Putting Equity in Health Back onto the Social Policy Agenda: Experience from South Africa
Author(s)
McIntyre, Di; Gilson, Lucy
Abstract
Over the past decade, aid donors have pledged billions of dollars to support peacebuilding efforts in collapsed states and war-torn societies. Peace conditionality–the use of formal performance criteria and informal policy dialogue to encourage the implementation of peace accords and the consolidation of peace–could make aid a more effective tool for building peace. In Bosnia, for example, donors have attempted to link aid to the protection of human rights, co-operation with the international war crimes tribunal, and the right of people displaced by ‘ethnic cleansing’ to return to their homes. Yet the conventional practices and priorities of aid donors pose constraints to the exercise of peace conditionality. This article examines several of these constraints, including the reluctance of donors (particularly the international financial institutions) to acknowledge responsibility for the political repercussions of aid; the competing foreign-policy objectives of donor governments; the humanitarian imperative to aid people whose lives are at risk; and the incentive structures and institutional cultures of donor agencies.