ABSTRACT

This volume looks at the effectiveness of conditionality in structural adjustment programmes. Tony Killick charts the emergence of conditionality, and challenges the widely held assumption that it is a co-operative process, arguing that in fact it tends to be coercive and detrimental to development objectives. Through detailed case studies of twent

chapter 4|15 pages

The `ownership' problem

chapter 5|23 pages

THE MODEL, THE RESEARCH, SOME RESULTS

chapter 7|38 pages

ALTERNATIVES TO CONDITIONALITY

chapter |7 pages

MASTER TABLE

chapter 19|13 pages

6 Bibliography