One year later, where do we stand on commitments made in Busan?

Alice collecting some of her ground nut crop, Copperbelt, Zambia (2006). Photo by: Emma Walsh/Oxfam

Aid is a vital tool in the fight against global poverty. But too often, aid delivers less than it promises.

If you follow the debate over development aid, you’ve probably heard that there was a big conference last year in South Korea where world leaders sought ways to make aid work better. As we hit the one year mark after the conference, Oxfam has released a briefing paper - ”Busan in a Nutshell” - intended as a guide to what happened at that conference, the Fourth High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness. ”Busan in a Nutshell” explains what happened at Busan, and how implementers and advocates can work together to make sure the global community delivers on its promise of more effective aid.

Since the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness was signed in 2005, donors, recipients, advocates and others have been working to improve aid so it delivers better poverty-fighting results. Last year, in Busan, these groups met to form the ”Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation,” which sets the international standard on the principles of effective aid and good development to which all development actors should subscribe.

“Busan in a Nutshell” documents the Global Partnership and the commitments made at Busan, while recommending how to ensure aid effectiveness commitments are implemented. These principles include:

All development stakeholders – including traditional donors and emerging providers – must respect and uphold these key principles by fulfilling the promises they made at Busan, Oxfam argues. For this to happen, the Global Partnership will need to rely on strong vision, high-level political engagement and a robust but flexible global accountability mechanism.

Let’s keep the conversation about the principles established in Busan going. Oxfam wants to hear from you through your participation by:

Gregory Adams, Oxfam America’s director of aid effectivness, kicks off the conversation with this blog post:

Here’s what other bloggers had to say:

Will you join the conversation?