IDEAS home Printed from https://ideas.repec.org/f/pdi642.html
   My authors  Follow this author

Ranil Dissanayake

Personal Details

First Name:Ranil
Middle Name:
Last Name:Dissanayake
Suffix:
RePEc Short-ID:pdi642
[This author has chosen not to make the email address public]

Affiliation

Center for Global Development (CGD)

Washington, District of Columbia (United States)
https://www.cgdev.org/
RePEc:edi:cgdevus (more details at EDIRC)

Research output

as
Jump to: Working papers

Working papers

  1. Ranil Dissanayake & Rachael Calleja, 2024. "What Could the UK’s Future Development Structure Look Like?," Policy Papers 319, Center for Global Development.
  2. Anthony McDonnell & Ranil Dissanayake & Katherine Klemperer & Flavio Toxvaerd & Michael Sharland, 2024. "The Economics of Antibiotic Resistance," Working Papers 682, Center for Global Development.
  3. Brian Webster & Charles Kenny & Ranil Dissanayake, 2023. "Is Manufacturing Destiny? On the Dynamics of Future Sectoral Shares and Development," Working Papers 662, Center for Global Development.
  4. Ranil Dissanayake & Mark Lowcock, 2023. "Setting the Compass for Eliminating World Poverty: The Department for International Development 1997-2003," Policy Papers 310, Center for Global Development.
  5. Ranil Dissanayake & Mark Lowcock, 2023. "Why Did Labour Create the Department for International Development?," Policy Papers 297, Center for Global Development.
  6. Ranil Dissanayake & Mark Lowcock, 2023. "Progress in Eliminating World Poverty: The Department for International Development 2003-2010," Policy Papers 317, Center for Global Development.
  7. Ranil Dissanayake, 2023. "GPGs and Where to Fund Them: The Startling Implications of Financing Global Public Good Provision for the Multilateral Development Banks," Policy Papers 303, Center for Global Development.
  8. Ranil Dissanayake & Euan Ritchie, 2022. "A Higher Bar or an Obstacle Course? Peer Review and Organizational Decision-Making in an International Development Bureaucracy," Working Papers 616, Center for Global Development.
  9. Ranil Dissanayake & Bernat Camps, 2022. "Building a Portfolio of Pull Financing Mechanisms for Climate and Development," Policy Papers 273, Center for Global Development.
  10. Ranil Dissanayake, 2021. "Navigating the Straits: Pull Financing for Climate and Development Outcomes," Policy Papers 239, Center for Global Development.
  11. Ranil Dissanayake & Atousa Tahmasebi, 2021. "Some Unpleasant ODA Arithmetic," Policy Papers 236, Center for Global Development.

More information

Research fields, statistics, top rankings, if available.

Statistics

Access and download statistics for all items

NEP Fields

NEP is an announcement service for new working papers, with a weekly report in each of many fields. This author has had 5 papers announced in NEP. These are the fields, ordered by number of announcements, along with their dates. If the author is listed in the directory of specialists for this field, a link is also provided.
  1. NEP-HPE: History and Philosophy of Economics (2) 2024-01-15 2024-01-15. Author is listed
  2. NEP-PPM: Project, Program and Portfolio Management (2) 2023-10-23 2024-01-15. Author is listed
  3. NEP-ENV: Environmental Economics (1) 2024-01-15
  4. NEP-HIS: Business, Economic and Financial History (1) 2024-01-15
  5. NEP-MAC: Macroeconomics (1) 2024-02-19

Corrections

All material on this site has been provided by the respective publishers and authors. You can help correct errors and omissions. For general information on how to correct material on RePEc, see these instructions.

To update listings or check citations waiting for approval, Ranil Dissanayake should log into the RePEc Author Service.

To make corrections to the bibliographic information of a particular item, find the technical contact on the abstract page of that item. There, details are also given on how to add or correct references and citations.

To link different versions of the same work, where versions have a different title, use this form. Note that if the versions have a very similar title and are in the author's profile, the links will usually be created automatically.

Please note that most corrections can take a couple of weeks to filter through the various RePEc services.

IDEAS is a RePEc service. RePEc uses bibliographic data supplied by the respective publishers.