Making Aid effective at the Community Level: The AMREF Experience
Making Aid effective at the Community Level: The AMREF Experience
Date
Authors
Ojakaa, David
Okoth, Elizabeth
Wangila, Sam
Ndirangu, Meshack
Mwangi, Naomi
Ilako, Festus
Type
Article, Journal
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Type
Article, Journal
Abstract
Effective use of donor aid is critical in achieving the sixth Millennium Development Goal –reversing the HIV/AIDS epidemic by 2015. The Paris Declaration of 2005 identified five key principles for aid effectiveness: ownership, alignment, harmonisation, mutual accountability and managing for results. As civil society organisations play a critical role in implementing HIV/AIDS interventions, it is important that they adhere to these principles. Often, however, they fail to implement interventions conforming with the principles, leading to duplication and inefficiency. Two case studies from AMREF in Kenya demonstrate how the principles of aid effectiveness can be applied to increase the impact of HIV/AIDS interventions.
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Keywords
Aid, Civil Society, Social Sector, Sub-saharan Africa
Citation
David Ojakaa, Elizabeth Okoth, Sam Wangila, Meshack Ndirangu, Naomi Mwangi & Festus Ilako (2011) Making aid effective at the community level: the AMREF experience, Development in Practice, 21:7, 1013-1022, DOI: 10.1080/09614524.2011.590887
