Ghana: Strengthening Civil Society Capacity in the EITI Process
In collaboration with the World Bank Development Grant Facility, RWI has partnered with the Integrated Social Development Center and Publish What You Pay-Ghana to help build capacity for civil society in support of EITI.
This effort focuses on educating Ghanaian civil society groups on EITI principles and their potential to foster accountable and responsible revenue management practices by governments and mining companies. The project also seeks to increase civil society groups's interest and capacity to work on EITI, especially at the community level.
The project's major phases include public education, through radio and television; community mobilization, in workshops and trainings on budget analysis, resource utilization and related issues; capacity building for better monitoring, evaluation and tracking ; and coordination and networking.
Grants
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Financial Summary
Revenue Watch and our partners engage in increasingly diverse forms of public finance monitoring, including service delivery, participatory budgeting, and aid and expenditure tracking. Our partners are coalescing into an indigenous-led network of non-governmental organizations at the forefront of the battle against corruption and abuse of the public interest.
Grant-making is RWI's primary tool for engaging civil society in resource-rich countries and is an important means to motivate, support and build grassroots movements that create sustained local and international demand for revenue and expenditure transparency.
RWI takes a comprehensive approach to improving governance and development across the entire value chain, from the organization of extractive production, revenue generation, and revenue management, and through to the expenditure processes and national development outcomes.
