.South Africa as a development partner: An empirical analysis of the African Renaissance and International Cooperation Fund
  • 27.Triangular cooperation: Enabling policy spaces
  • 28.Achieving the SDGs in Africa through South-South cooperation on climate change with China
  • 29.India as a partner in triangular development cooperation
  • 30.Partnerships with the private sector:Success factors and levels of engagement in development cooperation
  • 31.The role and contributions of development NGOs to development cooperation: What do we know?
  • 32.Southern think tank partnerships in the era of the 2030 Agenda
  • 33.Conclusion:Leveraging development cooperation experiences for the 2030 Agenda: Key messages and the way forward.