21 research outputs found
Water dynamics in the seven African countries of Dutch policy focus: Benin, Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Rwanda, South Sudan: report on Benin
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Water dynamics in the seven African countries of Dutch policy focus: Benin, Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Rwanda, South Sudan: general report and pressing needs
ASC – Publicaties niet-programma gebonde
Loss and damage livelihood resilience
Climate change Loss and Damage has emerged as a key challenge of the 21st century. This Policy Brief first frames the challenge and then introduces the Resilience Academy, highlighting 5 key insights that both feed the debate and inform action. Finally, it provides 5 recommendations to the Executive Committee of the Warsaw International Mechanism (WIM ExCom) for its 5-year work plan
Provincial Elections and government formation in the Western Cape: the politics of polarisation.
Lettere En WysbegeertePolitieke WetenskapPlease help us populate SUNScholar with the post print version of this article. It can be e-mailed to: [email protected]
Parliaments and the enhancement of democracy on the African continent: An analysis of institutional capacity and public perceptions
While modern parliaments in Africa receive little attention in the scholarly literature, they are drawing considerable attention from the international donor community. Since the early 1990s, when many African countries resumed multi-party elections and democratic practices, legislative strengthening programmes have become an important part of international democracy assistance. Despite these programmes, our knowledge about Africa\u27s current parliaments remains limited. They seem to be widely regarded as potential agents for democratic change but whether national legislatures are in fact enhancing the quality of democracy on the African continent is far from clear. This study discusses two important issues that lie at the heart of the democracy-enhancing potential of Africa\u27s current parliaments: their institutional capacity and the way they are perceived by the citizens they represent. After a brief review of the existing literature on legislatures in Africa, the essay first considers whether they have the institutional capacity to fulfill a meaningful role and provides a detailed description of the autonomy of parliaments in 16 selected countries. It then turns to the way Africans perceive and evaluate their parliaments. Do citizens see their legislatures as valuable institutions? Finally, we discuss the implications of our findings for the prospects of African parliaments becoming agents of democratic change
The use of landscape variability in the mesoscale hydrologic model
Water ManagementCivil Engineering and Geoscience
Het nieuwe Afrika: Nederland en Afrika in de 21e eeuw
ASC – Publicaties niet-programma gebonde