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Keywords
Poster ID #424
Abstract
The developing world is plagued by infectious diseases. Controlling infectious diseases will reduce suffering and promote economic development. Foreign aid donors fund projects for developing countries to help combat infectious diseases. However, foreign aid is not always allocated based on need. Often, it is given for political and strategic reasons1. With respect to aid for the health sector, the research has focused primarily on the global-disease level and not on the country-disease level. The limited research on the latter suggests that donors are responding to need2. The focus of my research is to examine the allocation of foreign aid specifically targeted at infectious diseases at the country-level to evaluate whether donors respond to countries’ level of need (as measured by disease burden).
Description
The Annual Mary Lou Fulton Mentored Research Conference showcases some of the best student research from the College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences. The mentored learning program encourages undergraduate students to participate in hands-on and practical research under the direction of a faculty member. Students create these posters as an aide in presenting the results of their research to the public, faculty, and their peers.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Dayton, Shane W. and Wilson, Sven, "Not All Aid Flows Are Created Equal: An analysis of the allocation of foreign aid to combat infectious diseases" (2010). FHSS Mentored Research Conference. 194.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/fhssconference_studentpub/194
Publication Date
2010-04-01
Permanent URL
http://hdl.lib.byu.edu/1877/2294
Language
English
College
Family, Home, and Social Sciences
Copyright Status
© 2010, Shane W Dayton, et al.;
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