Strengthening Country Commitment to Human Development: Lessons from Nutrition
Malnutrition persists in most developing countries. It contributes to the deaths of 3.4 million children annually and reduces the intelligence, health, and productivity of those who survive. Nutrition programs-indeed all human development programs-...
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Format: | Publication |
Language: | English en_US |
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Washington, DC: World Bank
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/01/5629078/strengthening-country-commitment-human-development-lessons-nutrition http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7310 |
Summary: | Malnutrition persists in most developing
countries. It contributes to the deaths of 3.4 million
children annually and reduces the intelligence, health, and
productivity of those who survive. Nutrition programs-indeed
all human development programs-succeed or fail depending in
part on the commitment of politicians, bureaucrats, and
communities to properly implement them, both initially and
over the long term. Technical, economic, and organizational
issues get the lion's share of attention in designing
nutrition and other human development programs. But the
success of such programs often depends on two variables:
whether countries back them with adequate financing and
whether countries sustain a commitment to high-quality
implementation. This book argues that assessing and
strengthening country commitment should therefore become a
new field of systematic professional practice. This new
field requires expertise in political and policy analysis,
organizational behavior, and strategic communication.
Focusing on a variety of country programs in nutrition-both
successful and failed-the book describes practical ways to
assess and strengthen commitment and outlines an agenda for
learning by doing. In addition to political will, programs
need to build support and commitment across government and
civil society, from local leaders to parents. To sustain
that commitment, organizational structures and processes
must be designed to motivate communities and officials over
the 15 to 20 years it takes to successfully implement a
national nutrition program. This book will especially appeal
to those in the fields of nutrition, public health,
community and economic development, and political science. |
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