LEADER 01292nam 2200253la 450 001 9910482414903321 005 20221108062128.0 035 $a(UK-CbPIL)2090297840 035 $a(CKB)5500000000091023 035 $a(EXLCZ)995500000000091023 100 $a20210618d1606 uy | 101 0 $adut 135 $aurcn||||a|bb| 200 14$aEen volcomen ontdeckinge van de Roomsche leere, in saecken van conspiratie ende rebellye ... Getrouwelijck overgeset uyt het Engelsche exemplair, ghedruckt tot Londen by Felix Kyngston int jaer 1605. Hier is noch by-ghevoucht een naerder verclaringhe ...-fAlles door F.V.B$b[electronic resource] 210 $aThe Hague $cBeuckel Cornelissz Nieulandt, 1602-1606$d1606 215 $aOnline resource (60 p, 4°) 300 $aReproduction of original in Koninklijke Bibliotheek, Nationale bibliotheek van Nederland. 700 $aAnon$0815482 801 0$bUk-CbPIL 801 1$bUk-CbPIL 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910482414903321 996 $aEen volcomen ontdeckinge van de Roomsche leere, in saecken van conspiratie ende rebellye ... Getrouwelijck overgeset uyt het Engelsche exemplair, ghedruckt tot Londen by Felix Kyngston int jaer 1605. Hier is noch by-ghevoucht een naerder verclaringhe ...-fAlles door F.V.B$92231563 997 $aUNINA LEADER 09141nam 2200685Ia 450 001 9910954309003321 005 20251117115348.0 010 $a1-280-08435-9 010 $a9786610084357 010 $a1-4175-0061-1 024 7 $a10.1596/0-8213-5645-3 035 $a(CKB)111087027997100 035 $a(SSID)ssj0000085780 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)11112963 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000085780 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)10025588 035 $a(PQKB)11306954 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC3050659 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL3050659 035 $a(CaPaEBR)ebr10051560 035 $a(CaONFJC)MIL8435 035 $a(OCoLC)70771517 035 $a(The World Bank)2003061162 035 $a(US-djbf)13303135 035 $a(BIP)46127486 035 $a(BIP)8890739 035 $a(EXLCZ)99111087027997100 100 $a20030807d2004 uf 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcn||||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 14$aThe CGIAR at 31 $ean independent meta-evaluation of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research /$fUma Lele 205 $aRev. ed. 210 $aWashington, DC $cWorld Bank$d2004 215 $axxv, 220 pages $cillustrations ;$d28 cm 225 1 $aOperations evaluation study 300 $aBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph 311 08$a0-8213-5645-3 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references. 327 $aIntro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Foreword -- Prólogo -- Avant-propos -- Preface -- Prefacio -- Préface -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- PART 1: OVERVIEW -- 1. CGIAR's Changing Mission and Authorizing Environment -- 2. CGIAR Activities and Impacts: What Do We Know? -- 3. New Challenges for the CGIAR: How Is It Responding? -- 4. Restructuring the CGIAR: Lessons of Past Attempts -- 5. The Current CGIAR Reforms: Some Are Creditable But Others Need Revisiting -- 6. The Critical Roles of the World Bank: Convener, Donor, and Development Partner -- 7. Recommendations -- Focusing the World Bank's Responsibilities -- Reforming the CGIAR -- PART 2: TECHNICAL REPORT -- SECTION I THE CONTEXT -- 8. The Context for the CGIAR Meta-Evaluation -- An Overview of the CGIAR -- A Conceptual Framework for Assessing CGIAR Effectiveness -- Previous Evaluations -- The Change Management and Design Process -- SECTION II THE DEVELOPMENT EFFECTIVENESS OF THE CGIAR -- 9. High Returns to Germplasm Research -- Examining the Impacts of Germplasm Research -- Related Issues Requiring Further Impact Assessments -- 10. Genetic Resources Strategy and Management -- Genetic Resource Management and Use: Issues for the CGIAR -- The Challenges of a Rapidly Changing Environment -- Can the CGIAR Meet this Challenge? -- Reconfiguring the CGIAR to Meet the Challenge -- 11. Policy Research in the CGIAR -- IFPRI's Policy Research: 1998 External Program and Management Review -- Other Reviews of IFPRI Impacts -- 12. Natural Resources Management Research in the CGIAR -- Thematic Priorities in NRM Research -- Focus -- Framework -- 13. National Agricultural Research Systems and the CGIAR -- The Black Box of High Returns: The Partnership Role of the NARS -- Pursuing Partnerships with Advanced NARS -- Ensuring Continued Support to Small-Country NARS -- 14. The CGIAR and Sub-Saharan Africa. 327 $aActivities, Impacts, and Constraints -- Priority Setting and the Roles of Regions -- Confronting Shortfalls in Public Agricultural Spending -- The Role of Donors and the Bank -- SECTION III THE ORGANIZATIONAL EFFECTIVENESS OF THE CGIAR -- 15. Past Attempts to Restructure the CGIAR -- The Financial Crisis -- The Renewal Process -- The Mixed Impacts of Renewal -- The Third System Review (1998) -- The Federation Proposal (2000) -- The CGIAR's Founding Principles Need Revisiting -- The Challenge of Reconfiguration -- Collective Action Problems Are Daunting -- 16. Reform in the CGIAR (2000-Present) -- The Executive Council -- The System Office -- The Science Council -- Challenge Programs -- Reforms Do Not Go Far Enough -- 17. The World Bank and the CGIAR -- Exercising the Bank's Leadership Role as Founder, Cosponsor, and Convener -- Funding the CGIAR and Exit Strategy from the DGF? -- The Bank's Multiple Roles -- Enhancing the Bank's Role as a Development Partner -- 18. Conclusions -- Science and Strategy -- Governance, Organization, Finance, and Management -- The Role of the World Bank -- Appendixes -- 1: Current Organizational Chart of the CGIAR -- 2: Meta-Evaluation Terms of Reference -- 3: Meta-Evaluation Team and Advisory Committee: Biographical Information -- 4: Methods and Tools -- 5: List of Working and Background Papers, Authors, and Peer Reviewers -- 6: List of People Consulted -- 7: Management Response -- 8: Chairman's Summary: Committee on Development Effectiveness -- Endnotes -- Bibliography -- Figures -- 1.1 Where the Poor Are -- 1.2 Cereal Yields: Slowdown in Growth -- 2.1 Research with Proven Impacts on Poverty Has Declined Dramatically -- 2.2 Restricted Funding Has Increased -- 2.3 Restricted Funding Varies Greatly among the Top Ten Donors. 327 $a3.1 Private Agricultural Research Expenditures Are Small in Developing Countries, Large in Developed Countries -- 6.1 Bank Lending to Agriculture Declined Dramatically in the 1990s -- 8.1 An Overview of CGIAR Centers -- 8.2 The World Bank Became the Largest Donor in 1994 -- 8.3 Top Ten Donors Provide Most of the Funding -- 8.4 Allocations to Commodity and Ecoregional Centers Have Declined -- 8.5 Research with Proven Impacts on Poverty Has Declined Dramatically -- 8.6 Centers' Expenditures on Africa Have Increased Slightly During the Last Ten Years -- 8.7 Global Public Agriculture Research Expenditures, 1995: 21.7 Billion -- 8.8 Global Public Health Expenditures, 1998: 73.5 Billion -- 8.9 Average Annual Growth Rates in Public Agricultural Research Expenditures, by Region and Half Decades, 1976 to 1996 -- 8.10 World Bank and USAID Funding of Agricultural Research by Region -- 8.11 Rural and Health Sectors Are Prominent in DGF Allocations to Global Programs (FY02 figures) -- 8.12 Environment, Rural, and Health Sectors Are Prominent in Overall Global Program Expenditures (FY01 figures) -- 14.1 Public Agricultural Research Expenditures, 1976-95 -- 17.1 World Bank Lending to Agricultural Research and Extension, 1971-02 -- Boxes -- 1.1 Portrait of a Global Program -- 1.2 Concepts Relating to Setting and Achieving Priorities -- 2.1 What Is Global and Regional Public Goods Research? -- 3.1 The New World of Intellectual Property Rights -- 3.2 "Golden Rice" Demonstrates the Challenges of Public-Private Partnerships -- 4.1 The CGIAR's Founding Principles Need Revisiting to Maintain Impact on Poverty Reduction -- 4.2 Stakeholders Report Many Concerns about the System -- 6.1 Conflicts of Interest in the Bank's Roles Inhibit Reforms -- 8.1 The Research and Development Continuum -- 8.2 Global versus International Public Goods. 327 $a8.3 Economies of Scale and Scope in Research -- 8.4 The Importance of the Priority Setting Process: The Case of Climate Change -- 10.1 Current CGIAR Biotechnology Research, by Center and Activity -- 15.1 The Unevaluated ILCA/ILRAD Merger Experience -- 15.2 Veterans Cite Multiple Reasons for Consolidation -- 16.1 The Science Council Has Less Power Than Did TAC -- 16.2 Issues in the Transformation of TAC to the Science Council. 330 $aThe Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) was established in 1971 to scale up years of effort by the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations in supporting four international agricultural research centres in Colombia, Mexico, Nigeria and the Philippines. As the first global program to receive grants from the World Bank's net income, the CGIAR's original mission was a strategic, science-based focus on increasing "the pile of rice on the plates of food-short consumer." Today it supports 16 international Centres, and from an initial 18, its membership has expanded to 62, including 24 developing and transition economies. The CGIAR at 31, a meta-evaluation of the CGIAR, finds that CGIAR's productivity-enhancing research has had sizeable impacts on reducing poverty by increasing employment, raising incomes, lowering food prices, and releasing land from cropping. However, the CGIAR is facing huge challenges. It is less focused on enhancing agricultural productivity than it used to be. The report finds that CGIAR's current mix of activities reflects neither its comparative advantage nor its core competence. 410 0$aWorld Bank operations evaluation study. 517 3 $aCGIAR at thirty-one 606 $aAgriculture$xResearch$xInternational cooperation 615 0$aAgriculture$xResearch$xInternational cooperation. 676 $a630/.7/2 700 $aLele$b Uma J$0631011 712 02$aConsultative Group on International Agricultural Research. 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910954309003321 996 $aThe CGIAR at 31$94479470 997 $aUNINA