Rethinking Absorptive Capacity: A New Framework, Applied to Afghanistan’s Police Training Program (CSIS report)

By Robert D. Lamb and Kathryn Mixon ■ In development, stabilization, and peace building, donors increasingly recognize the importance of being sensitive to the local contexts of their efforts. Yet the use of “blueprints” remains widespread. Even when standard approaches are modified for particular aid partners, there often remains a poor fit between donor efforts […]

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Measuring Absorptive Capacity (MAC): A New Framework for Estimating Constraints (CSIS brief)

By Robert D. Lamb ■ This policy brief describes a new framework for measuring absorptive capacity in international development, peacebuilding, and stabilization efforts. Absorptive capacity is the form and amount of foreign aid and attention that recipient communities, institutions, or societies can receive without suffering significant social, economic, or political disruptions. Conventional measures of absorptive […]

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MAC: Prototype of a Tool Linking Program Designs and Local Conditions

I spent a good part of last year on a UK-funded project on “absorptive capacity” — which I think too many people in the international development community still think of as “why can’t poor people spend our money better?” Our answer to that, though this research, was basically: “Because we keep asking them to do […]

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