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| 003 | OSt | ||
| 005 | 20210825115157.0 | ||
| 008 | 160316s2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
| 020 | _a0-19-530511-6 | ||
| 040 | _cnls | ||
| 082 |
_a338.900000 _bUND |
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| 100 | _aU N D P | ||
| 245 | _aHuman development report 2005 : International co-operation at a cross roads, Aid trade and security in an unequal world | ||
| 260 |
_aNew Delhi _bOxford University Press _c2005 |
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| 300 | _a372p | ||
| 365 | _b Rs. 575 | ||
| 505 | _aContents: Chapters; Overview International cooperation at a crossroads: aid, trade and security in an unequal world 1; Chapter 1 The state of human development 15; Progress and setbacks in human development 18; Advances in human development—a global snapshot 19; Progress viewed through the human development index 21; The limits to human development 24; The end of convergence? 25; Inequality and poor countries’ share of increased global wealth 36; Scenario 2015—prospects for the Millennium Development Goals 39; Scenario 2015—projections not predictions 40; Changing course and getting on track 45; Chapter 2 Inequality and human development 49; Why inequality matters 52; Social justice and morality 52; Putting the poor first 53; Growth and efficiency 53; Political legitimacy 53; Public policy goals 54; Counter-arguments—countered 54; Chains of disadvantage—inequality within countries 55; Layers of inequality constrain life choices 59; Unequal chances—health inequalities and the MDGs 61; The human development potential of pro-poor growth 64; Improving the distribution of growth 64; Achieving pro-poor growth 69; Chapter 3 Aid for the 21st century 73; Rethinking the case for aid 77; Aid as moral imperative and enlightened self-interest 77; Aid and human development 79; Financing aid—the record, the problems, the challenge 83; Aid quantity 84; Aid and the MDGs: can rich countries afford them? 92; Can more aid be absorbed? 96; Weakness in the quality and effectiveness of aid 98; The volatility and unpredictability of aid 98; Conditionality and country ownership 99; Too many donors—too little coordination 100; Inefficient resource transfers: tied aid 102; Project support rather than national budget support 103; Rethinking aid governance 105; Bilateral aid—some lessons from Africa 105; Multilateral initiatives 107; Changing aid 108; Chapter 4 International trade—unlocking the potential for human development 111; An interdependent world 114; Trade and global living standards 114; The limits to convergence 116; Trade and human development 119; Unfair rules: how the trading system favours developed countries 126; Access to markets 126; Agricultural trade 129; Closing down the space for development policies 133; Beyond the rules: commodities, the new gatekeepers and capacity building 139; The commodity crisis 139; The role of market gatekeepers 142; Lack of capacity 143; Turning Doha into a development round 146; Rethinking WTO governance 146; How trade could deliver for the MDGs 147; Chapter 5 Violent conflict—bringing the real threat into focus 149; Violent conflict at the start of the twenty-first century 153; Security risks have shifted towards poor countries 153; Human development costs of conflict 154; The challenge of conflict-prone states 162; Horizontal inequalities 163; Natural resource management 165; Beyond borders 167; The international response 168; Improving aid 169; Managing natural resources and tackling small arms 171; Building regional capacity 174; Challenges for reconstruction 175; Transitions from war to peace and from peace to security 177; Redefining security and building collective security 179;; Notes 183; Bibliographic note 186; Bibliography 188. | ||
| 650 | _a1.Human Development Report- 2005 | ||
| 700 |
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| 856 | _uhttp://hdr.undp.org/en/content/human-development-report-2005 | ||
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