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The Parliamentary Centre and Poverty ReductionIn partnership with the Canadian International Development Agency, the World Bank Institute and the United Nations Development Program, among other institutions, the Parliamentary Centre launched Parliament and Poverty Reduction in April 2000 with an on-line Parliamentary Development Forum Discussion. Drawing on this discussion, 15 parliamentarians from around the world then met in Canada for the 2000 Laurentian Seminar, on "Parliamentarians and Policies to Reduce Poverty". During the week, participants discussed face to face the practical ways in which Parliamentarians can assist in poverty reduction. This set off an intensive consultation process by internet, through three video-conferences in Asia and Africa, and then via a week-long seminar in Vienna to help plan a World Bank Institute-Parliamentary Centre course on the PRSP Process. Experienced senior parliamentarians, parliamentary experts and World Bank and Parliamentary Centre staff analysed Parliament and poverty reduction, and how to increase parliaments' involvement in the PRSP. The lessons from all this work, plus the basis for future course presentations,
came together in a Handbook for Parliamentarians on Policies to Reduce
Poverty. ( The 2001-02 program then implemented pilot projects in Ghana, Ethiopia and Cambodia:
Network links are now being developed amongst economic committees across Africa, to share lessons learned, plan joint training initiatives, and use special workshops to probe key issues in poverty reduction (in partnership with African policy institutes.) Supported by the new Africa-Canada Parliamentary Strengthening Program under CIDA's Canada Fund for Africa, the new Poverty Reduction Parliamentary Network includes key poverty-related committees from Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Ghana, Mali, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe. The network was officially launched on November 7-8, 2003, in Tamale, Ghana coinciding with the start of the network's main activity - an ambitious MPs and staff training and internship program implemented by the Institute for Policy Alternatives (IPA), a local policy institute. The training and internship program also involve civil society groups in order to increase capacity and understanding of poverty-related committee members in their role in local monitoring of poverty measures.Research Documents:
For further information please contact Rasheed Draman, Project Coordinator working on Poverty Reduction in the Africa Program: DramaR@parl.gc.ca
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