Publication: World Bank-Civil Society Engagement: Review of Fiscal Years 2010-2012
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2013
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2016-08-31
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World Bank relations with civil society continued to expand throughout the institution during 2010–12. This evolution was experienced across the spectrum of the "engagement continuum," which includes information disclosure, policy dialogue, strategy consultations, operational collaboration, and institutional partnerships.
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“World Bank. 2013. World Bank-Civil Society Engagement: Review of Fiscal Years 2010-2012. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24994 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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The paper argues that there is substantial scope for greater efforts in this domain, including through the support of external aid agencies. Such efforts and support should, however, build on existing political and civil society structures (rather than transplanting "best practice" initiatives from elsewhere), and be structured for careful monitoring and assessment of impact.Publication World Bank-Civil Society Engagement(World Bank, Washington, DC, 2006)Fiscal Year 2005 and 2006 have confirmed a growing trend in Bank-civil society relations: more substantive policy dialogue at the global level, and greater country-level operational collaboration. Not only is the policy dialogue around complex and sensitive issues at the global level becoming more fluid, but the PRS process continues to open up important policy space for government-civil society engagement at the country level. On the operational level, as the joint tsunami reconstruction efforts in Asia are demonstrating, civil society and governments can be complementary partners in the development process. Yet as the Bank’s own Issues and Options paper and various CSO critiques have confirmed, the Bank faces many challenges in order to realize the greater opportunities that Bank-civil society dialogue and collaboration have to offer. The Bank must improve its own mechanisms for civil society engagement and accountability; ensure that best practices are applied more consistently across the institution; and encourage member governments to improve the enabling environment for civil society to flourish in their countries.
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