Sudan's health sector partnership: From confined progression to openness and hope to uncertain demise

IF 2 3区 经济学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Development Policy Review Pub Date : 2023-11-12 DOI:10.1111/dpr.12757
Huzeifa Aweesha, Anna-Karin Hurtig, Anni-Maria Pulkki-Brännström, Miguel San Sebastian
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Abstract

Motivation

Despite the signature of the 2005 Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness and subsequent adoption of the principles of effective development co-operation (EDC) for better health co-operation, there is a gap in documenting the challenges to implement these commitments at country level. Sudan represents an interesting case study. The country adopted a local health compact in 2014, but for much of the time since the regime had been under sanction. Sudan witnessed a revolution in 2018, followed by a counter-coup in 2021.

Purpose: We aim to explore the evolution of the relationships, perspectives, and compliance of Sudan's health sector partners in terms of the EDC principles of ownership, alignment, and harmonization, while accounting for underlying processes and context changes between 2015 and 2022.

Methods and approach

We collected data through two rounds of interviews, in 2015 (16) and 2022 (8), with stakeholders within the Sudan Health Sector Partnership. We used the framework method for data analysis where responses are coded and then sorted into themes.

Findings

Before the 2019 revolution, co-operation was progressive but restricted, with civil society marginalized and a dominating government. The EDC principles, especially ownership, were misused and misaligned with national priorities driven by donors' interests and conditions.

The transition period (post-revolution) witnessed an influx of partners, characterized by their openness, but unstable leadership and subsequent changes in priorities led to wasted opportunities.

Following the coup, donors adopted a no-contact policy towards the de facto government. The expectation was that civil society organizations would replace the government as the main implementers. Overall, limited co-ordination capacity and no sustainability measures were present throughout.

Policy implications

Much of what was observed was due to the often complicated and difficult context of the governance of Sudan. However, general issues arose, including the government's ability to co-ordinate policy and implementation; the need for stable, legitimate arrangements; and the need to define the role of civil society and empower civil society organizations. In a complex and volatile context, revisiting partners' commitments through joint compact reviews and transparent EDC progress monitoring is crucial.

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苏丹卫生部门伙伴关系:从封闭到开放,从希望到不确定的消亡
动机 尽管签署了 2005 年《援助实效问题巴黎宣言》,并随后通过了有效发展合作(EDC) 原则以改善卫生合作,但在记录国家一级履行这些承诺所面临的挑战方面仍存在差距。苏丹是一个有趣的案例研究。该国于 2014 年通过了地方卫生契约,但在此之后的大部分时间里,苏丹政权一直受到制裁。苏丹在 2018 年发生了一场革命,随后在 2021 年发生了反政变。 目的:我们旨在探讨苏丹卫生部门合作伙伴的关系、观点和遵守 EDC 的所有权、调整和协调原则的演变情况,同时考虑到 2015 年至 2022 年间的基本进程和背景变化。 方法 我们在 2015 年(16 次)和 2022 年(8 次)对苏丹卫生部门合作伙伴关系中的利益相关者进行了两轮访谈,收集了数据。我们采用框架法进行数据分析,对回答进行编码,然后按主题分类。 调查结果 在 2019 年革命之前,合作是渐进的,但受到限制,民间社会被边缘化,政府占据主导地位。在捐助者利益和条件的驱使下,经济发展委员会的原则,尤其是自主权原则被滥用,并与国家优先事项不一致。 在过渡时期(革命后),以开放为特点的合作伙伴大量涌入,但领导层的不稳定以及随后优先事项的变化导致机会被浪费。 政变后,捐助者对事实上的政府采取了不接触政策。人们期望民间社会组织能够取代政府,成为主要的执行者。总体而言,整个过程中协调能力有限,也没有可持续性措施。 政策影响 观察到的大部分情况都是由于苏丹治理的背景往往复杂而困难。然而,也出现了一些普遍问题,包括政府协调政策和实施的能力;需要稳定、合法的安排;以及需要确定民间社会的作用并赋予民间社会组织权力。在复杂多变的背景下,通过联合契约审查和透明的经济发展委员会进度监测来重新审视合作伙伴的承诺至关重要。
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来源期刊
Development Policy Review
Development Policy Review DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
5.90%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: Development Policy Review is the refereed journal that makes the crucial links between research and policy in international development. Edited by staff of the Overseas Development Institute, the London-based think-tank on international development and humanitarian issues, it publishes single articles and theme issues on topics at the forefront of current development policy debate. Coverage includes the latest thinking and research on poverty-reduction strategies, inequality and social exclusion, property rights and sustainable livelihoods, globalisation in trade and finance, and the reform of global governance. Informed, rigorous, multi-disciplinary and up-to-the-minute, DPR is an indispensable tool for development researchers and practitioners alike.
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