Carmeneza Dos Santos Monteiro

Carmeneza Dos Santos Monteiro is a policy advocate and practitioner, currently working as Strategic Policy Adviser to the Ministry of Social Solidarity and part-time Commissioner of Timor-Leste’s Civil Service Commission. Her most recent publications include the '2018 Tatoli Survey Report' with The Asia Foundation, 'Fataluku Labour Migration and Transnational Care in Timor-Leste' (co-author, in the Indonesia journal) and 'On Brexit Worries: Migration and Remittance Landscapes in Timor-Leste' (co-author, in the Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Timor-Leste). Carmen has a Bachelor of Arts (Hons) in International Relations from the Australian National University.
Big Elephants and Small Islands: getting beyond the New Aid Orthodoxy

Big Elephants and Small Islands: getting beyond the New Aid Orthodoxy

Official development assistance (ODA) – or aid – is a small but conspicuous pillar of the international order, and its frailties are being exposed by COVID as surely as those of the other foundations of this order. The assumptions underpinning aid and its management have long drawn fire from a broad range of critics, but this has been particularly acute in recent years. This has resulted in dwindling confidence in aid as an instrument of development, giving rise to a series of sensible, if slow-moving, initiatives to address some of its systemic flaws. We argue that these initiatives are welcome but, in and of themselves, are incapable of lifting aid effectiveness to meet the lofty rhetoric of the expectations that it is burdened by.

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