|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
Originally published in 1986, this book evaluated the review of the
Australian Overseas Aid Program (the 1984 Jackson Report) and
discusses the significance of Australia's contribution to overseas
aid for the future. The book focusses on the overall context of the
Jackson report; discusses the geographical distribution of aid
proposed by the report and examines aid administration in its more
specific bureaucratic context and with broader questions of
community participation in developmental processes.
Development's current focus - poverty reduction and good governance
- signals a turn away from the older neoliberal preoccupation with
structural adjustment, privatisation, and downsizing the state. For
some, the new emphases on empowering and securing the poor through
basic service delivery, local partnership, decentralisation and
institution building constitute a decisive break with the past, and
a whole set of new Development possibilities beyond neoliberalism.
Taking a wider historical perspective, this book charts the
emergence of poverty reduction and governance at the centre of
Development. It shows that the Poverty Reduction paradigm does
indeed mark a shift in the wider liberal project that has
underpinned Development: precisely what is new, and what this means
for how the poor are governed, are here described in detail.
This book provides a compelling history of Development doctrine and
practice, and in particular offers the first comprehensive account
of the last 20 years, and Development's shift towards a new
political economy of institution building, decentralised governance
and local partnerships. The story is illustrated with extensive
case studies from first hand experience in Vietnam, Uganda,
Pakistan and New Zealand.
The Magarini Settlement Project in Kenya is typical of many large
Third World rural development projects of recent years, not least
in its failure to fulfil even minimum goals. First published in
1991, Development in Practice explores the reasons for this
projects failure, and looks at the lessons to be learned from this
experience for development in general. Challenging many assumptions
and approaches, its provocative conclusions will generate much
interest amongst development practitioners.
The Magarini Settlement Project in Kenya is typical of many large
Third World rural development projects of recent years, not least
in its failure to fulfil even minimum goals. First published in
1991, Development in Practice explores the reasons for this
projects failure, and looks at the lessons to be learned from this
experience for development in general. Challenging many assumptions
and approaches, its provocative conclusions will generate much
interest amongst development practitioners.
Originally published in 1986, this book evaluated the review of the
Australian Overseas Aid Program (the 1984 Jackson Report) and
discusses the significance of Australia's contribution to overseas
aid for the future. The book focusses on the overall context of the
Jackson report; discusses the geographical distribution of aid
proposed by the report and examines aid administration in its more
specific bureaucratic context and with broader questions of
community participation in developmental processes.
"If you are interested in Coaching the System, you must be either
desperate or crazy " At least that's what people told authors Gary
Smith and Doug Porter when they began investigating this
revolutionary style of play almost a decade ago. Ignoring the
critics, they went on to coach the two highest scoring teams in
men's and women's college basketball history: the University of
Redlands, California (132.4 ppg), and Olivet Nazarene University in
Illinois (104.1 ppg). From its origins as the Sonny Allen Numbered
Fast Break, to Paul Westhead's Loyola Marymount up-tempo game, the
System has been around for decades. But when Grinnell College's
David Arseneault added platoon substitution patterns and
hockey-style short shifts, placing a priority on creating
three-point looks for his "preferred shooters," the System truly
came into its own. Smith and Porter learned the Grinnell version of
the System from Arseneault himself, adapting it to fit their
situations coaching men's and women's programs. In the past decade
their teams set 32 NCAA and NAIA records between them, including
most 100-point games in a season (Redlands-23; Olivet-24). Olivet
also holds national records for defensive turnovers (36.3 per game)
assists (23.8 per game), and three pointers made in a season (509,
15.6 per game). Redlands owns college basketball records (all
levels) for field goal attempts (110.3 per game), and
three-pointers made (23.8 per game). Now you can learn every detail
of this devastating full court run-and-press attack that allows you
to dictate tempo and force your opponents out of their normal game
plan, capturing the imagination of your players and community, and
making coaching fun again You'll learn exactly how and why the
System works, how to adapt it to fit your personnel, suggestions
for conditioning players, organizing System practices, and even
ways to respond to the inevitable criticisms that come with playing
the game this far "outside the box." Other chapters offer complete
descriptions of the Redlands Attack (Coach Smith's variation of the
Grinnell offense), the LMU Attack (which Westhead popularized and
used to advance to the NCAA regional finals in 1990), and the
Olivet Attack (Coach Porter's hybrid version of the LMU and
Dribble-Drive offenses). Finally, you'll learn System defensive
principles, terminology, and how to cover every conceivable press
attack and press-breaker alignment. Also included are 57 drills and
over 300 diagrams to illustrate System offense and defense,
providing you with a complete blueprint for "Coaching the System "
Development's current focus - poverty reduction and good governance
- signals a turn away from the older neoliberal preoccupation with
structural adjustment, privatisation, and downsizing the state. For
some, the new emphases on empowering and securing the poor through
basic service delivery, local partnership, decentralisation and
institution building constitute a decisive break with the past, and
a whole set of new Development possibilities beyond neoliberalism.
Taking a wider historical perspective, this book charts the
emergence of poverty reduction and governance at the centre of
Development. It shows that the Poverty Reduction paradigm does
indeed mark a shift in the wider liberal project that has
underpinned Development: precisely what is new, and what this means
for how the poor are governed, are here described in detail.
This book provides a compelling history of Development doctrine and
practice, and in particular offers the first comprehensive account
of the last 20 years, and Development's shift towards a new
political economy of institution building, decentralised governance
and local partnerships. The story is illustrated with extensive
case studies from first hand experience in Vietnam, Uganda,
Pakistan and New Zealand.
|
|