African Development ReviewAfrican Development Review is a professional journal devoted to the study and analysis of development policy in Africa. The Review emphasizes policy relevance of research findings, rather than purely theoretical and quantitative issues. The African Development Review is published twice a year, in June and December for the African Development Bank. The African Development Bank is a regional multilateral development finance institution the members of which are all of the 53 countries in Africa and 25 countries from Asia, Europe, North and South America. The purpose of the Bank is to further the economic development and social progress of African countries, individually and collectively. To this end, the Bank promotes the investment of public and private capital for development, primarily by providing loans and grants for projects and programs that contribute to poverty reduction and broadly based development in Africa. It covers, amongst others, the following subjects: Macroeconomic Policies (Fiscal, Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy); Economic and Structural Reforms including Issues of Financial Sector Reforms; Sectoral Issues on Agriculture, Energy, Mining and Industry; Issues of Building Infrastructure and Human Resource Capacity; Private Sector Development; Regional and International Concerns such as Debt, Trade, Capital Flows, Regional Integration, South-South Cooperation and Globalization; and Socioeconomic Issues of Income Distribution and Poverty Alleviation. For USC users only.
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