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Power, Capture, and Conflict: A Call for Human Rights Accountability in Development Cooperation
by
Darrow, Mac
, Tomas, Amparo
in
Accountability
/ Conflict
/ Cooperation
/ Development
/ Development Programs
/ Development Strategies
/ Empowerment
/ Frame analysis
/ Housing
/ Human Rights
/ International cooperation
/ International development
/ International Law
/ Normativity
/ Personal empowerment
/ Poverty
/ Power
/ Program Implementation
/ Rhetoric
/ Structural adjustment
/ Sustainable development
/ Theoretical Problems
/ Transformation
/ Treaties
/ United Nations
/ Urgency
/ World Bank
2005
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Power, Capture, and Conflict: A Call for Human Rights Accountability in Development Cooperation
by
Darrow, Mac
, Tomas, Amparo
in
Accountability
/ Conflict
/ Cooperation
/ Development
/ Development Programs
/ Development Strategies
/ Empowerment
/ Frame analysis
/ Housing
/ Human Rights
/ International cooperation
/ International development
/ International Law
/ Normativity
/ Personal empowerment
/ Poverty
/ Power
/ Program Implementation
/ Rhetoric
/ Structural adjustment
/ Sustainable development
/ Theoretical Problems
/ Transformation
/ Treaties
/ United Nations
/ Urgency
/ World Bank
2005
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Do you wish to request the book?
Power, Capture, and Conflict: A Call for Human Rights Accountability in Development Cooperation
by
Darrow, Mac
, Tomas, Amparo
in
Accountability
/ Conflict
/ Cooperation
/ Development
/ Development Programs
/ Development Strategies
/ Empowerment
/ Frame analysis
/ Housing
/ Human Rights
/ International cooperation
/ International development
/ International Law
/ Normativity
/ Personal empowerment
/ Poverty
/ Power
/ Program Implementation
/ Rhetoric
/ Structural adjustment
/ Sustainable development
/ Theoretical Problems
/ Transformation
/ Treaties
/ United Nations
/ Urgency
/ World Bank
2005
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Power, Capture, and Conflict: A Call for Human Rights Accountability in Development Cooperation
Journal Article
Power, Capture, and Conflict: A Call for Human Rights Accountability in Development Cooperation
2005
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Overview
Ushered in during the 1990s in response to development failures of the structural adjustment era, human rights-based approaches to development have proliferated in recent years. Nonetheless, the rhetoric has so far not been matched by conceptual rigor, systematization of practice, or lessons-learning-shortcomings that may undermine continuing support for such approaches. This Article seeks to contribute conceptual clarity to the frequently muddy waters of rights-based approaches, addressing in particular the conceptual and practical relevance of the international human rights normative framework to development cooperation within the UN system. The analysis focuses upon particular niches in which a normatively rigorous model for rights-based programming seems uniquely adapted, that is to say, in addressing asymmetries of power, the phenomenon known as \"elite capture,\" and the transformation of violent conflict. The Article concludes with a reminder of the challenges and prerequisites for the wider implementation of rights-based approaches, and of the urgency of the need for a strengthened conceptual framework for empowerment and accountability.
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