New working paper about Swedish aid to Afghanistan

EBA has published a new working paper with the title “Punching Above its Weight or Running with the Crowd? Lessons from Sweden’s Development Cooperation with Afghanistan 2002–2020.”

This working paper reviews the lessons that can be drawn from Sweden’s development cooperation with Afghanistan from 2002–2020 and the implications of these for Sweden’s future engagement with the country. The analysis is based on official documentation related to Sweden’s country strategies for Afghanistan, evaluation reports, interviews with key stakeholders, and a wider set of references from secondary academic literature.

Main findings:

  • The overall results of international development assistance, including initiatives funded by Sweden, have been poor. Such assistance has worked best when focusing on the provision of basic infrastructure, schools and education. It has generally achieved less in terms of building capacities and changing behaviours.
  • International aid interventions in Afghanistan have been based on policy narratives that have pre-defined solutions to the assumed problems. These policy narratives show a limited understanding of how Afghanistan works or how interventions engage with social logics and practices. Sweden’s development cooperation is not immune from this critique.
  • Sweden should develop a better understanding of key contextual issues in Afghanistan and ensure that future aid programming addresses these. This need of a revised country strategy for Afghanistan is a potential opportunity to recalibrate Sweden’s engagement.
  • Some elements of Swedish aid have given greater consideration to the Afghan context and worked iteratively — continuously adapting to the flow of the more complex dynamics of social change. One such example is the long-term support to the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan. This is an approach that Sida should be encouraged to develop more explicitly as part of its portfolio. It is also highly relevant to the new context.

Author:

Dr. Adam Pain, part of a research team led from the School of Oriental and African Studies, London, researcher at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, previous researcher at the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation unit (AREU), Kabul.