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Shaping policy for development

An overview of Lagoro IDP camp in Kitgum District, northern Uganda, 20 May 2007. Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Fri, 11/16/2012 - 07:04 -- Anonymous (not verified)

ODI On... Call to Action on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 2008

25 September 2008 00:00 - 23:59

Call to Action on the Millennium Development Goals aims to accelerate progress towards meeting these global targets, bringing together heads of state and other key figures in development for a high-level event at the United Nations Headquarters on 25 September 2008.

Outputs

Getting the MDG fundamentals right

Event - Public event - 24 September 2008 08:00 - 10:30 (GMT+00)

The objective of this side event around the September 25th MDG High Level event is to draw attention to the fundamentals which underlie the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). If these are well addressed, the MDGs will be achieved.

Neil Bird

MDGs and the environment: Are environmental institutions 'fit for purpose'?

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 10 September 2008

Millennium Development Goal 7 is to ensure environmental sustainability. There are intimate links between global commitments and local efforts on environmental sustainability. Achieving this goal, therefore, depends heavily on action at both the national and international level. There is a growing recognition that institutions – agencies and other bodies working on environment issues – matter in securing the linkages between these levels. The role of national government administration is critical to environmental results.

Peter Newborne

Sanitation and the MDGs: Making the politics work

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 9 September 2008

The world is not on track to reach the sanitation target of the Millennium Development Goals: a halving of the proportion of people without access to improved sanitation by the year 2015. Sanitation and Hygiene (S&H) policies, backed by sound epidemiological evidence, and supported by solid socio-economic arguments for increased investment, are still being overlooked by many governments.  Technical solutions exist, as well as broad agreement that they should be used to support demand. Recent research suggests that the problem lies in failures in sanitation policy-making.

The MDGs - challenges and opportunities: Bangladesh Perspectives

Event - Public event - 9 September 2008 09:00 - 10:30 (GMT+00)

Dr. A. B. Mirza Azizul Islam, Honourable Adviser (Minister) for Finance and Planning, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh, will present the successes and challenges of MDG’s in Bangladesh and the actions for the international community to accelerate progress towards meeting the goals.

Simon Maxwell

Inspiring action to reduce poverty

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 8 September 2008

This Opinion, drawn from the overview of the ODI Annual Report 2008, sets out the ODI priorities and concerns over the past year, and its future agenda.

Overview

The Call to Action on the Millennium Development Goals aims to accelerate progress towards meeting these global targets, bringing together heads of state and other key figures in development for a high-level event at the United Nations Headquarters on 25 September 2008.

In ODI's Annual Report 2008, Andrew Shepherd discusses the importance of these goals. Here is an excerpt.

"The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are the most determined effort in history to galvanise international action around one set of development targets. The goals themselves are no-brainers: basic rights for all by the year 2015, with clear targets to be reached along the way.

However, we are just seven years from the 2015 MDG deadline. As the credit crunch and rising prices threaten to distract leaders from their global commitments, now is the time to regroup around the MDGs, looking beyond 2015 and changing direction if necessary.

There has been some progress, particularly in countries where commitment from the top is backed by strong policies and public expenditure. Examples include Vietnam, a one-party state, and Ghana, a multiparty democracy. Progress is also enhanced when efforts are made across a number of mutually reinforcing goals. Improvements in girls’ education, for example, can boost demand for reproductive health services, and both can dent intergenerational poverty.

Economic growth helps, and could put the world on track for the MDG target of halving the proportion of people living on less than one dollar a day. Growth means more tax revenue and resources for public expenditure, if the politics of public expenditure permit.

However, the challenges remain formidable. They include rising food and oil prices and accelerating climate change, as well as the continuing threats of chronic poverty, growing inequality, poor governance and the extreme problems facing the most fragile states, where the necessary leadership – and the basics of development – are often lacking.

Venue: 
United Nations Headquarters