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- USAID-State
Strategic Plan 2007-2012
- National
Security Strategy of the United States, March 2006
- Policy
Framework for Bilateral Foreign Aid, January 2006 [PDF,
440 KB]
- White Paper:
US Foreign Aid: Meeting the Challenges of the Twenty-first Century,
January 2004 [PDF, 353 KB]
- Fragile
States Strategy, January 2005 [PDF, 305 KB]
- Democracy
and Governance Strategic Framework [PDF, 343 KB]
- Mitigating
the Development Impacts of HIV/AIDS [PDF, 406 KB]
- Foreign Aid in the National
Interest [PDF, 353 KB]
- Nine Principles,
February 2005
- Business
Transformation
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USAID Primer: What We Do and How We Do It
The purpose of this primer
is to explain the internal
doctrines, strategies,
operational procedures, structure,
and program mechanisms of the U.S.
Agency for International Development
(USAID). The primer has been
prepared primarily for employees
of other federal agencies such as the
departments of State and Defense,
partner organizations, congressional
staff, and new USAID employees.
USAID plays a vital role in promoting
U.S. national security, foreign policy,
and the War on Terrorism. It does so
by addressing poverty fueled by lack of
economic opportunity, one of the root
causes of violence today. As stated in the
Presidents National Security Strategy,
USAIDs work in development joins
diplomacy and defense as one of three
key pieces of the nations foreign policy
apparatus. USAID promotes peace and
stability by fostering economic growth,
protecting human health, providing
emergency humanitarian assistance, and
enhancing democracy in developing
countries. These efforts to improve the
lives of millions of people worldwide
represent U.S. values and advance U.S.
interests for peace and prosperity.
USAID provides assistance in sub-
Saharan Africa, Asia and the Near East,
Latin America and the Caribbean, and
Europe and Eurasia. With headquarters
in Washington, D.C., USAIDs
strength is its field offices in many
regions of the world. The agency works
in 100 developing countries and inclose partnership with private voluntary
organizations, indigenous groups,
universities, American businesses,
international organizations, other
governments, trade and professional
associations, faith-based organizations,
and other U.S. government agencies.
USAID has working relationships,
through contracts and grant
agreements, with more than 3,500
companies and over 300 U.S.-based
private voluntary organizations.
The types of assistance USAID provides
include
- technical assistance and capacity
building
- training and scholarships
- food aid and disaster relief
- infrastructure construction
- small-enterprise loans
- budget support
- enterprise funds
- credit guarantees
We hope you find the information
in this primer useful.
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