Knack, Stephen F.
Knack, Stephen F., 1961-
Knack, Stephen
Knack, Stephen (Stephen F.)
Stephen F. Knack
VIAF ID: 85090926 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/85090926
Preferred Forms
-
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Knack, Stephen F
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Knack, Stephen F.
-
- 100 1 0 ‡a Knack, Stephen F.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Knack, Stephen F.
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Knack, Stephen F., ‡d 1961-
-
-
- 100 0 _ ‡a Stephen F. Knack
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (14)
5xx's: Related Names (3)
- 510 2 _ ‡a College of Public and International Affairs ‡g Washington, DC ‡e Affiliation
- 510 2 _ ‡a University of Maryland ‡g College Park, Md. ‡e Affiliation
- 510 2 _ ‡a Weltbank ‡e Affiliation
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Aid dependence and the quality of governance : a cross-country empirical analysis | |
Are larger countries really more corrupt? | |
Boondoggles and expropriation rent-seeking and policy distortion when property rights are insecure | |
Democracy, governance, and growth, 2003: | |
Donor fragmentation and bureaucratic quality in aid recipients | |
Essays on electoral participation, 1991: | |
Foreign aid and market-liberalizing reform | |
Individual and country-level factors affecting support for foreign aid | |
Institutions and the convergence hypothesis, 1994: | |
Mapped in or mapped out? : the Romanian poor in inter-household and community networks | |
Measuring corruption in Eastern Europe and Central Asia a critique of the cross-country indicators | |
Moving up the ladder : an analysis of IDA graduation policy | |
Polarization, politics, and property rights links between inequality and growth | |
Social capital and the quality of government evidence from the U.S. | |
Social capital, growth and poverty : a survey of cross-country evidence | |
Social polarization, political institutions, and country creditworthiness | |
Sovereign rents and the quality of tax policy and administration | |
Which Donors, Which Funds? : Bilateral Donors' Choice of Multilateral Funds at the World Bank | |
Why don't poor countries catch up?, 1993: | |
The worldwide governance indicators and tautology : causally related separable concepts, indicators of a common cause, or both? |