Makerere Institute of Social Research (MISR) - IDS
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Browsing Makerere Institute of Social Research (MISR) - IDS by Subject "Finance"
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ItemLocal finances system and the feasibility of its decentralization( 1993-08) Guamba, Jose Manuel ElijaThis paper is aiming to analyse the financial system of the cities and the feasibility of its decentralization, to demonstrate how the adoption of an autonomous financial system can lead, on one hand, to the solution of the infrastructures' degradation and the inefficient urban management vvhich actually a great number of our cities faces; and in the other hand, if a system like this can generate local resources to promote development.
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ItemLocal finances system and the feasibility of its decentralization( 1993-08) Guamba, Jose Manuel ElijaThis paper is aiming to analyse the financial system of the cities and the feasibility of its decentralization, to demonstrate how the adoption of an autonomous financial system can lead, on one hand, to the solution of the infrastructures' degradation and the inefficient urban management vvhich actually a great number of our cities faces; and in the other hand, if a system like this can generate local resources to promote development.
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ItemWar and the debt burden in the Great Lakes region( 2000-07) Mande, Wilson MuyindaThe task of this paper is to advance the view that the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs) of Great Lakes Region would do better to endeavor and resolve political disharmony using peacemaking strategies rather than engaging in wars which are horribly expensive and largely counter-productive. Many African nations, as the case of the Great Lakes region illustrates, have a propensity to resort to war first and foremost and only remembering negotiated peace afterwards.
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ItemWar and the debt burden in the Great Lakes region( 2000-07) Mande, Wilson MuyindaThe task of this paper is to advance the view that the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs) of Great Lakes Region would do better to endeavor and resolve political disharmony using peacemaking strategies rather than engaging in wars which are horribly expensive and largely counter-productive. Many African nations, as the case of the Great Lakes region illustrates, have a propensity to resort to war first and foremost and only remembering negotiated peace afterwards.