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Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt, MDGs

Showing 21-30 of 449 results

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  • Document

    Post 2015: how emerging economies shape the relevance of a new agenda

    Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik / German Development Institute (GDI), 2013
    The rise of emerging economies has fundamentally changed the context in which negotiations on a post-2015 agreement take place. The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were an agenda driven by traditional donors and North-South relations – a model of global relations that is outdated today.
  • Document

    Progress for children: beyond averages - learning from the MDGs

    United Nations Children's Fund, 2015
    This eleventh edition of Progress for Children is UNICEF’s final report on the child-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It presents latest data that show while the MDGs helped drive tremendous advances in the lives of the world’s children, development efforts in the past 15 years failed to reach millions of the most disadvantaged.
  • Document

    Integrating population issues into sustainable development, including the post- 2015 development agenda: a concise report

    Department of Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations, 2015
    In designing and implementing the new development agenda, post-2105, it is important to understand and account for the demographic changes that are likely to unfold over the next 15 years and how such changes are expected to contribute to or hinder the achievement of the sustainable development goals.
  • Document

    Zero draft: Transforming our world by 2030: A new agenda for global action

    2015
    This is the zero draft of the outcome document for the UN Summit to adopt the Post-2015 Development Agenda published on 1st June 2015. The draft covers the four components of the Agenda:
  • Document

    Reasonable goals for reducing poverty in Africa: targets for the post-2015 MDGs and Agenda 2063

    Institute for Security Studies, 2015
    The eradication of extreme poverty is a key component in the post-2015 Millennium Development Goals process and the African Union’s Agenda 2063. This paper uses the International Futures forecasting system to explore this goal and finds that many African states are unlikely to make this target by 2030, even when modelling a package of aggressive poverty reduction interventions.
  • Organisation

    World Centre for Sustainable Development / RIO+ Centre

    The World Centre for Sustainable Development (RIO+ Centre) was established as a legacy of the Rio+20 Conference to keep the commitment to inclusive and sustainable development alive.
  • Document

    China’s propositions and recommendations on the Post-2015 agenda

    China International Development Research Network, 2014
    With the MDGs coming to the end by 2015, the discussions about the Post-2015 Development Agenda in the international world are becoming more and more vigorous. Many national governments, research institutes, NGOs, as well as international organizations represented by the UN have attached great importance to this.
  • Document

    Sustainable Development Goals must consider security, justice and inequality to achieve social justice

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2015
    Security and social justice have a crucial role to play in the newly proposed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The goals, which aim to establish a safe, sustainable and just society for all, require a truly transformative approach, one that places inclusivity, safety, equity and justice at the centre of a global pursuit for sustainable development.
  • Document

    Understanding the Rising Powers' contribution to the Sustainable Development Goals

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2015
    Rising powers such as Brazil, India and China have been criticised for being obstructive in the negotiations on the post-2015 development agenda. The start of the United Nations (UN) negotiations saw high expectations for the role of these countries in shaping the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This leadership has not materialised.
  • Document

    Achieving the MDGs: at what cost?

    HLSP Institute, UK, 2009
    More spending is needed if progress towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) is to be accelerated. Extra funding is vitally important, particularly for the poorest countries, but it can come with risks. Those working to achieve the health MDGs cannot ignore the macroeconomic implications of injecting additional external resources into weak economies.

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