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EN
The article is concerned with the latest strategies of Polish development policy in the light of shifting global economic and political power structures, when North-South relationships are fundamentally changing, and so the conditions that frame European and polish development aid policy. Key documents define Polish development aid activities as the important field of foreign policy. The first part of the article analyses the determinants and experience of polish development cooperation. The second part examines the legal basis for development cooperation (Act on Development cooperation approved on 16th of September 2011 by the Polish Parliament) and the medium term vision for Poland’s development cooperation (Multiannual development cooperation programme 2012–2015, development cooperation plan for 2012 and 2013). The last part of the analysis characterizes geographical and thematic areas of polish aid. The article presents strengths and weaknesses of Poland’s official development assistance (ODA). The author intends to describe basic principles of the organization of the Polish development policy under Development Cooperation Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and so their implementation.
EN
The fundamental issue with which this article deals is whether the authentic alternatives to development policy can be considered and implemented in Africa. And if so, on what political and social ground these alternatives can be based, and by what means they can best carried out. This article focuses, in particular, on the degree to which African countries in the wake of transitions from settler neocolonialism contain the sort of cultural, social and political impulses that can support a new thinking about development and the means thereto. This rethinking of the political economy of development is about the possibility of pursuing alternatives to development strategies, but not about providing a new blueprint for what that future should look like. In this article the author presented two concepts for the development of African countries, by Paul Romer and Philippe Engelhard. The article also presents the cur- rent economic situation of the African continent.
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