Engagement with Civil Society : An EITI Implementation Case Study
Author(s)
World BankKeywords
OILLAWS
CONSTITUENCY
MINING ROYALTIES
CIVIL SOCIETY PARTICIPANTS
MASS MEDIA
OGMC
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
REGIONAL TRAINING
CIVIL SOCIETY INVOLVEMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR
CONSULTATIONS
EMPOWERMENT OF CIVIL SOCIETY
RESOURCE CURSE
MINERAL RIGHTS
CADASTRE
PREPARATION
EITI
CAPACITY-BUILDING NEEDS
JOURNALISTS
CANDIDATES
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
SERIES OF CONFERENCES
OIL INDUSTRY
MINISTERS
NEGOTIATIONS
BROAD RANGE OF ACTIVITIES
NGO
EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES TRANSPARENCY INITIATIVE
OUTREACH
ACCOUNTING
STAKEHOLDER
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
PROGRAM EVALUATION
BUDGET CONTRIBUTIONS
GAS
MINING DEVELOPMENT
CONSTITUENCIES
HUMAN RIGHTS
CIVIL SOCIETY CAPACITY BUILDING
COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS
TRAINING PROGRAMS
BUSINESS ASSOCIATIONS
POLICY MAKERS
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
MINING REGIONS
CIVIL SOCIETY CAPACITY
EMPOWERMENT
TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY
REFLECTION
AWARENESS RAISING
MOBILIZATION
REPRESENTATIVES
SOCIAL SAFEGUARDS
TRAINING COURSES
GLOBAL INITIATIVE
MINING SECTOR
CIVIL SOCIETY SECTOR
ANTICORRUPTION ISSUES
MINING INDUSTRIES
NATURAL RESOURCES
CONSULTATION
OIL COMPANIES
MINING INDUSTRY
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
CIVIL SOCIETY LEADERS
BROAD PARTICIPATION
REPRESENTATIVES OF GOVERNMENT
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
PARLIAMENTARIANS
GOOD GOVERNANCE
MINERAL RESOURCES
BUDGET ANALYSIS
EXTRACTIVE COMPANIES
RESOURCE-RICH COUNTRIES
COLLABORATION
DEVELOPMENT GRANT FACILITY
INTERNATIONAL CIVIL SOCIETY
PUBLIC AWARENESS
MINE CLOSURE
CIVIL SOCIETY SPECIALIST
BEST PRACTICES
EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES
CASM
ECONOMIC POLICY
MINING POLICY
EI
POLICY DIALOGUE
EXTRACTIVE SECTOR
ANTICORRUPTION
POLITICAL OPPOSITION
RECONSTRUCTION
TRANSPARENCY
ADVOCACY GROUPS
SMALL-SCALE
MINING OPERATIONS
CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS
CIVIL SOCIETY
COMMUNITY LEVEL
REVENUE STREAMS
ADVOCACY
STAKEHOLDERS
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATION
CONSENSUS
CREDIBILITY
SMALL-SCALE MINERS
MINING COMPANY
PUBLIC INFORMATION
COLLABORATIVE WORK
EXTRACTIVE SECTORS
POLITICAL ACTIVITY
LEADERSHIP
STAKEHOLDER GROUP
EITI PRINCIPLES
TRADE UNIONS
GAS FLARING REDUCTION
SMALL-SCALE MINING
CIVIL SOCIETY PARTICIPATION
NATIONAL BUDGET
CAPACITY BUILDING
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18232Abstract
Within the World Bank Group (WBG), the Oil, Gas, and Mining Policy Division (COCPO) is responsible for policy and advisory services in the oil, gas, and mining sectors, including World Bank lending. The unit also manages WBG participation in a number of donor-funded global programs and partnerships, including the Multi-Donor Trust Fund (MDTF) for the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI). The main finding of this paper is that the direct support to civil society organization (CSO) through the Development Grant Facility (DGF) mechanism (July 2005 to June 2008) was well received and met key program objectives. In particular, DGF funding catalyzed the EITI in countries by helping strengthen CSO ability to play their role in the initiative. Working closely with the Revenue Watch Institute (RWI) during the later part of the DGF grant cycle helped COCPO build partnerships with CSO. The CSO also found the strategic nature of the DGF interventions to be positive, given that the grants allowed them to carry out a broad range of activities (advocacy, research, capacity building, and communications) around the sensitive topic of extractive industries and EITI.Date
2014-05-09Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/18232http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18232
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 IGORelated items
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 some of the common issues that have arisen and lessons that
 have been learned in countries implementing Extractive
 Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), and to which the
 World Bank's EITI team has been exposed through its
 involvement in supporting EITI implementation. These are
 "early" or preliminary lessons, because
 implementation processes are evolving in most countries that
 have committed to EITI. Some countries have produced EITI
 reports, but analysis of these reports is still at an early
 stage. It is hoped that this report will stimulate further
 discussion on implementation choices that face government
 policy makers; civil society groups; oil, gas, and mining
 companies; and donor agencies involved in the initiative.