Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 44 Nos. 1

Coordinating Development in Conflict States: Donor Networks in Somalia

Published on 8 January 2013

Aid coordination is part of the governance of public policy, affecting the accountability and effectiveness of aid as well as power relationships.

Using the case of Somalia, this article analyses the coordination of aid in conflict settings. Somalia is marked by multidimensional involvement, ‘remote control’ from Nairobi, and a general unease about impact and accountability across all involved (donors, UN and Somali actors). ‘Comprehensive’ aid strategies that straddle various logics of engagement need to be given shape in situ , i.e. by relatively autonomous donor country offices. Here networks of relationships and coordination mechanisms shape decision‐making and problem‐framing. Often the size of one’s development budget provides limited leverage. Despite much distrust, UN agencies provide a gatekeeper function vis‐à‐vis Somalia counterparts. Trilateral dialogue about aid remains largely symbolic and at the diplomatic level. While effective solutions to problems can be found, a lack of joint engagement based on publicly traceable ‘technical’ principles undermines both accountability and joint learning over time, in turn impacting trust.

Related Content

This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 44.1 (2013) Coordinating Development in Conflict States: Donor Networks in Somalia

Cite this publication

Schmidt, A. (2013) Coordinating Development in Conflict States: Donor Networks in Somalia. IDS Bulletin 44(1): 53-71

Authors

Anna Schmidt

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
authors
Schmidt, Anna
doi
10.1111/1759-5436.12007

Share

About this publication

Region
Somalia

Related content

Working Paper

The Great Green Wall as a Social-Technical Imaginary

IDS Working Papers 602 and 603

Élie Pédarros & 10 others

24 April 2024

Student Opinion

Support for first-generation learners

Rachna Vyas, IDS student, MA Governance, Development & Public Policy

27 March 2024