Partners in Development? Robert McNamara, Lester Pearson, and the Commission on International Development, 1967–1973.

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  • Author(s): Brushett, Kevin (AUTHOR)
  • Source:
    Diplomacy & Statecraft. Mar2015, Vol. 26 Issue 1, p84-102. 19p.
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    • Abstract:
      In 1968, the newly appointed World Bank president, Robert McNamara, asked former Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson to chair a Bank Commission on International Development in hopes that he could revive the North’s flagging commitment to foreign aid promised under the banner of the Decade of Development. The Commission and its Report—Partners in Development—have a general reputation as farsighted approaches to problems of official development assistance. In Canada, the Pearson Commission is viewed through the lens of Canada’s commitment to Middle Power multilateralism. This analysis tests both interpretations by examining the Commission and the conception and reception of its work. Whilst the Middle Power concept circumscribed Pearson’s role and effectiveness, the Commission succeeded in helping Canada’s chief ally, the United States, share the burden of development assistance with its European allies. As in the realm of peacekeeping, Pearsonian development diplomacy was as much about shoring up relations with Northern allies as it was with developing new Southern friendships. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
    • Abstract:
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