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1. Climate Finance Effectiveness: Six Challenging Trends

2. A Global Development Paradigm for a World in Crisis

3. Building a Portfolio of Pull Financing Mechanisms for Climate and Development

4. Costing Healthcare Services Using Time-Driven Activity-Based Costing: A Simple Step-By-Step Guide for Data Collection and Analysis

5. Do Cash Transfers Deter Migration?

6. The ABCs of Sovereign Debt Relief

7. Reforming the World Bank and MDBs to Meet Shared Global Challenges

8. The Next Game Changers: A Priority Innovation Agenda for Global Health

9. Is There a Better Way to Use Global Reserves?

10. What’s the Best Way to Bolster the IMF’s Capacity to Lend to Low-Income Countries?

11. Why and How Development Agencies Facilitate Labor Migration

12. Breakthrough to Policy Use: Reinvigorating Impact Evaluation for Global Development

13. Leveraging Knowledge Generation for Policy Impact: Recommendations for the World Bank

14. Mainstreaming Evidence Use through Locally Led Development: Recommendations for USAID

15. Breakthrough to Policy Use Reinvigorating Impact Evaluation for Global Development

16. A Package of Reforms for Financing Pandemic Preparedness and Response for the G7

17. Let Them Eat Carbon

18. Assessment of Expenditure Choices by Low- and Low- Middle-Income Countries During the Pandemic and Their Impact on SDGs

19. Girls’ Education and Women’s Equality: How to Get More out of the World’s Most Promising Investment

20. A Fund for Global Health Security and Pandemic Preparedness

21. Schooling for All: Feasible Strategies to Achieve Universal Education

22. Development Effectiveness in the “New Normal”: What Do the Changing Roles and Purposes of ODA Mean for the Effectiveness Agenda?

23. Domestic Revenue Mobilization and Debt Relief: The Lack of Any Link

24. Country Platforms and Delivery of Global Public Goods

25. IDB COVID-19 Response Projects and Gender Integration

26. Prioritizing Public Spending on Health in Lower-Income Countries: The Role of the Global Financing Facility for Women, Children and Adolescents

27. Strengthening Regional Policy Frameworks to Better Respond to Environmental Migration: Recommendations for the UK Government

28. How Can Multilateral Organizations Strengthen Global Data Governance Practices? Roundtable Summary

29. Who’s Responsible for Climate Change? New Evidence Based on Country-Level Estimates of Climate Debt

30. Meeting the Global Health Challenge to Reduce Death and Disability from Alcohol, Tobacco, and Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption with Corrective Taxes

31. Navigating the Straits: Pull Financing for Climate and Development Outcomes

32. How Do Humanitarian Donors Make Decisions, and What Is the Scope for Change?

33. Are Development Finance Institutions Good Value for Money?

34. Valuing Climate Liabilities: Calculating the Cost of Countries’ Historical Damage from Carbon Emissions to Inform Future Climate Finance Commitments

35. Some Unpleasant ODA Arithmetic

36. Effective Humanitarian Governance

37. Rethinking Humanitarian Reform: What Will it Take to Truly Change the System?

38. The Commitment to Development Index 2021

39. Operationalizing Climate Adaptation at the US International Development Finance Corporation: The Case for an Agriculture-Led Agenda in Low-Income Countries

40. The Case for Transparency in Power Project Contracts: A Proposal for the Creation of Global Disclosure Standards and PPA Watch

41. A Review of Multilateral Development Banks’ Investments in Childcare

42. Do Evolving Digital Trade Rules Create an Uneven Playing Field? Understanding Global Perspectives

43. Are Current Models of Data Protection Fit for Purpose? Understanding the Consequences for Economic Development

44. Financing the Humanitarian Public Good: Towards a More Effective Humanitarian Financing Model

45. Improving Performance in the Multilateral Humanitarian System: New Models of Donorship

46. A Path to Resiliency: Mitigating the Impacts of COVID-19 on Essential Medicines Supply Chains

47. Ethical Recruitment of Health Workers: Using Bilateral Cooperation to Fulfill the World Health Organization’s Global Code of Practice

48. The Quality of Official Development Assistance

49. Unpacking Gender Gaps and Data Gaps in Public Sector Employment and Pay

50. Addressing the COVID-19 Crisis’s Indirect Health Impacts for Women and Girls

51. Promoting Women’s Economic Empowerment in the COVID-19 Context

52. The Gendered Dimensions of Social Protection in the COVID-19 Context

53. How Do Development Agencies Support Climate Action?

54. Gender Gaps in Education: The Long View

55. From Principles to Practice: Strengthening Accountability for Gender Equality in International Development

56. Actually Navigating by Judgment: Towards a New Paradigm of Donor Accountability Where the Current System Doesn’t Work

57. Blueprint for a Market-Driven Value-Based Advance Commitment for Tuberculosis

58. Managing Better: What All of Us Can Do to Encourage Aid Success

59. Who Are the World’s Poor? A New Profile of Global Multidimensional Poverty

60. Gendered Language

61. Governing Big Tech’s Pursuit of the “Next Billion Users”

62. The Two Hundred Billion Dollar Question: How to Get the Biggest Impact from the 2019 Replenishments

63. Cohesive Institutions and Political Violence

64. Women and the Future of Work: Fix the Present

65. Improving Global Health Supply Chains through Traceability

66. The Principles on Commercial Transparency in Public Contracts

67. The Machines Are Not So Easy to Ride: Another Take on Automation

68. Can Transparency Lower Prices and Improve Access to Pharmaceuticals? It Depends

69. WHO Technical Report on Cancer Pricing Misses the Mark—It Should Focus on the “Demand Side”

70. Pooled Procurement of Drugs in Low and Middle Income Countries

71. Who Benefits from Pharmaceutical Price Controls? Evidence from India

72. Making Basel III Work for Emerging Markets and Developing Economies

73. Aggregating Demand for Pharmaceuticals is Appealing, but Pooling Is Not a Panacea

74. Struggling with Scale: Ebola’s Lessons for the Next Pandemic

75. Where Do Internally Displaced People Live and What Does that Mean for Their Economic Integration?

76. How Urban are IDPs and What Does that Mean for Their Economic Integration?

77. Does the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Help or Hinder Financial Inclusion? A Study of FATF Mutual Evaluation Reports

78. Understanding the Opportunity Cost, Seizing the Opportunity: Report of the Working Group on Incorporating Economics and Modelling in Global Health Goals and Guidelines

79. The Limits of Accounting-Based Accountability in Education (and Far Beyond): Why More Accounting Will Rarely Solve Accountability Problems

80. After 2020: What’s Next for Global Access to Family Planning

81. Imagining the Alternative Worlds of 2030: Policy Implications for the Future of Global Health Procurement

82. Public Financial Management and the Digitalization of Payments

83. World Bank Financing to Support Refugees and Their Hosts: Recommendations for IDA19

84. Tackling the Triple Transition in Global Health Procurement

85. Vaccine Introduction and Coverage in Gavi-Supported Countries 2015-2018: Implications for Gavi 5.0

86. Global Immunization and Gavi: Five Priorities for the Next Five Years

87. Digital Governance: Is Krishna a Glimpse of the Future?

88. Tackling the Triple Transition in Global Health Procurement

89. What We Learn about Girls’ Education from Interventions that Do Not Focus on Girls

90. Trends in Private Capital Flows to Low-Income Countries: Good and Not-So-Good News

91. “Contractors or Collectives?” Earmarked Funding of Multilaterals, Donor Needs and Institutional Integrity: The World Bank as a Case Study

92. Five Takeaways on the Future of Humanitarian Reform

93. Promoting Investment in Research for Development Outcomes: A Research Ventures Fund at the World Bank

94. People-Driven Response: Power and Participation in Humanitarian Action

95. Why Uncertainty in Global Health Interventions Matters—and What We Can Do About It

96. Marginal, Not Transformational: Development Finance Institutions and the Sustainable Development Goals

97. Teacher Professional Development around the World: The Gap between Evidence and Practice

98. Five Principles for Use of Aid in Subsidies to the Private Sector

99. What Is “Country Ownership”? A Formal Exploration of the Aid Relationship

100. A Smoother Trade Transition for Graduating LDCs