Independent Syndicate of Energy of Kosovo (SPEK) meets with World Bank and U.S. government officials to discuss the effects of a new coal power plant project and the privatization of Kosovo’s electricity grid.
On June 26, 2012, BIC and YOHR committed to coordinating their activities related to encouraging civil society participation in World Bank activities in Yemen.
An Indian civil society group responds to an invitation from Country Director Roberto Zagha to attend a consultation workshop on the proposed Country Partnership Strategy with an open letter decrying past World Bank actions.
A new BIC publication outlines the World Bank Group’s approach to development in Mongolia since 1991, focusing on the extractives industry. Mongolia is a large, sparsely populated country sandwiched between Russia and China whose economy has been growing rapidly over the past 10 years due to the discovery of vast mineral deposits such as coal …
The World Bank makes public its interim strategy for Tunisia after the government agrees to early disclosure. On June 27, 2012 the World Bank made public its interim strategy for Tunisia for the years 2013-2014 which outlines its engagement in the country during this transitional period. The Bank’s Board of Executive Directors is set to …
Under pressure to keep up with a changing world, the Bank is modernizing. Encompassing the primary operational policy reforms, as well as changes to enhance the enabling environment for policy implementation, the modernization agenda will set the stage for the upcoming review of World Bank safeguard policies. With a wide array of ongoing internal and …
Civil society groups are calling for a review of World Bank and CAS in India. Below is a statement from Indian civil society groups on the World Bank consultation on its Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) on 31 May 2012: The World Bank’s Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) 2013-2016 Consultation is Farce Indian Parliament Must Review Operations …
Despite warnings from its own appeals body and communities, the Bank declined to take concrete actions to address major concerns over water availability, air quality, and others.
In a meeting with Bank staff, Egyptian civil society and affected residents of North Giza farming communities raised concerns about a power project’s impacts on local livelihoods and the environment.
International Rivers’ new report argues that the World Bank’s top-down approach to infrastructure should be replaced by a strategy that prioritizes the needs of the poor.