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Foreign Aid Reform, National Strategy, and the Quadrennial Review
Susan B. Epstein | Congressional Research Service | 2010-04-12
"Several development proponents, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and policymakers are pressing the 111th Congress to reform U.S. foreign aid capabilities to better address 21st Century development needs and national security challenges. Over the past nearly 50 years, the legislative foundation for U.S. foreign aid has evolved largely by amending the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (P.L. 87-195), the primary statutory basis for U.S. foreign aid programs, or enacting separate freestanding laws to reflect specific U.S. foreign policy interests. Many describe U.S. aid programs as fragmented, cumbersome, and not finely tuned to address the existing needs and U.S. national security interests. Lack of a comprehensive congressional reauthorization of foreign aid for about half of those fifty years further compounds the perceived weakness of U.S. aid programs and statutes."
China's Place on the Global Stage
9/22/2009
Abraham Denmark, Nirav Patel | Center for a New American Security
Understanding China's 'Soft Power'
4/1/2009
Kerry Dumbaugh | Congressional Research Service



