Lessons from Armenia's Institutional and Governance Review

Institutional and Governance Reviews (IGRs) are a new tool in the Bank's package of analytical and advisory activities (see PREMnote 75). Because they are politically sensitive, the development of these reviews involves careful tradeoffs. Though each requires thorough analysis of a country's institutional shortcomings, the final product must be acceptable to country authorities and other development partners. To be credible and acceptable, an IGR must reflect extensive participation by a variety of national stakeholders. In Armenia the Bank's IGR team engaged the government (executive, legislature, judiciary), civil society (nongovernmental organizations, political parties, trade unions, academics), and other development partners from the outset. This approach resulted in widespread acceptance of the report's analysis and recommendations within both Armenia and the Bank. Armenia's IGR was a pioneering effort by the Bank's Europe and Central Asia Region to systematically evaluate a country's public institutions and develop a program of reforms supported by follow-up operations. The IGR had two main objectives. First, it was to diagnose institutional dysfunction at the national level using quantitative benchmarks of performance. Second, it was to assess political realities and constraints to reform, to foster the sustainability of Bank operations. Armenia was chosen for several reasons. There was a dearth of analytical work on public sector institutional reforms prior to 1998. Moreover, country authorities evinced keen interest in an IGR-and were matched by strong support from the Bank's country unit and team..

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mukherjee, Amitabha, Shahzadeyan, David
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2002-12
Subjects:GOVERNANCE OUTCOMES, STAKEHOLDER, CIVIL SOCIETY, POLITICAL PARTIES, TRADE UNIONS, REFORMS, POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY, INSTITUTIONAL REFORM, PUBLIC SECTOR ACCOUNTABILITY, PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS, DEFENSE, FOREIGN AFFAIRS, NATIONAL SECURITY ACCOUNTABILITY, ANALYTICAL WORK, AUTHORITY, CIVIL SERVICE, CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS, CONSENSUS, COUNTRY OWNERSHIP, DELIVERY OF SERVICES, DEMOCRACY, DEVELOPMENT PARTNERS, DONOR AGENCIES, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT, EXPENDITURE, EXTERNAL EXPERTS, GOVERNANCE ISSUES, GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES, IGR, INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT, INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS, INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURES, JUDICIARY, LEGISLATURE, LOCAL LEVELS, NATIONAL INSTITUTIONS, NATIONAL LEVEL, NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS, POLICY DEVELOPMENT, POLICYMAKERS, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POOR PEOPLE, POVERTY REDUCTION, POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY, PRESIDENCY, PRIME MINISTER, PUBLIC OFFICIALS, PUBLIC SECTOR, PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT, PUBLIC SECTOR PERFORMANCE, REFORM AGENDA, REFORM PROGRAM, REPRESENTATIVES, SERVICE DELIVERY, SOCIAL SECTORS, STATE AGENCIES, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/12/2518704/lessons-armenias-institutional-governance-review
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11332
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