Edited by Diane Stone, University of Warwick, UK and Simon Maxwell, Overseas Development Institute, UK * It provides an authoritative overview of the concepts and theories associated with the complex link between research and development. * It offers practical guidance to researchers and policy-makers. The book contains the foundation for a manual on policy entrepreneurship in international development. Global Knowledge Networks and International Development will interest students, researchers and policy-makers concerned with global policy, knowledge utilisation, global governance and development. Edited by Routledge/Warwick Studies in Globalisation November 2004: 234x156: 208pp: illus. 4 line drawings and 2 tables Hb: 0-415-34944-3: £65.00 US$96.00 R o u t l e d g e * It illustrates the complexity with case studies of projects bridging research and policy-making from all over the world. These are provided by individual researchers from Africa, South Asia and Eastern Europe, and also by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) in Canada, the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) in London and the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), based in Washington DC. f r o m Drawn from think-tanks, academia and development agencies, the contributors provide case histories of how research has informed local, national and global policy. They investigate how development agencies have promoted the development potential of research, and outline various methods and techniques of policy entrepreneurship. The book has three key elements: s o o n Making ideas count in policy has become a key issue for both researchers and policy-makers, and in both developed and developing countries. This volume provides a coherent examination of how, why and to what extent research informs policy in the field of international development. C o m i n g Global Knowledge Networks and International Development HOW TO ORDER Hb: 0-415-34944-3 Global Knowledge Networks and International Developement Routledge books are available from all good bookshops or can be ordered direct Email:info.politics@routledge.co.uk UK and Rest of World: US and Canada: • Return this form to: Customer Services, Routledge, FREEPOST, Andover, Hants SP10 5BR, England • Customers in the US - Return this form to: Customer Service, Taylor & Francis, 10650 Toebben Drive, Independence, KY 41051 • e-mail : book.orders@routledge.co.uk • Call toll-free: 1-800-634-7064 • Fax toll-free: 1-800-248 4724 • Call : +44-(0)-1264-34-3071 • Fax : +44-(0)-1264-34-3005 • Customers in Canada - Return this form to: Customer Service,Taylor & Francis, 74 Rolark Drive, Scarborough, ON M1R 4G2 • Internet site: www.routledge.com • Call toll-free: 1-877-226-2237 • Fax: 416-299-7531 • Internet site: www.routledge-ny.com Shipping UPS Ground is the regular method of service for the US. CANPAR is the regular method of service for Canada. Shipping Charges 1st book US $5.00 Canada $6.00 Each add’l $2.50 $3.00 Method of Payment I enclose a cheque or postal order for the full amount due made out to Taylor & Francis for £ Sales Tax Please charge my credit card: Residents of California, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, New York and Pennslyvannia, please add local sales tax. Canadian Residents, please add 7% GST. Method of Payment I enclose a check or money-order for the full amount due made out to Taylor & Francis for $ Please charge my credit card: Surname First Name Institution Telephone Fax E-mail Address Country Zip/Postal code Signature Date Order not valid without signature. All prices are subject to change without notice, please allow up to three weeks for delivery. Please tick here if you do not want to receive any mailings from Taylor & Francis Group companies This book examines what makes accountability for previous violations more or less possible for transitional regimes to achieve. It closely examines the other vital goals of such regimes against which accountability is often balanced. The options available are not simply prosecution or par- don, as the most heated polemics of the debate over transitional justice suggest, but a range of options from complete amnesty through truth commissions and lustration or purification to prosecutions. The question, then, is not whether or not accountability can be achieved, but what degree of accountability can be achieved by a given country. The focus of the book is on the politics of transition: what makes accounili