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Third World Quarterly

Volume 29, Issue 6, 2008

Participation in Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers: reviewing the past, assessing the present and predicting the future

Participation in Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers: reviewing the past, assessing the present and predicting the future

DOI:
10.1080/01436590802201188
Joel Lazarusa

pages 1205-1221

Available online: 16 Jul 2008

Abstract

This article assesses the various accounts put forward to explain the disappointing outcomes thus far of ‘civil society participation’ in the design and implementation of Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (prsps) in aid-receiving countries throughout the world. While donors' technical and depoliticised explanations prove particularly unhelpful, other more radical perspectives, though insightful, often lack sufficient subtlety in their analyses. The article goes on to consider and critique commentators' various visions and prescriptions for prsp participation. Finding within participation aid's classic paradox—where it can work it is not needed and where it might be needed it cannot work—the article predicts a bleak future for prsp participation and argues that the project's failure may exacerbate the crisis of legitimacy faced by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, a crisis that led these organisations to launch the prsp initiative in the first place.

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 16 Jul 2008

Author affiliations

  • a St Antony's College, University of Oxford, 62 Woodstock Road, Oxford, OX2 6JF, UK E-mail: Joel Lazarus is a doctoral research student

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group