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Lessons from the rise and fall of the Department for International Development

63 min • 29 oktober 2024

From its creation in 1997 to its merger with the Foreign Office in 2020, the Department for International Development (DfID) managed nearly £200 billion in total and played a global leadership role in reducing poverty. While DfID also had to deal with high-profile failures and public criticism, sustained political support from Labour, coalition and Conservative governments helped the department to achieve a record of delivery during its 23-year existence.

 

A new book, The Rise and Fall of the Department for International Development, will be published in October. Sir Mark Lowcock, the book's co-author with Ranil Dissanayake, joined an expert panel at the Institute for Government to discuss what we can learn from DfID's history, with a particular focus on building the institution, how to maintain civil service capability, targeting resources and developing ways to measure value for money – with essential lessons for the new Labour government and what other departments can learn from DfID's focus on delivery.

 

Joining Sir Mark Lowcock on the panel were:

 

Sarah Champion MP, Chair of the International Development Select Committee

Andrew Mitchell MP, Shadow Foreign Secretary and former Secretary of State for International Development

 

The panel was chaired by Alex Thomas, Programme Director at the Institute for Government.

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