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Rodrigo Bonilla

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About the Contributors
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Ian Smillie, an Ottawa-based Canadian, has worked for more than thirty years in international development as a practitioner and writer. Recent publications include The Alms Bazaar: Altruism under Fire—Non-profit Organizations and International Development, and Relief and Development: The Struggle for Synergy, a monograph in the Humanitarianism and War Project series.

Mike Leffert has reported on Central America for ten years as an independent journalist. He lived and worked in Guatemala for six years, writing for a number of international publications and wire services, including Time and the Associated Press.

Stephen C. Lubkemann is a postdoctoral fellow at the Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute for International Studies and the Population Studies and Training Center at Brown University. He has lived and worked in Mozambique, and his doctoral dissertation was on Mozambican refugee migration.

Kathy Mangones served for ten years as executive director of the Association Haïtienne des Agences Bénévoles, an NGO umbrella group. Since then she has worked as an independent development consultant in Haiti.

Arjuna Parakrama is a former senior fellow at the United States Institute for Peace and a former dean of arts at Colombo University. He is director of the Centre for Policy Alternatives in Sri Lanka and has been instrumental in the design and implementation of innovative community-activist training programs throughout the country.

Goran Todorović began the 1990s as a Yugoslavian journalist and finished the decade having run CARE's emergency relief program in Sarajevo throughout the war. He subsequently founded and managed the Bosnian NGO Foundation, which aims to foster the development of Bosnian civil society. He currently works for CARE in East Timor.

Thomas Turay, a longtime Sierra Leonean NGO worker, is currently a lecturer at the Coady International Institute in Nova Scotia.







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