Index

Patricia Jean McLaughlin (Independent Consultant, USA)

Expatriate Leaders of International Development Projects

ISBN: 978-1-83909-631-0, eISBN: 978-1-83909-630-3

Publication date: 13 April 2021

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

McLaughlin, P.J. (2021), "Index", Expatriate Leaders of International Development Projects, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 157-162. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83909-630-320211007

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021 by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Accountability
, 55–56

Aid recipients of projects
, 65–66

American Center for International Labor Solidarity (ACILS)
, 41–42

American Deaf Culture
, 2

Annual Work Plan (AWP)
, 95

“Beltway Bandits”
, 60

Bureau for PPC
, 37, 43–45

“Bureaucratic paralysis”
, 60–62

Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
, 37–38

Center for Development Information and Evaluation (CDIE)
, 37–38

Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE)
, 41–42

Chief of party (COP)
, 13, 73, 111

expatriate leaders’ advice to aspiring
, 117

experience managing USAID projects
, 74–77

Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support (CORDS)
, 42–43

Coherent long-term foreign aid program
, 32–33

Cold War
, 18, 39

Colonialism
, 51

Communist-inspired Cuban revolution
, 32–33

Competency-based leadership
, 4–7

Competing values
, 49–50

Competing Values Framework (CVF)
, 49–50

Complementary assets
, 49–50

Compliance superintendence, USAID and
, 89–90

Compliance system
, 65–67, 138–140

Congressional earmarks
, 20–21

Constituency
, 19

Contracting officer (CO)
, 95

Contracting officer representative (COR)
, 64, 78, 134–135

managing COR expectations
, 90–92

USAID’s system for assigning CORs to project and lack of COR training
, 92–93

Contractor Performance Assessment Reporting System (CPARS)
, 81, 94, 126–127

Corruption, coping with
, 99–100

Cost
, 55

Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (Comecon)
, 29–30

Country Development Cooperation Strategy (CDCS)
, 58, 60, 62

Decentralized decision-making
, 36–37

Degree of geopolitical importance
, 28–29

Deputy chief of party (DCOP)
, 86–87

Destined-to-fail projects
, 22

“Development business”
, 58

Development Experience Clearinghouse (DEC)
, 118–119

Development Loan Fund (DLF)
, 32–34

Development Objectives (DOs)
, 58

Development theory
, 62–63

Division of Public Education (DPE)
, 9

Domino theory
, 29–30

Dualism
, 25–26, 45

of foreign aid
, 71

Early Grade Reading Assessment (EGRA)
, 14–15

Early Grade Reading Program (EGRP)
, 14–15

Earmarks
, 20–21

Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA)
, 28

Economic institutions
, 51–54

Education technology
, 6

Egyptian Ministry of Education
, 11–12

Eisenhower Doctrine
, 31

Emergency Food Security Program (EFSP)
, 22–23

European Recovery Plan (ERP)
, 29–30

Evaluation
, 54

Expatriate leaders
, 1, 17, 22, 73, 125

achievement
, 125–131

advice to aspiring COPs
, 117

Americans to know about work managing USAID projects
, 122

applying lessons learned to subsequent projects
, 105–106

being expatriate leader of international development projects
, 109–110, 112

being perceptive of gender and age
, 108–109

believe host country national team members define success
, 131

capturing benefit of expatriate status
, 107–108

challenges created by USAID CORs
, 94–97

COP experience managing USAID projects
, 74–77

coping with situational challenges
, 97–103

define success as international development project leader
, 125–131

defining project success
, 79–81

defining success, or lack and achievement
, 137–140

to effectively lead time-limited organizational entity
, 131–133

efforts to lead international development projects
, 104–109

explain easy or difficult about being
, 136–137

explaining challenges
, 82–103

feeling successful
, 78–79

formative life and/or work experiences of
, 77

grown as leader
, 115–117

HCN perspectives of project success
, 81–82

helped or harmed expatriate leaders’ efforts
, 135–136

of international development projects
, 73

leading time-limited temporary organizations
, 82–85

lessons expatriate leaders learned leading projects
, 113–114

managing COR expectations
, 90–92

navigate relationships with organizational leaders of multiple organizations
, 133–137

navigating relational challenges
, 85–90

office of
, 49–50

participants
, 74–77

prior project management experience
, 104

revealing thoughts
, 123–124

sharing perspectives on project success
, 77–82

speaking about minds
, 112–123

speaking efforts to lead projects
, 103–112

successful managing USAID projects
, 118–120

systematic approach to project management
, 106–107

theory of what factors experienced by
, 137

think Members of Congress need to know about projects
, 122–123

of USAID projects
, 47

USAID’s system for assigning CORs to project and lack of COR training
, 92–93

views changed about international development projects
, 114–115

work with recipient organization leadership
, 135

working with recipient organization leaders
, 96–97

Expatriate leadership
, 1, 10

working with USAID projects
, 10–16

Export-Import Bank
, 32–33

Extractive political
, 51–54

Federal Acquisition Institute Training Application System (FAITAS)
, 64–65

Federalism
, 19

Foreign aid programs
, 28–29

Foreign aid’s value
, 49

Foreign Assistance Act (1961)
, 32–33

Foreign Assistance Act (1973)
, 34–35

Foreign assistance projects
, 37–38, 45

Foreign policy labors
, 19–20, 66–67

Foreign Service Officer (FSO)
, 10–11

Foreign Service Officer Test (FSOT)
, 10–11

Formative life of expatriate leaders
, 77

Frankfurt International School (FIS)
, 6–7

Gender-neutral pseudonym
, 73–74

General Accounting Office (GAO)
, 37–38

Girls Improved Learning Outcomes project (GILO project)
, 14

Global Food Security Act (2016)
, 22–23

Global War on Terror (GWOT)
, 18, 42–43

Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA)
, 39–40, 62–63

“Hands-off approach”
, 97

Host country national (HCN)
, 77–78, 131

perspectives of project success
, 81–82

Humanitarians
, 25–26

Idara level (school district level)
, 12

Impact evaluations
, 55

Information technology (IT)
, 6–7

Institutionalizing gender equality
, 56–57

Intellectual property
, 23–24

Inter-American Development Bank
, 24, 32

“Inter-organizational partnership”
, 68–69

International Cooperation Administration (ICA)
, 31

International Desert Development Commission
, 9

International development
, 30

International Development Contractors (IDCs)
, 60

International development projects
, 47–48, 73

expatriate leader of
, 17, 109–110, 112

multi-dimensional organizational context
, 17, 47, 71

USAID
, 17–46

International Monetary Fund (IMF)
, 23–24, 32

International Republican Institute (IRI)
, 41–42

K-12 computer/technology
, 6

“Leading from behind” approach
, 105

Leading temporary organizations
, 47–49

Leading time-limited temporary organizations
, 82–85

“Life-of-Project Plan”
, 131–133

Logical Framework method
, 58–59

Lumsdaine’s empirical analysis
, 28–29

Male-dominated technology firm
, 4–5

Marshall Plan
, 28–30, 43, 45

Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
, 60–62

Middle East Partnership Initiative (MEPI)
, 44

Ministry of Education (MOE)
, 11–13, 97

Molotov Plan
, 29–30

Moroccan project
, 56–57

Mudireya level (governorate level)
, 12

Multi-dimensional organizational context
, 47–71

complementary assets, competing values
, 49–50

extractive political and economic institutions
, 51–54

home office of technical implementing organization
, 86–89

leading temporary organizations
, 47–49

navigating relational challenges with leaders within
, 85–90

USAID and compliance superintendence
, 89–90

USAID evaluation program and operational policies, practices, systems
, 54–71

National Authority for Quality Assurance and Accreditation (NAQAA)
, 12

National Democratic Institute (NDI)
, 41–42

National Education Standards (NES)
, 12–13

National Strategic Plan for Pre-University Education Reform
, 14

Neoliberalism
, 51–52

New Directions legislation (1973)
, 35

New Embassy Compounds (NEC)
, 67

Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)
, 35–36

Nonpermissive environments
, 69–70

North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
, 30–31

Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI)
, 42

“Officers’ Republic”
, 52–53

Organizational value
, 49

Performance evaluations
, 55

Performance Management Plan (PMP)
, 59

Personal services contractors (PSCs)
, 36–37

Point Four Program
, 30–31

Policy, Planning, and Learning (PPL)
, 44–45

Policy and Program Coordination (PPC)
, 37, 43–45

Post-Cold War
, 18

Post-Conflict Reconstruction Project
, 70–71

Post-SSA
, 12

“Poverty Barons”
, 60

Pre-SSA
, 12

Prepackaged programming
, 65–66

President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)
, 44

Prior project management experience
, 104

Prisoners-of-War (POW)
, 33–34

Private voluntary organizations (PVOs)
, 35–36

Procurement reformsl
, 44–45

Procurement system
, 138–139

“Profits over project success” dynamic
, 88–89

Project authorization
, 58–59

Project management

success
, 56–57

systematic approach to
, 106–107

Project Management Plan (PMP)
, 52, 77–78, 98

Project success
, 52, 73, 78, 129

defining
, 79–81

expatriate leaders sharing perspectives on
, 77–82

HCN perspectives of
, 81–82

Property rights
, 51

Public assistance
, 2–3

Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR)
, 44–45

Quantitative approach
, 62–63

Quantitatively-driven compliance model
, 63–64

Quantitatively-driven model
, 62–63

Reduction in force (RIF)
, 39–40

Regional lenders
, 24

Request for Proposals (RFP
, 59

“Resource capturing”
, 60–62

Results-based management approach
, 55–56, 138–139

Rural Expansion of Afghanistan’s Community-Based Healthcare (REACH)
, 118–119

School improvement plan (SIP)
, 12

School self-assessment (SSA)
, 12

School Team Excellence Awards Program (STEAP)
, 12

STEAP I
, 12–13

STEAP II
, 12–13

Short-Term Technical Advisor (STTA)
, 99–100

Situational challenges

coping with
, 97–103

coping with betrayal of trust
, 98–99

coping with consequences of travel
, 98

coping with corruption
, 99–100

coping with internal and external pressures to hire specific individuals
, 99

coping with managing projects in volatile settings
, 102–103

coping with unknowns of taking over troubled project
, 100–102

Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR)
, 68–69

Strategic planning
, 37

Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs)
, 23–24

Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF)
, 52–53

Systematic approach to project management
, 106–107

Teacher professional development (TPD)
, 14

Technical assistance and training projects (TAT projects)
, 55

Technical officers
, 37

Texas Hill Country
, 8

Top-down project design approach
, 65–66

Truman’s Doctrine
, 29–31

Trust, coping with betrayal of
, 98–99

U. S. Department of Agriculture
, 22–23

U. S. Development Assistance (DA)
, 21–22, 25–26, 60, 62

United States (US)
, 17–18

United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
, 1, 10, 15–17, 24–25, 32–33, 46, 67, 125

and compliance superintendence
, 89–90

compliance system
, 65–67

COP experience managing USAID projects
, 74–77

crafting United States Foreign Aid Policy
, 18–27

evaluation program and operational policies, practices, systems
, 54–71

evolving
, 33–46

origin
, 27–33

system for assigning CORs to project and lack of COR training
, 92–93

working with USAID projects
, 10–16

United States bilateral assistance
, 35

United States Constitution
, 18–19

United States Farmer-to-Farmer program
, 28

United States Foreign Aid Policy, crafting
, 18–27

United States Informational Agency (USIA)
, 39–40

US Cold War diplomacy
, 27–28

US Economic Support Funds (ESF)
, 21–22, 60, 62

ESF-funded projects
, 46

US food aid program
, 22–23

US foreign policy
, 22–23

Vietnam War
, 33–34, 42–43

“Whites only” environment
, 2–3

Work experiences of expatriate leaders
, 77

World Bank
, 14–15, 24, 31