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Advocacy
is a feature often associated with NGOs and civil society, but
many also have the capacity to produce compelling and valuable
research, which underpins their advocacy work. This section carries
examples of recent civil society and NGO research.
Reality of Aid 2004 Report: Focus on Governance and Human Rights
in International Cooperation
Reality of Aid Network - June 2004
The findings
in the Reality of Aid 2004 report - a North/South non-government
initiative looking at aid priorities and policies - unveil how
resources for poverty reduction are being diverted to pay for
donors' security interests. Read how NGOs have scrutinized the
benchmarks - good governance and human rights - for management
and coordination of aid and discovered that they are highly inconsistent
and political in their application. (read)
An Ounce of Prevention: The Failure of G8 Policy on Armed Conflicts
World Vision - June 2004
This report
focuses on the human, social and economic costs that violent conflict
has wreaked in sixteen different contexts that have not had the
high media profile of Iraq. World Vision highlights the suffering
of post-conflict recovery experienced by these countries (i.e.,
low human development, high indebtedness, disease and poor economic
prospects) and puts forth preventative measures to halt the exacerbation
of current conflicts or the emergence of new ones. (read)
Understanding Urban Poverty: What the Poverty Reduction Papers
Tell Us
International Institute for Environmental Development - 2004
Diana Mitlin
This paper
reviews 23 Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) to consider
how they define and measure urban poverty and thereby assess the
extent to which they consider urban poverty. Many countries believe
their poverty estimates do not fully capture the level of urban
poverty. "Pockets of poverty" within urban areas may
be increasing and inequality may be higher in urban areas than
in rural areas. This paper is part of a Working Paper Series on
Poverty Reduction in Urban Areas dedicated to showcasing the important
roles that local institutions have (or can have) in contributing
to poverty reduction in urban areas. (read)
Public Opinion and HIV/AIDS: Facing Up to the Future?
Southern African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN) - April 2004
Large proportions
of people in Eastern and Southern Africa have lost family or friends
to AIDS, or care for sick family members. Yet despite exposure
to the pandemic, this article finds that citizens are undecided
about whether their governments should divert scarce resources
from these and other important priorities to fight the AIDS epidemic
in their country. (read)
To Lend or to Grant? A Critical View of the IMF and the World
Bank's approach to debt sustainability analysis for Low-Income
Countries
Catholic Fund for Overseas Development (CAFOD) - April 2004
If the Millennium
Development Goals are to be met, the international community will
need to recast financing instruments around these agreed targets.
In its latest working paper, CAFOD argues that the World Bank
and the International Monetary Fund need to incorporate a wider
set of human development considerations when assessing the creditworthiness
of Low Income Countries (LICs). (read)
Peacekeeping in West Africa: A Regional Report
Refugees International - June 2004
Regional cooperation
is particularly important in the design and execution of programmes
to disarm, demobilize and retrain soldiers; interdict weapons
shipments; and halt the cross-border movement of combatants. In
its study, Refugees International focuses on the need to coordinate
separate UN operations in Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Ivory
Coast. However, the report notes that a regional peacekeeping
approach should also apply to East Africa, where several peacekeeping
operations are currently active. (read)
The UN Human Rights Norms for Business: Towards Legal Accountability
Amnesty International - 2004
This booklet
provides an introduction to the UN Human Rights Norms for Business.
It answers a number of questions about the Norms and their legal
status and includes an overview of the drafting process, details
on their implementation and views on their feasibility for the
private sector. (read)
The Price of Power: Poverty, Climate Change, the Coming Energy
Crisis and the Renewable Revolution
New Economics Foundation - 2004
Lack of access
to essential energy is condemning over a billion people to grinding
poverty, while climate change triggered by our addiction to fossil
fuels is threatening the wellbeing of billions more. Read how
faced with such a looming energy crash, the huge potential of
renewable energy for the developing world is underexploited. (read)
IBFAN's
Latest Report: Breaking the Rules, Stretching the Rules 2004
International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) -- May 2004
The International
Baby Food Action Network's (IBFAN) latest report -- Breaking the
Rules, Stretching the Rules 2004 -- provides evidence of violations
of the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes
and subsequent resolutions. Based on the results of worldwide
monitoring, the report analyses the promotional practices of 16
transnational baby food companies and 14 bottle and teat companies
in 69 countries. (read)
2015 Watch:
The EU's Contributions to the Millennium Development Goals
Alliance 2015 - May 2004
A new report
released by Alliance 2015 reveals that while the European Union
is the world's largest donor, its overseas aid programme is performing
poorly in terms of supporting, or reaching the globally agreed
upon Millennium Development Goals. Assessing the EU on Millennium
Goal 8 - the creation of a global partnership for development
between North and South - Alliance 2015 has found that there is
a big gap between policy and implementation, between theory and
reality, between rhetoric and results. (read)
An Action
Plan to Prevent Brain Drain: Building Equitable Health Systems
in Africa
Physicians for Human Rights - June 2004
Physicians
for Human Rights' new report exposes the hardships facing Africa's
health system as its doctors, nurses and pharmacists flee the
continent in search of higher wages. The report demands reimbursement
for the African countries that have paid for the education of
the departing health care workers; calls on rich countries and
international organizations to send money to African health care
workers to boost salaries; and demands the provision of treatment
to HIV infected health care professionals. (read)
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