Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
For A Collaborative Project With The Stanford Program In International Legal Studies
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Amount$413,295
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ProgramU.S.-Latin American Relations
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Date Awarded7/14/2003
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Term24.0 Months
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Type of SupportProject
About the Grantee
Grantee Website
www.cide.edu
Address
Carretera México-Toluca 3655 Apartado Postal 10-883 Col. Lomas de Santa Fé Deleg. Alvaro Obregón, Mexico City, 01210, Mexico
Grants to this Grantee
for support for research, training, and evaluation on accountability and governance in Mexico
Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE) is a Mexican public research university whose mission is to generate knowledge to improve policy and decision making. This grant will build on previous support to CIDE to research why good policies are poorly implemented in Mexico’s federal and subnational governments. CIDE will carry out a diagnosis of institutional capacities at the federal and state level, and develop a set of proposals for improving them.
for a project to support the Accountability Network in Mexico
Centro de Investigación y Docencias Económicas (CIDE) is a Mexican public university that specializes in economic, legal, and policy research to improve public policy in Mexico. CIDE hosts the Accountability Network, a project that brings together civil society organizations, academics, media, opinion leaders, and public agencies to produce new research and diversify policy dialogue around how Mexico could develop a more comprehensive policy framework to improve public sector accountability. This renewal would permit the Network to generate more specific research to inform proposals for institutional improvements to increase accountability.
for support for research, training, and evaluation on accountability and governance in Mexico
This grant would support an increase in the quantity and quality of research, training, evaluation, and public education campaigns aimed at improving the conditions for greater accountability in Mexico’s public sector. The training and research portions of the project would provide students with scholarships and greater analytical tools to apply the principles of accountability in governance. The evaluation and public education campaigns would produce more evidence about how accountability might improve in Mexico.