
Demanding Accountability: Civil Society Claims and the World Bank Inspection Panel
Author(s): Dana Clark (Editor), Jonathan A. Fox (Editor), Kay Treakle (Editor), Victor Abramovich (Contributor), Richard Bissell (Contributor), Elias Diaz Pena (Contributor), Majibul Huq Dulu (Contributor), David Hunter (Contributor), Cristian Opaso (Contributor), Marcos Orellana (Contributor), Maria Guadalupe Rodriques (Contributor), Aurelio Vianna Jr. (Contributor)
- Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
- Publication Date: 8 Nov. 2003
- Language: English
- Print length: 344 pages
- ISBN-10: 0742533107
- ISBN-13: 9780742533103
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Compelling and insightful. — Juliette Majot, Executive Director, international Rivers Network
I recommend this book to both scholars and practitioners of international sustainable development law and policy. — Thomas T. Ankersen, University of Florida
It is a rare thing indeed when an academic book has me anxiously turning the pages waiting to see what’s going to happen next ( I include my own in this, of course!). This might be a slight exaggeration, but there are many components in Demanding Accountability that are also found in the best airport novels: rich versus poor; international conspiracy; backroom bargaining; corruption; murder; death threats; and so on. Unfortunately, this is not a novel. It is a well researched and documented account of the real tragedies that follow on from ill-conceived development projects and the stories of ordinary citizens (and some not so ordinary, such as the Dalai Lama) trying to hold the World Band to account. — Heather Marquette, International Development Department, School of Public Policy, University of Birmingham
Indispensable reading for anybody interested in transparency and accountability in international institutions. — Alvaro Umana, director, Energy and Environment Practice, United Nations Development Programme; former member of the World Bank Inspection Panel
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