New practice paper on the impact of aid interventions
The NSGI has launched a new paper on increasing the impact of aid interventions to support centre of government reforms

The new publication from the National School of Government International (NSGI): , was developed in partnership with the and explores the emerging NSGI approach of using practitioner-to-practitioner support, and adapting that to local priorities and the local context.
The use of practitioner-to-practitioner support may provide a useful framework for improving the effectiveness of the design, implementation and monitoring of aid interventions. The paper identifies three categories of interdependent, non-linear success factors that should be applied throughout any engagement with a recipient government:

On Tuesday 14 June the NSGI and the IfG held a roundtable discussion of the NSGI鈥檚 new publication, and an accompanying paper published as part of the IfG鈥檚 鈥淚nside Out鈥� series:
The discussion was attended by a mix of key Whitehall personnel and academics from both the development and UK reform fields, and a range of implementers. There was a broad consensus that this is an innovative approach to providing aid interventions and that Partnerships can offer a solution where technical assistance cannot.