Absorptive Capacity in the Security and Justice Sectors

Assessing Obstacles to Success in the Donor-Recipient Relationship

Robert D Lamb author Kathryn Mixon author Andrew Halterman author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Centre for Strategic & International Studies,U.S.

Published:11th Jul '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Absorptive Capacity in the Security and Justice Sectors cover

In development, stabilization, and peace building, donors increasingly recognize the importance of being sensitive to the local contexts of their efforts. Yet the use of “blueprints” remains widespread. Even when standard approaches are modified for particular aid partners, there often remains a poor fit between donor efforts and local conditions. When recipients cannot absorb the aid and attention they are offered, the common response is “capacity building.” While it is true that many aid recipients do not have adequate capacity for implementation, this report presents the results of a case study demonstrating that some security and justice programs are designed and implemented without an adequate appreciation of local desires, resources, capabilities, and challenges. Absorptive capacity, in other words, is a byproduct of the donor-recipient relationship. An earlier study by the authors introduced a new framework for measuring absorptive capacity. This volume applies it to security and justice sector programs that did not meet all of their objectives in Lebanon, Cambodia, and Colombia.

ISBN: 9781442225138

Dimensions: 278mm x 214mm x 5mm

Weight: 168g

52 pages