A refreshing and badly needed effort at teasing out the relationship between governance and aid. -- Sophie Richardson, author of China, Cambodia, and the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence
List of Figures and Tables Preface Acknowledgments Note on Confidentiality Introduction 1. Aid Dependence and Quality of Governance 2. Growth Without Development: The Garment 3. An International Problem: The Cambodian Response to Avian Influenza 4. Shallow Democracy: Cambodian Human Rights Activism and the International Community Conclusion Appendix Notes Works Cited Index
Sophal Ear is an assistant professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, where he teaches courses on postconflict reconstruction and political economy. Previously, he worked for the World Bank and the United Nations. A graduate of Princeton University and the University of California, Berkeley, he arrived in the United States from France as a Cambodian refugee at the age of ten.
Using cross-national statistical evidence and his immense knowledge of Cambodian society, Sophal Ear has produced an important book on the perverse effects of development aid on governance. If this could be the starting point from which future discussions began, there would be a much greater chance of outsiders truly helping poor countries to develop. -- James Robinson, Harvard University Sophal Ear's Aid Dependence in Cambodia is both passionate and level-headed. Inspired by his family's history and based on extensive field interviews and careful case studies, it offers a sustained criticism of how aid policies have contributed to dependence and helped undermine fragile democracies. There are valuable lessons here for all countries attempting to build peace and development with international assistance. -- Michael Doyle, Columbia University Khmer Rouge survivor Sophal Ear is uniquely qualified to address the issue of aid and dependence in developing countries. Much more than academic criticism, Aid Dependence in Cambodia also charts a path for Cambodian reform. Although it is highly unlikely, Cambodian leaders would be wise to heed Ear's advice. -- Peter Maguire, author of Facing Death in Cambodia ...offers valuable lessons not just for policy-makers working on Cambodia but also for other countries emerging from conflict or upheaval. -- Sebastian Strangio Asia Times Sophal Ear's work stands out for its social science rigour, its cohesion, as well as its probing quality, offering a new standard of scholarship on aid dependence not only applicable to the Cambodia case but easily replicable around the developing world. -- Geoffrey C. Gunn Asian Affairs An important and timely contribution to the field. It raises awareness around Cambodia, and sheds light on what is otherwise widespread apathy and complacency. -- Peter Tan Keo The Diplomat [Ear's] concise study provides valuable insights into the role of Official Development Assistance (ODA) in promoting governance in post-conflict societies. -- D. Gordon Longmuir Pacific Afairs ... Sophal Ear's logical, yet personal account of the impact that international foreign aid has on Cambodia, the country of his birth, should cause the entire aid community to reflect inwardly. Small Wars Journal A pungent, grounded contribution... International Journal of Asian Studies An excellent introduction to the literature on development on the region (and globally)... Everyone hoping to do some good in Cambodia ought to read this book... Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
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