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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... 2010 MDG Review Summit

20 - 22 September 2010

Five years from the 2015 deadline for achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), world leaders at the United Nations MDG Summit in New York must agree on how best to accelerate progress. There is no time for scepticism or naivety. The MDGs need critical friends – friends who acknowledge their value, recognise their failings and have something sensible to say about next steps. ODI has produced a range of materials that provide such critical friendship.

Outputs

A new mood at the MDG Summit

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 22 September 2010
Breathe the atmosphere here at the UN Summit on the Millennium Development Goals this week and, for the first time in several years, there's a whiff of hope. Less of the language of ‘Development Emergency', and more encouraging numbers – on just how many more girls are attending school, for example, how many children are being immunised, and how many households now have clean water.

Why the MDGs need critical friends

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 20 September 2010
It is easy to criticise the Millennium Development Goals . Some consider them, at best, naïve and, at worst, a sop to misguided global welfarism. Not surprisingly, there are plenty of sceptics who predict a damning failure to reach the goals by the 2015 deadline.

World leaders in New York this week need to prove them wrong. What the MDGs need now is not scepticism or naivety, but critical friends.

Equity and the MDGs: Closing gaps to accelerate progress

Event - Public event - 7 September 2010 12:00 - 13:30 (GMT+01 (BST))

Five years from the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) deadline, there is growing debate on how to accel­erate progress in human development – particularly around the 2010 MDG review proc­ess.  Will promoting equity in human development by reducing the gap between the haves and the have-nots accelerate progress towards the MDGs?

Growth, equity and the MDGs: supporting redistributive and inclusive growth

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 9 June 2010

There is strong consensus that growth is important to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). We know that growth tends to be positively correlated with improvements in income, and that there is a strong link between growth and poverty reduction. Indeed, high growth in China and India has resulted in considerable reductions in global income poverty, and strong global progress on meeting MDG 1.

Economic growth and the MDGs

Publication - Briefing papers - 6 June 2010
Claire Melamed, Kate Higgins and Andy Sumner

This Briefing Paper argues that equitable distribution of the benefits of growth, in the form of progressive taxation and pro-poor public spending on health, education and social protection, is an essential part of how growth contributes to the MDGs.

Overview
Successes, failures and lessons learnt on the Millennium Development Goals

Five years from the 2015 deadline for achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), world leaders at the United Nations MDG Summit in New York must agree on how best to accelerate progress. There is no time for scepticism or naivety. The MDGs need critical friends – friends who acknowledge their value, recognise their failings and have something sensible to say about next steps.

ODI has produced a range of materials that provide such critical friendship. The MDG Report Card, for example, published by ODI and partners confirms the value of time bound and achievable goals. It reveals impressive progress on poverty reduction, access to education, closing the gender gap in primary education, and improving access to clean water.

It also recognises the failings, however. Progress has slowed, stalled or gone into reverse in some areas, often as a result of gross inequity. Those who have benefited most from progress are those who were already better off. In many countries, national progress on the MDGs excludes the poorest, including those in rural areas and, very often, poor women and girls.

This chimes with additional ODI research related to the MDGs. Our key resources include publications on three ‘fundamentals’ that are essential for the achievement of the MDGs:

  • equitable economic growth to support the human development of the poorest people
  • policies and programmes to tackle the gender discrimination that hampers progress
  • effective and gender-sensitive social protection, including cash transfers and public work programmes, that are backed by investments in health, education and agriculture
Growth, Poverty and Inequality
Centre for Aid and Public Expenditure
Social Development
Social Protection
Venue: 
UN Headquarters, New York, US