Service Delivery in Countries Emerging from Conflict
Author: T Vaux and E Visman
Date: 2005
Size:
83 pages
(648.3 KB)
Access full text: available online
What is the role of service delivery in promoting social and political pro-poor change? How does it contribute to the avoidance of future conflict? How does it strengthen institutions in countries emerging from conflict? This report, by Bradford University, examines service delivery in Mozambique, Uganda, Cambodia and East Timor. It looks at the relationship between service delivery and violent conflict, showing how it changes. It tries to determine appropriate and sustainable service delivery systems.
Delivery of services such as health and education can play an important role in the context of conflict. The distribution of resources and their accessibility to different groups can address existing social inequalities. On the other hand, it can heighten them. Equity and inclusiveness are critical to ensuring that service delivery promotes sustainable peace. They are also indicators of sustainable peace. However, because peace-building has rarely been an explicit objective of interventions, it is difficult to gauge the effectiveness and impact of service delivery in this regard.
There are a number of issues that can help maximise the capacity of service delivery to promote sustainable peace. These include the need for strategic analysis and an integrated approach, supporting equitable distribution of, and access to, resources. Also important are: legitimacy, representing the poor, empowering women and harnessing non-state actors within a regulatory framework.
It is clear that service delivery interventions directly impact on conflict.
Access full text: available online
Source:
Vaux, T. and Visman, E., 2005, 'Service Delivery in Countries Emerging from Conflict', Centre for International Co-operation and Security (CICS), Department of Peace Studies, University of Bradford, report prepared for UK Department for International Development (DFID)
Author:
Tony Vaux
, vauxt@aol.com