Abstract

AbstractMotivationThere is a wide‐ranging consensus that co‐ordination in development policy is needed for aid effectiveness. However, our research reveals a number of surprising and significant gaps in existing scholarship. Development co‐ordination in Palestine has not been researched and the phenomenon of aid co‐ordination as “shielding” against domestic contestation remains underexamined.PurposeThis article aims to provide a better understanding of the “risk shielding” dynamic in European development co‐ordination through four case studies. It envisages theoretical insights on the “shield effect” and specifically: (a) how cracks may entail co‐ordination collapse; and (b) which conditions influence the continuation of such donor co‐ordination schemes.Approach and methodsThe pragmatic and inductive research strategy is based on 74 expert interviews in Jerusalem and Ramallah in 2017 and 2019, which are triangulated with primary sources, existing evaluations, verification meetings and secondary literature. We examine four cases that vary in terms of successfulness. Coincidental variation between and within the cases allows us to infer theoretical insights.FindingsWhile donor co‐ordination in Palestine has often been pursued in order to shield against contestation, an opposite dynamic can also emerge whereby one donor succumbs to pressures and thereby contaminates the entire donor group. Our article provides an empirically grounded theorization of co‐ordination schemes’ sustainability by identifying: (a) a five‐stage script of how domestic contestation may erode the shield; and (b) three conditions for sustainable co‐ordination. Finally, we make suggestions for further research, for instance from a politicization perspective.Policy implicationsBefore engaging in far‐reaching co‐ordination schemes, donors should consider the possible impact of domestic contestation within fellow donors and the creation of additional protective belts through international organizations. While donor consortia seem to be useful shields against attacks, they may put a heavy burden on all donors involved. Donors that are confident about domestic support should therefore consider going it alone. While Palestine constitutes a unique context, we expect that domestic contestation of aid will grow and hence that the “shielding” purpose will become increasingly relevant.

Highlights

  • There is a wide-r­anging consensus that co-o­ rdination in development policy is necessary for aid to be effective

  • We examined four cases of European donor co-­ordination: the Joint Financing Arrangement (JFA), a pooled fund in the education sector, Transfer Agreements to the European Union (EU) for social infrastructure in Area C, a pooled fund managed by the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) in agricultural development, and a Secretariat (SECR) channelling funds to human rights civil society organizations

  • The main aim and starting point of this research on European donor co-­ordination in Palestine was to provide an empirical contribution to the literature by examining a particular country context and four hitherto unstudied cases

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There is a wide-r­anging consensus that co-o­ rdination in development policy is necessary for aid to be effective. Our research into development co-o­ rdination in Palestine reveals a number of surprising and significant gaps in existing scholarship. While some studies have focused on the foreign policies of the EU and its member states vis-­à-v­ is the Israeli–­Palestine conflict (Asseburg, 2019; Asseburg & Goren, 2019; Bicchi, 2018a; Eriksson, 2018; Gordon & Pardo, 2015; Martins, 2015; Müller, 2019), there is no empirical research into aid co-­ordination. Existing literature provides little insight on the sustainability of European co-o­ rdination practices and the durability of the shield that donors have created

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call