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Aid Activities in Africa provides detailed information on individual commitments, i.e. intended disbursements, of foreign aid to African countries for the year 2003. This yearly publication records the commitments reported by countries represented ...
This publication presents statistics on aid flows in support of gender equality for the years 1999-2003. It provides an analysis of aid targeting the objective of gender equality over 1999-2003 in selected sectors.
Aid Activities in Africa provides detailed information on individual commitments, i.e. intended disbursements, of foreign aid to African countries for the year 2003. This yearly publication records the commitments reported by countries represented ...
This is the 2nd edition of the OECD statistical annual with over 100 indicators covering a wide range of subject areas including the economy, agriculture, education, energy and the environment, foreign aid, health and quality of life, industry, information and communications, population/labour force, trade and investment, taxation, public expenditure, debt, and R&D. Data are given for all OECD member countries, and in some cases, for selected non-member countries. Time series vary according to the nature of the indicator, but in most cases provide coverage from 1991 onwards, with some going back before this date. The publication includes information on statistical links (StatLinks) to web pages where data can be accessed and downloaded in Excel format.
Japan has increasingly emphasized democracy assistance since the mid-2000s, such that it now constitutes a major part of Japan’s foreign policy. This approach is an ostensible departure from the country’s traditional foreign policy stance, which tries to avoid bringing values to the forefront of foreign policies. This book intends to answer the questions of why Japan has started emphasizing democracy assistance and why it has relegated itself to a minor role in democracy assistance nevertheless. It argues that Japan’s emphasis on democracy assistance reveals its intention to increase its political influence with regards to China based on democratic values, and its usage of the term "democracy assistance" is a performative speech act to orchestrate a comprehensive approach for international democracy support. Shedding light on the novel aspect of Japanese policy, this book contributes to the understanding of Japanese foreign policy and democracy promotion. Providing the analysis that state’s speech act could cause to create foreign policies that counter what is predicted by structural realism, this analysis makes contributions to neoclassical realism which explains states’ foreign policy choices within the constraints of international structure.