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E&E Deputy Assistant Administrator Gloria D. SteeleReplicability and Sustainability in U.S.-Ukraine Partnerships
U.S.-Ukraine Foundation's Community Partnership Program

The E&E Deputy Assistant Administrator gave the keynote luncheon address July 23 in St. Louis at the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation's conference on Replicability and Sustainability in U.S.-Ukraine Partnerships. The U.S.-Ukraine Foundation's Community Partnership Program (CPP), funded by E&E since 1997, currently supports partnerships between 14 U.S. and 14 Ukrainian medium-sized cities and focuses on strengthening local government and promoting citizens' participation at the grassroots level. Read More...


Press Releases from USAID/Macedonia's Community Self-Help Initiative

The Community Self Help Initiative is a USAID-funded program in Macedonia that assists communities to plan and implement projects that promote democracy and ethnic harmony, and provide sustainable benefits to their inhabitants. The CSHI helps foster self-determination at the community level and promotes ethnic collaboration through economic development and participatory community planning activities. See the links below for recent examples of CSHI success stories.


USAID Administrator Natsios$25 Million Raised for Balkans Through Public-Private Partnership: Donors Leverage Funds to Solidify Democracy

The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the German Marshall Fund of the United States (GMF), and the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation are pleased to announce a new $25 million initiative to support good governance in Southeastern Europe. The grant-making effort, called the Balkan Trust for Democracy, is a project of GMF made possible through a public-private partnership between GMF, USAID, and the Mott Foundation. Read More ...


Partners SigningUSAID Welcomes Formation of Joint Partnership Between Pennsylvania, Hungary Health Organizations

The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) welcomed the signing today of an agreement establishing a joint Hungarian-U.S. health partnership. In comments in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania this afternoon at a ceremony marking the event, Dr. Kent R. Hill, USAID Assistant Administrator for Europe and Eurasia, praised the creation of the new partnership and emphasized the importance of these types of relationship to foreign assistance and international development. Read More ...


Home funded by USAID Romania/Enterprise Funds USAID Enterprise Funds are at the Forefront of Creating Home Mortgages in Europe and Eurasia

In January, 2003, the Government of Romania approved the formation of the first financial institution dedicated solely to providing mortgage financing for individual home ownership. The new institution, The Romanian Mortgage Loan Company (Ro-Fin), is a joint public-private partnership created with $1.3 million in funding from USAID Romania. These funds have leveraged $34.0 million in capital for RO-FIN. Read More ...


USAID/Serbia and Monenegro Website screenshotUSAID/Serbia & Montenegro Announces Launch of its New Website

USAID has been working in Serbia and Montenegro since 1997. The USAID program supports Serbia and Montenegro in their goal to be democratic, prosperous and moving toward Europe. Our strategy aims to strengthen democracy and governance, to support a large civil society program that fosters democracy at the local level, and to support sustained private sector growth and economic integration with Europe through broad-based policy reform. Visit their website ...


A boy drinks from a water fountain provided by USAIDWater Means Life in Macedonia

Before the Veles water supply project was implemented, the homes of the town’s happy children were at times without water for days at a time, and even when water was available it was usually insufficient due to lack of water pressure in that hilly neighborhood. Read more ...


Windows at the Health Center for Children and WomenSerbia Heating and Energy Efficiency Program

In the immediate aftermath of the resignation of President Milosevic in October 2000, the new government of Serbia faced critical shortages of electricity in large part caused by extremely low prices that artificially increased demand. Serbia’s use of electric heating is much higher than elsewhere, where it is usually more expensive than other heating methods. In March 2001, USAID funded a Heating and Energy Efficiency program to help citizens deal with energy shortages as well as with the large increases in prices that were widely understood to be inevitable. Read more ...


Group photo of members of ERE, IURC and NARUCIndiana Utility Authority Signs Partnership Agreement with Albanian Electricity Authority

The Electricity Regulatory Authority of Albania (ERE) and the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) today signed a memorandum of understanding cementing a partnership designed to aid Albania in restructuring and reforming its energy sector. Read more ...


USAID/Russia Website screenshotUSAID/Russia Announces Launch of its New Website

USAID has operated in Russia since 1992. We have worked in close collaboration with Russian partners from federal, regional, and municipal governments, non-governmental and non-commercial organizations, and the private sector. We are proud of the partnerships we have forged - and proud of the important results achieved under our joint programs throughout this vast country. Visit their website ...


An elderly woman enjoys the water supplySouthern Serbia: Sowing Seeds of Change

The Presevo Valley is a remote finger of Serbia located between Bulgaria to the east, Macedonia to the south, and Kosovo to the west. Its gently rolling farmland lies nestled between mountains to the north that separate it from the rest of Serbia, even higher ranges on the east and west that demarcate its respective boundaries with Bulgaria and Kosovo, and a broad plain it shares with Macedonia to the south. The area is flecked with a few major towns and numerous small hamlets which are generally either ethnic Albanian or Serb. Read more ...


6 Macedonia education experts at a school in SeattleUSAID Program Brings Macedonia Education Experts to Seattle

Local education experts from Macedonia arrived in Seattle, Washington on December 8 for a week-long study tour to the United States sponsored by the USAID. A team of four education consultants will be visiting Seattle, Washington from December 8 to December 13, 2002 to examine various alternatives in the education sector and to exchange ideas and concepts with educational counterparts in the United States. The team members chosen for this program are all well-known experts in the field of educational reform in Macedonia. Read more ...


Croatian Officials in the middle of the ConferenceUSAID, Cleveland State University Bring Croatian Officials to Ohio

USAID and the Unger Croatia Center for Local Government Leadership at Cleveland State University’s Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs sponsored a two-week conference for local government officials from Croatia on “Citizen Participation in Local Government” from November 30 to December 14, 2002. Read more ...


Kosovo Prime Minister Meets With USAID Assistant AdministratorKosovo Prime Minister Meets With USAID Assistant Administrator

Dr. Kent R. Hill, USAID Assistant Administrator for Europe and Eurasia, met with Kosovo Prime Minister Dr. Bajram Rexhepi and Minister of Economy and Finance Ali Sadriu on Wednesday at the USAID headquarters in Washington. Read more ...


AA/EE Dr. Kent R. HillVideo: Dr. Kent R. Hill in a Television Interview

Assistant Administrator Dr. Kent R. Hill appeared on The Editors, a half-hour public television program in Toledo, Ohio. The discussion included wide-ranging topics such as the growing HIV/AIDS epidemic, services of the missions, USAID's relationship with the State Department, how the fall of communism affected USAID's foreign aid policies, and much, much more. Watch the interview ...


Two millionth  land title presented to Rusudan Pavliashvili in Akhalgori, GeorgiaLand Title Reform - Akhalgori, Georgia

For Rusudan Pavliashvili, it was going to be a big day. She stood with scores of her neighbors in the shade of the tall poplar trees sheltering from the hot July sun. They waited quietly, almost reverently in front of the run-down municipal building for what promised to be a truly memorable event. Today, the land that Stalin and the Bolsheviks had taken away decades earlier, was about to be given back to her by the Government of Georgia. Read more ...


Brock Bierman assists with sheep distributionThe Building Blocks of International Relations
(Read the write-up in the Bowling Green News, 9/12/02)

As we approached the airport the scene from above appeared one of tranquility and beauty. Small villages sprawled throughout a rural landscape, country houses with tiled roofs and farm animals roaming in nearby fields. Read more ...


Recipient of earthquake assistance - ArmeniaU.S. Foreign Assistance Makes a Difference

Imagine living in a country where you could not own property: you could not buy or sell a home or leave it to your children; you could not own the land you farmed; you could not own the property on which you did business. Indeed, you would have a very hard time doing any kind of business at all, as there would be no banking system as we know it, no possibility of getting a mortgage or other credit, no judicial system to enforce a contract. Read more ...


Asia-Plus: The First Independent Radio Station Registered in the Tajik Capital

On August 28, 2002, three and a half years after the independent news agency and production house Asia-Plus first applied for a broadcasting license, the government of Tajikistan finally granted the radio station the right to operate. Asia-Plus Radio is the first non-state radio station broadcasting in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe. Two other independent radio stations in Dushanbe received licenses on this date, but neither has started broadcasting yet. Read more ...


Controlling Conflict in Central Asia

What we now know as the sovereign territories of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan were created by Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin in the 1920s to divide and conquer the Central Asian peoples. The artificial boundaries separated communities, created ethnic enclaves, and disrupted patterns of trade and movement. Read more ...

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