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Archive for the ‘Community’ Category

Partner Series: Women Thrive Travels to Burkina Faso

Thursday, July 1st, 2010
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Women ThriveIn our next blog post looking at the work of MFAN’s Partners, we will highlight the work of Women Thrive Worldwide, a non-profit organization seeking to shape U.S. policy in order to foster economic opportunities for women in developing countries. Women Thrive believes that women are the key to ending global poverty, and investing in women and girls is one of the most efficient uses of U.S. foreign aid. Research has proven that women are more likely than men to invest any income they receive in food, clean water, education and health care for their children, creating a positive cycle that can lift entire communities out of poverty. And now more than ever world attention has turned toward empowering women through a variety of initiatives, including the Obama administration’s Global Health Initiative, which makes women’s health interventions a top priority.

Last month, Ritu Sharma, President and Co-founder of Women Thrive and an MFAN Principal, traveled to Burkina Faso to learn more about the challenges that women farmers face in trying to feed their families. Many Burkinabe women spend their days performing difficult fieldwork to grow food and crops, all while caring for children.  Yet, because customary law excludes women from owning land, most are unable to invest in the tools and resources that would allow them to better feed their families. In her travel diary, Ritu explains why even Burkina’s newest land laws are designed to keep most benefits of land reform from reaching women farmers, what she calls “discrimination, plain and simple.”

Learn more about Ritu’s trip to Burkina Faso and read an excerpt from her travel diary after the jump:

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MFAN Partners Respond to Obama’s G8 Statement on Development

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010
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Sarah Jane StaatsIn a new post on the Center for Global Development’s Rethinking U.S. Foreign Assistance Blog, MFAN member Sarah Jane Staats reviews Obama’s recently released announcement on the G8, “A New Approach to Advancing Development.” Staats applauds the statement for putting a “little more meat on the bones” of U.S. global development strategy, but notes that the real challenge will be putting the policy directive into practice and tailoring U.S. development policy to reflect the goals and guidelines expressed in the announcement. Read a few excerpts and a similar post by the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition after the jump:

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MFAN Member Grapples with Delayed Reviews

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010
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Sarah Jane StaatsSarah Jane Staats, director of policy outreach at the Center for Global Development and MFAN member, recently posted a piece on CGD’s Rethinking U.S. Foreign Assistance blog drawing an uncomfortable comparison to the delayed reviews and the muddled bureaucratic process these reviews are trying to streamline and simplify.  Both the Presidential Study Directive and the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review were set to deliver findings by now, and the clock is running out for the administration to implement any durable reforms.  See excerpts from Staats blog below:

“Two major reviews on U.S. development policy—the Presidential Study Directive on U.S. Global Development Policy (PSD) and the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR)—intend to make sense out of the confusing array of agencies and actors involved in U.S. global development policy; both appear to be suffering delays rooted in the very bureaucratic confusion they aim to resolve.”

“Nearly one year out, it’s hard to see whether we’re any closer to agreement. Eighteen months into this administration, the delay means President Obama and his team are running out of time not just to issue strategies, but to implement any reforms. The less time there is for the reforms to get traction, the less likely they’ll create any lasting legacy.”

Stimson Center’s Adams on Encroachment of Defense

Thursday, June 24th, 2010
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See below for a strong piece by Gordon Adams, distinguished fellow at the Stimson Center, analyzing the recent dismissal of General Stanley McChrystal and the military’s continued dominance of foreign policy issues and programs.  Read more about this issue and other budgeting for foreign affairs on the Budget Insight blog.

McChrystal-izing a Problem: The Militarization of American StatecraftGordon Adams

Gordon Adams

June 23, 2010

General Stanley McChrystal’s candid disrespect for civilian leadership is being treated as an issue of bad judgment and personality.  But this episode reveals a much deeper dilemma for American statecraft, one that has long roots but has reached near crisis proportions over the past ten years: the gradual erosion of civilian leadership and the militarization of our foreign and security policy.

Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen warned about this trend in remarks to the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University last year, but it has been under way for years.  Its manifestations include:

  • DOD and the military now define what America’s national security strategy will be.  The DOD strategic document – the Quadrennial Defense Review – was for many months the only definitive description of our strategy; the National Security Strategy followed, and is significantly less informative or clear.  DOD has for years done our only real national strategy planning, well ahead of any White House guidance.
  • DOD and the military have determined that our most important engagement abroad will be to fight terrorist and insurgents, despite the fact that terrorist tactics hardly threaten our existence and, outside of insurgents in Afghanistan (and in decline in Iraq) it is not clear either that there are a lot of insurgencies for us to fight or that other countries will welcome a major US military presence to deal with those that do exist. (more…)

Partner Series: InterAction’s Mission to Reform Aid

Thursday, June 24th, 2010
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Continuing our series highlighting the work of MFAN’s partners in promoting foreign assistance reform, we will look at the campaign of our partner organization InterAction. InterAction is a coalition of U.S.-based nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) advocating greater coherence of U.S. foreign aid and development programs. InterAction has called for development to be elevated as a national priority, emphasizing its significance if our nation seeks greater engagement with the rest of the world.

InteractionRecently, the effort to improve our global development policy has become an increasingly important topic of discussion between Congress, the Obama administration and the aid community. At the recent InterAction Forum 2010, held from June 2-4, USAID administrator Rajiv Shah spoke during the opening plenary session, and commented on the agency’s commitment to working closely with Congress on foreign assistance reform. He said, “We have the unique opportunity to frame what development should be for the next 50 years. President Obama… sees development as a cornerstone of his national security strategy.” Shah cited Haiti as an example of the successes of evidence-based development, mentioning the great strides in improving access to clean water since the start of the post-quake recovery process. You can read more about Rajiv Shah’s opening remarks from InterAction and from our blog earlier this month. (more…)