Fragmented Aid: The Institutionalization of the OIC’s Foreign Aid Framework

Submitted by siteadmin on Thu, 04/02/2020 - 10:52
Year
2019
Country
United States
Language
English
Abstract

Although the Organization for Islamic Cooperation (OIC) was not established with the explicit purpose of providing aid to the world’s underprivileged, its founders were motivated, at least in part, by a wish to impersonate and enhance “Islamic solidarity” in the face of widespread poverty in Muslimmajority countries (İhsanoğlu 2010:3). Diverse OIC institutions emerged, including the Islamic Development Bank (1975), the Islamic Solidarity Fund (1974), and the Islamic Centre for Development of Trade (1981), dealing with both humanitarian and developmental concerns (Kayaoglu 2015:17). These entities signaled an initiative to address the wide range of needs and, progres-sively, to align aid with the third generation of human rights—rights to eco-nomic and social development (Iqbal 2007). Thus, only recently did the OIC stress again the need to ensure the “right to development” for members of the umma. © Authors

English
ISSN/ISBN
978-0812251197
No. of Pages
344
City
Pennsylvania
Edition
1
Select type of work
Name of the Publisher
CIS Program Old
CIS publications
No
CIS Thesis
No
Chapter Pages
245-269
Publication Month
July