A Technical Assistance Center, or TAC, is a department within a company that's primary purpose is networking, or an ISP. The TAC also works closely with a company's Network Operations Center, or NOC. A TAC can only monitor items with a return signal, such as a modem or a MTA. Forward-only systems, such as cable boxes, are currently not monitored.
Development aid (also development assistance, technical assistance, international aid, overseas aid, official development assistance (ODA), or foreign aid) is financial aid given by governments and other agencies to support the economic, environmental, social, and political development of developing countries. It is distinguished from humanitarian aid by focusing on alleviating poverty in the long term, rather than a short term response.
The term development co-operation, which is used, for example, by the World Health Organization (WHO) is used to express the idea that a partnership should exist between donor and recipient, rather than the traditional situation in which the relationship was dominated by the wealth and specialised knowledge of one side. Most development aid comes from the Western industrialised countries but some poorer countries also contribute aid.
Aid may be bilateral: given from one country directly to another; or it may be multilateral: given by the donor country to an international organisation such as the World Bank or the United Nations Agencies (UNDP, UNICEF, UNAIDS, etc.) which then distributes it among the developing countries. The proportion is currently about 70% bilateral 30% multilateral.
Types of Development Aid | IB Development Economics | The Global Economy
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Class o...
published: 09 Mar 2016
WHAT IS FOREIGN AID AND DOES IT WORK? | IE EXPLAINS
#IEEXPLAINS presents:
#Foreignaid is #assistance given out by donors such as governments or NGOs for several reasons, ranging from moral or altruistic interests to political or economic ones. However, once the aid is distributed, there is no tracking mechanism for this aid. For this reason, some experts question the effectiveness of foreign aid. Others argue it is crucial in order to solve the poverty trap.
Find out more at: https://www.ie.edu/school-global-public-affairs/faculty-and-research/ie-explains/
published: 16 Apr 2020
Foreign aid: who gives the most, and where does it go?
Rich countries are giving more in foreign aid than ever before. But which countries are the most generous?
Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.st/2AAzFCG
Rich countries are giving away more in aid than at any other time on record. In 2016 more than $140bn was distributed around the world.
According to the latest breakdown in 2015 America gave the most money away - nearly $31bn to at least 40 countries and organisations such as the world bank. This included $770m to Pakistan and $250m to Mexico. This may sound generous but the United States has the largest economy in the world.
American foreign aid spending in 2015 was only 0.17% of the gross national income. Far less than other rich countries.
Sweden and Norway are the biggest givers, donating over 1% of...
published: 08 Dec 2017
The Problem with Foreign Aid
Giving aid would seem a purely good thing, but it's often actually the source of people's troubles.
### Credits ###
Music is "Thinking Music" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Thanks to Katzenland for the Vietnamese subtitle translation.
Map image is "World - Single Color" by FreeVectorMaps.com
Based on the book The Dictator's Handbook (go read it)
Other sources:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/business/a-surprising-case-against-foreign-aid.html?mcubz=3
https://today.yougov.com/news/2016/03/11/foreign-aid/
published: 29 Sep 2017
Friendly Fire: How Foreign Aid Hurts Development | Abhishek Parajuli | TEDxOxford
A dutch NGO decided to give some Indian villages cows to help them. A year later, they came back to find that the villagers had taken their girl children out of school to look after the cows. With the best of intentions, the NGO had deprived a generation of girls of an education. Exploring shocking cases of waste and poor planning, Abhi shows how foreign aid is counter productive because we are wired to only care about services we pay for. The solution he argues is not to cut aid but to spend even more in a way that works with human nature rather than against it. The way to sustainable development is to spark an accountability revolution in the developing world by engineering entitlement in its citizens. Watch to learn how we can do this.
Abhishek is a graduate student at the Universit...
published: 27 Feb 2017
Foreign Aid: Are we really helping others or just ourselves? | Maliha Chishti | TEDxUTSC
Maliha Chishti speaks at a 2016 TEDx event in Toronto.
Dr. Maliha Chishti is a researcher specializing in war and post-conflict peacebuilding. As the former director of the Hague Appeal for Peace at the United Nations, Maliha helped to initiate the historic Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security. Her work on this landmark resolution was recognized by the University of Toronto’s ‘Great Minds’ alumni campaign. Maliha implemented one of the first training and capacity-building programs for women in post-conflict Afghanistan and served as the Social Impact Consultant for Canada’s first and largest ‘signature’ aid project in Kandahar Afghanistan. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Decolonizing Peacebuilding: Lessons Afghanistan.
This talk was given a...
published: 03 Mar 2016
Design Thinking for Development Cooperation | Victoria Peter | TEDxBerlin
For more information on Victoria Peter, please visit our website www.tedxberlin.de Victoria has one heart in France and one beating in West Africa, where she develops and promotes citizen engagement and multi- stakeholder collaboration programs. Her
rm believe: whatever development means - if anything, it must be based on citizen engagement.
This is why she passionately develops the regional branch of MakeSense in West-Africa – a global organisation mobilising citizens, private and public sector to solve social
and environmental issues by accelerating grassroots entrepreneurship and social innovation.
Apart from creativity workshops and many post-its, Victoria also accompanies African entrepreneurs and big organisations in France and Africa seeking to develop solutions for sustainable foo...
published: 27 Oct 2017
Rethinking development finance: Three guiding principles
How can development finance and aid policies be improved?
To start, it's important to define development aid more clearly. Private capital flows are now much bigger than traditional aid and there has been a geographical shift in where the world's poorest people live. The OECD is working to modernise the way it defines and quantifies aid. A new, broader measure of official support for development reflects the big changes in aid since the concept of Official Development Assistance (ODA) was first devised.
Thanks to European Commission Audiovisual Services for the following footage: from 2'07'' to 2'17'' and from 3'23'' to 3'29''.
Find out more at https://www.OECD.org
Follow us on social media: https://www.oecd.org/social-media
Edited: 31/03/21
FILLING THE GAP between what the IB EXPECTS you to do and how to ACTUALLY DO IT in the IB ECONOMICS classroom! https://www.bradcartwright.com.
STUDENT AND T...
FILLING THE GAP between what the IB EXPECTS you to do and how to ACTUALLY DO IT in the IB ECONOMICS classroom! https://www.bradcartwright.com.
STUDENT AND TEACHER MEMBERSHIPS INCLUDE:
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----------------------------
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bradleyocartwright/
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----------------------------
*
FILLING THE GAP between what the IB EXPECTS you to do and how to ACTUALLY DO IT in the IB ECONOMICS classroom! https://www.bradcartwright.com.
STUDENT AND TEACHER MEMBERSHIPS INCLUDE:
Over 400+ Video Lessons!
Over 1000+ Downloadable Documents!
- Study Notes
- Vocabulary Lists
- Key Terms and Concepts
- Review Questions
- IB Exam Review Questions
"This website saved my IB Diploma! They are informative, funny, entertaining!" - IB Student Member
"As a NEW IB Economics teacher, Brad's workshops & resources saved me!" - IB Teacher Member
"Brad's IB Teacher Workshops are the best in the market place!" - IB Workshop Attendee 2021
STUDENT MEMBERSHIPS | IB ECONOMICS
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TEACHER WORKSHOPS, MEMBERSHIPS, AND RESOURCES | IB ECONOMICS
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ON-SITE AND ZOOM PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS
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THE WORLD IS OUR CLASSROOM!
Stay safe out there,
Brad
----------------------------
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bradleyocartwright/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bradleyocartwright/
----------------------------
*
#IEEXPLAINS presents:
#Foreignaid is #assistance given out by donors such as governments or NGOs for several reasons, ranging from moral or altruistic interest...
#IEEXPLAINS presents:
#Foreignaid is #assistance given out by donors such as governments or NGOs for several reasons, ranging from moral or altruistic interests to political or economic ones. However, once the aid is distributed, there is no tracking mechanism for this aid. For this reason, some experts question the effectiveness of foreign aid. Others argue it is crucial in order to solve the poverty trap.
Find out more at: https://www.ie.edu/school-global-public-affairs/faculty-and-research/ie-explains/
#IEEXPLAINS presents:
#Foreignaid is #assistance given out by donors such as governments or NGOs for several reasons, ranging from moral or altruistic interests to political or economic ones. However, once the aid is distributed, there is no tracking mechanism for this aid. For this reason, some experts question the effectiveness of foreign aid. Others argue it is crucial in order to solve the poverty trap.
Find out more at: https://www.ie.edu/school-global-public-affairs/faculty-and-research/ie-explains/
Rich countries are giving more in foreign aid than ever before. But which countries are the most generous?
Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube...
Rich countries are giving more in foreign aid than ever before. But which countries are the most generous?
Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.st/2AAzFCG
Rich countries are giving away more in aid than at any other time on record. In 2016 more than $140bn was distributed around the world.
According to the latest breakdown in 2015 America gave the most money away - nearly $31bn to at least 40 countries and organisations such as the world bank. This included $770m to Pakistan and $250m to Mexico. This may sound generous but the United States has the largest economy in the world.
American foreign aid spending in 2015 was only 0.17% of the gross national income. Far less than other rich countries.
Sweden and Norway are the biggest givers, donating over 1% of their gross national income to foreign aid. The biggest receivers of aid in 2015 were Afghanistan, India, Vietnam, Ethiopia and Indonesia.
Afghanistan received $3.8bn and India $3.1bn. Despite being the second biggest economy in the world, China received $1.5bn in development aid in 2015. This included around $750m from Germany and $67m from Britain.
The total amount of foreign aid is at an all time high - up 9% in 2016. This is largely down to the generosity of six countries who meet or exceed the United Nations foreign aid target, donating more than 0.7% of gross national income.
Daily Watch: mind-stretching short films throughout the working week.
For more from Economist Films visit: http://econ.st/2AAzGGK
Check out The Economist’s full video catalogue: http://econ.st/20IehQk
Like The Economist on Facebook: http://econ.st/2AAzIym
Follow The Economist on Twitter: http://econ.st/2AAzKpY
Follow us on Instagram: http://econ.st/2ACXABp
Follow us on LINE: http://econ.st/1WXkOo6
Follow us on Medium: http://econ.st/2AEbeEw
Rich countries are giving more in foreign aid than ever before. But which countries are the most generous?
Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.st/2AAzFCG
Rich countries are giving away more in aid than at any other time on record. In 2016 more than $140bn was distributed around the world.
According to the latest breakdown in 2015 America gave the most money away - nearly $31bn to at least 40 countries and organisations such as the world bank. This included $770m to Pakistan and $250m to Mexico. This may sound generous but the United States has the largest economy in the world.
American foreign aid spending in 2015 was only 0.17% of the gross national income. Far less than other rich countries.
Sweden and Norway are the biggest givers, donating over 1% of their gross national income to foreign aid. The biggest receivers of aid in 2015 were Afghanistan, India, Vietnam, Ethiopia and Indonesia.
Afghanistan received $3.8bn and India $3.1bn. Despite being the second biggest economy in the world, China received $1.5bn in development aid in 2015. This included around $750m from Germany and $67m from Britain.
The total amount of foreign aid is at an all time high - up 9% in 2016. This is largely down to the generosity of six countries who meet or exceed the United Nations foreign aid target, donating more than 0.7% of gross national income.
Daily Watch: mind-stretching short films throughout the working week.
For more from Economist Films visit: http://econ.st/2AAzGGK
Check out The Economist’s full video catalogue: http://econ.st/20IehQk
Like The Economist on Facebook: http://econ.st/2AAzIym
Follow The Economist on Twitter: http://econ.st/2AAzKpY
Follow us on Instagram: http://econ.st/2ACXABp
Follow us on LINE: http://econ.st/1WXkOo6
Follow us on Medium: http://econ.st/2AEbeEw
Giving aid would seem a purely good thing, but it's often actually the source of people's troubles.
### Credits ###
Music is "Thinking Music" by Kevin MacLeod...
Giving aid would seem a purely good thing, but it's often actually the source of people's troubles.
### Credits ###
Music is "Thinking Music" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Thanks to Katzenland for the Vietnamese subtitle translation.
Map image is "World - Single Color" by FreeVectorMaps.com
Based on the book The Dictator's Handbook (go read it)
Other sources:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/business/a-surprising-case-against-foreign-aid.html?mcubz=3
https://today.yougov.com/news/2016/03/11/foreign-aid/
Giving aid would seem a purely good thing, but it's often actually the source of people's troubles.
### Credits ###
Music is "Thinking Music" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Thanks to Katzenland for the Vietnamese subtitle translation.
Map image is "World - Single Color" by FreeVectorMaps.com
Based on the book The Dictator's Handbook (go read it)
Other sources:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/business/a-surprising-case-against-foreign-aid.html?mcubz=3
https://today.yougov.com/news/2016/03/11/foreign-aid/
A dutch NGO decided to give some Indian villages cows to help them. A year later, they came back to find that the villagers had taken their girl children out of...
A dutch NGO decided to give some Indian villages cows to help them. A year later, they came back to find that the villagers had taken their girl children out of school to look after the cows. With the best of intentions, the NGO had deprived a generation of girls of an education. Exploring shocking cases of waste and poor planning, Abhi shows how foreign aid is counter productive because we are wired to only care about services we pay for. The solution he argues is not to cut aid but to spend even more in a way that works with human nature rather than against it. The way to sustainable development is to spark an accountability revolution in the developing world by engineering entitlement in its citizens. Watch to learn how we can do this.
Abhishek is a graduate student at the University of Oxford studying the impacts of taxes and foreign aid on development. His research shows that foreign aid may hurt development by making citizens care less about corruption and explores ways of making aid spending more effective. He has lived and worked in Nepal, India and Hong Kong before moving to the United States where he graduated as class valedictorian from Dartmouth College in 2015.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
A dutch NGO decided to give some Indian villages cows to help them. A year later, they came back to find that the villagers had taken their girl children out of school to look after the cows. With the best of intentions, the NGO had deprived a generation of girls of an education. Exploring shocking cases of waste and poor planning, Abhi shows how foreign aid is counter productive because we are wired to only care about services we pay for. The solution he argues is not to cut aid but to spend even more in a way that works with human nature rather than against it. The way to sustainable development is to spark an accountability revolution in the developing world by engineering entitlement in its citizens. Watch to learn how we can do this.
Abhishek is a graduate student at the University of Oxford studying the impacts of taxes and foreign aid on development. His research shows that foreign aid may hurt development by making citizens care less about corruption and explores ways of making aid spending more effective. He has lived and worked in Nepal, India and Hong Kong before moving to the United States where he graduated as class valedictorian from Dartmouth College in 2015.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
Maliha Chishti speaks at a 2016 TEDx event in Toronto.
Dr. Maliha Chishti is a researcher specializing in war and post-conflict peacebuilding. As the former di...
Maliha Chishti speaks at a 2016 TEDx event in Toronto.
Dr. Maliha Chishti is a researcher specializing in war and post-conflict peacebuilding. As the former director of the Hague Appeal for Peace at the United Nations, Maliha helped to initiate the historic Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security. Her work on this landmark resolution was recognized by the University of Toronto’s ‘Great Minds’ alumni campaign. Maliha implemented one of the first training and capacity-building programs for women in post-conflict Afghanistan and served as the Social Impact Consultant for Canada’s first and largest ‘signature’ aid project in Kandahar Afghanistan. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Decolonizing Peacebuilding: Lessons Afghanistan.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
Maliha Chishti speaks at a 2016 TEDx event in Toronto.
Dr. Maliha Chishti is a researcher specializing in war and post-conflict peacebuilding. As the former director of the Hague Appeal for Peace at the United Nations, Maliha helped to initiate the historic Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security. Her work on this landmark resolution was recognized by the University of Toronto’s ‘Great Minds’ alumni campaign. Maliha implemented one of the first training and capacity-building programs for women in post-conflict Afghanistan and served as the Social Impact Consultant for Canada’s first and largest ‘signature’ aid project in Kandahar Afghanistan. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Decolonizing Peacebuilding: Lessons Afghanistan.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
For more information on Victoria Peter, please visit our website www.tedxberlin.de Victoria has one heart in France and one beating in West Africa, where she de...
For more information on Victoria Peter, please visit our website www.tedxberlin.de Victoria has one heart in France and one beating in West Africa, where she develops and promotes citizen engagement and multi- stakeholder collaboration programs. Her
rm believe: whatever development means - if anything, it must be based on citizen engagement.
This is why she passionately develops the regional branch of MakeSense in West-Africa – a global organisation mobilising citizens, private and public sector to solve social
and environmental issues by accelerating grassroots entrepreneurship and social innovation.
Apart from creativity workshops and many post-its, Victoria also accompanies African entrepreneurs and big organisations in France and Africa seeking to develop solutions for sustainable food systems. She defends the
cause of citizen engagement and impactful entrepreneurship at various conferences in and around the African continent.
Victoria has been working with citizens, entrepreneurs and big organisations since the age of 20. After developing a social enterprise foundation in Amsterdam at the age of 19 and building an innovation network for the ght against food waste in her early 20ies, she also placed open innovation and entrepreneurship within big companies, such as the Deutsche Bahn.
Victoria holds a Masters Degree in International Development and Africa from Sciences Po, Paris. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
For more information on Victoria Peter, please visit our website www.tedxberlin.de Victoria has one heart in France and one beating in West Africa, where she develops and promotes citizen engagement and multi- stakeholder collaboration programs. Her
rm believe: whatever development means - if anything, it must be based on citizen engagement.
This is why she passionately develops the regional branch of MakeSense in West-Africa – a global organisation mobilising citizens, private and public sector to solve social
and environmental issues by accelerating grassroots entrepreneurship and social innovation.
Apart from creativity workshops and many post-its, Victoria also accompanies African entrepreneurs and big organisations in France and Africa seeking to develop solutions for sustainable food systems. She defends the
cause of citizen engagement and impactful entrepreneurship at various conferences in and around the African continent.
Victoria has been working with citizens, entrepreneurs and big organisations since the age of 20. After developing a social enterprise foundation in Amsterdam at the age of 19 and building an innovation network for the ght against food waste in her early 20ies, she also placed open innovation and entrepreneurship within big companies, such as the Deutsche Bahn.
Victoria holds a Masters Degree in International Development and Africa from Sciences Po, Paris. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
How can development finance and aid policies be improved?
To start, it's important to define development aid more clearly. Private capital flows are now much b...
How can development finance and aid policies be improved?
To start, it's important to define development aid more clearly. Private capital flows are now much bigger than traditional aid and there has been a geographical shift in where the world's poorest people live. The OECD is working to modernise the way it defines and quantifies aid. A new, broader measure of official support for development reflects the big changes in aid since the concept of Official Development Assistance (ODA) was first devised.
Thanks to European Commission Audiovisual Services for the following footage: from 2'07'' to 2'17'' and from 3'23'' to 3'29''.
Find out more at https://www.OECD.org
Follow us on social media: https://www.oecd.org/social-media
Edited: 31/03/21
How can development finance and aid policies be improved?
To start, it's important to define development aid more clearly. Private capital flows are now much bigger than traditional aid and there has been a geographical shift in where the world's poorest people live. The OECD is working to modernise the way it defines and quantifies aid. A new, broader measure of official support for development reflects the big changes in aid since the concept of Official Development Assistance (ODA) was first devised.
Thanks to European Commission Audiovisual Services for the following footage: from 2'07'' to 2'17'' and from 3'23'' to 3'29''.
Find out more at https://www.OECD.org
Follow us on social media: https://www.oecd.org/social-media
Edited: 31/03/21
FILLING THE GAP between what the IB EXPECTS you to do and how to ACTUALLY DO IT in the IB ECONOMICS classroom! https://www.bradcartwright.com.
STUDENT AND TEACHER MEMBERSHIPS INCLUDE:
Over 400+ Video Lessons!
Over 1000+ Downloadable Documents!
- Study Notes
- Vocabulary Lists
- Key Terms and Concepts
- Review Questions
- IB Exam Review Questions
"This website saved my IB Diploma! They are informative, funny, entertaining!" - IB Student Member
"As a NEW IB Economics teacher, Brad's workshops & resources saved me!" - IB Teacher Member
"Brad's IB Teacher Workshops are the best in the market place!" - IB Workshop Attendee 2021
STUDENT MEMBERSHIPS | IB ECONOMICS
Class of 2022: https://www.bradcartwright.com/bundles/student-subscription-class-of-2022
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YEARLY SCHOOL MEMBERSHIP | IB ECONOMICS
School Membership: https://www.bradcartwright.com/bundles/school-membership-ib-economics
ON-SITE AND ZOOM PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS
Contact Information: [email protected]
THE WORLD IS OUR CLASSROOM!
Stay safe out there,
Brad
----------------------------
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bradleyocartwright/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bradleyocartwright/
----------------------------
*
#IEEXPLAINS presents:
#Foreignaid is #assistance given out by donors such as governments or NGOs for several reasons, ranging from moral or altruistic interests to political or economic ones. However, once the aid is distributed, there is no tracking mechanism for this aid. For this reason, some experts question the effectiveness of foreign aid. Others argue it is crucial in order to solve the poverty trap.
Find out more at: https://www.ie.edu/school-global-public-affairs/faculty-and-research/ie-explains/
Rich countries are giving more in foreign aid than ever before. But which countries are the most generous?
Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.st/2AAzFCG
Rich countries are giving away more in aid than at any other time on record. In 2016 more than $140bn was distributed around the world.
According to the latest breakdown in 2015 America gave the most money away - nearly $31bn to at least 40 countries and organisations such as the world bank. This included $770m to Pakistan and $250m to Mexico. This may sound generous but the United States has the largest economy in the world.
American foreign aid spending in 2015 was only 0.17% of the gross national income. Far less than other rich countries.
Sweden and Norway are the biggest givers, donating over 1% of their gross national income to foreign aid. The biggest receivers of aid in 2015 were Afghanistan, India, Vietnam, Ethiopia and Indonesia.
Afghanistan received $3.8bn and India $3.1bn. Despite being the second biggest economy in the world, China received $1.5bn in development aid in 2015. This included around $750m from Germany and $67m from Britain.
The total amount of foreign aid is at an all time high - up 9% in 2016. This is largely down to the generosity of six countries who meet or exceed the United Nations foreign aid target, donating more than 0.7% of gross national income.
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Giving aid would seem a purely good thing, but it's often actually the source of people's troubles.
### Credits ###
Music is "Thinking Music" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Thanks to Katzenland for the Vietnamese subtitle translation.
Map image is "World - Single Color" by FreeVectorMaps.com
Based on the book The Dictator's Handbook (go read it)
Other sources:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/business/a-surprising-case-against-foreign-aid.html?mcubz=3
https://today.yougov.com/news/2016/03/11/foreign-aid/
A dutch NGO decided to give some Indian villages cows to help them. A year later, they came back to find that the villagers had taken their girl children out of school to look after the cows. With the best of intentions, the NGO had deprived a generation of girls of an education. Exploring shocking cases of waste and poor planning, Abhi shows how foreign aid is counter productive because we are wired to only care about services we pay for. The solution he argues is not to cut aid but to spend even more in a way that works with human nature rather than against it. The way to sustainable development is to spark an accountability revolution in the developing world by engineering entitlement in its citizens. Watch to learn how we can do this.
Abhishek is a graduate student at the University of Oxford studying the impacts of taxes and foreign aid on development. His research shows that foreign aid may hurt development by making citizens care less about corruption and explores ways of making aid spending more effective. He has lived and worked in Nepal, India and Hong Kong before moving to the United States where he graduated as class valedictorian from Dartmouth College in 2015.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
Maliha Chishti speaks at a 2016 TEDx event in Toronto.
Dr. Maliha Chishti is a researcher specializing in war and post-conflict peacebuilding. As the former director of the Hague Appeal for Peace at the United Nations, Maliha helped to initiate the historic Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security. Her work on this landmark resolution was recognized by the University of Toronto’s ‘Great Minds’ alumni campaign. Maliha implemented one of the first training and capacity-building programs for women in post-conflict Afghanistan and served as the Social Impact Consultant for Canada’s first and largest ‘signature’ aid project in Kandahar Afghanistan. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Decolonizing Peacebuilding: Lessons Afghanistan.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
For more information on Victoria Peter, please visit our website www.tedxberlin.de Victoria has one heart in France and one beating in West Africa, where she develops and promotes citizen engagement and multi- stakeholder collaboration programs. Her
rm believe: whatever development means - if anything, it must be based on citizen engagement.
This is why she passionately develops the regional branch of MakeSense in West-Africa – a global organisation mobilising citizens, private and public sector to solve social
and environmental issues by accelerating grassroots entrepreneurship and social innovation.
Apart from creativity workshops and many post-its, Victoria also accompanies African entrepreneurs and big organisations in France and Africa seeking to develop solutions for sustainable food systems. She defends the
cause of citizen engagement and impactful entrepreneurship at various conferences in and around the African continent.
Victoria has been working with citizens, entrepreneurs and big organisations since the age of 20. After developing a social enterprise foundation in Amsterdam at the age of 19 and building an innovation network for the ght against food waste in her early 20ies, she also placed open innovation and entrepreneurship within big companies, such as the Deutsche Bahn.
Victoria holds a Masters Degree in International Development and Africa from Sciences Po, Paris. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
How can development finance and aid policies be improved?
To start, it's important to define development aid more clearly. Private capital flows are now much bigger than traditional aid and there has been a geographical shift in where the world's poorest people live. The OECD is working to modernise the way it defines and quantifies aid. A new, broader measure of official support for development reflects the big changes in aid since the concept of Official Development Assistance (ODA) was first devised.
Thanks to European Commission Audiovisual Services for the following footage: from 2'07'' to 2'17'' and from 3'23'' to 3'29''.
Find out more at https://www.OECD.org
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Edited: 31/03/21
A Technical Assistance Center, or TAC, is a department within a company that's primary purpose is networking, or an ISP. The TAC also works closely with a company's Network Operations Center, or NOC. A TAC can only monitor items with a return signal, such as a modem or a MTA. Forward-only systems, such as cable boxes, are currently not monitored.