Happy New Year 2023 to all! The bad news is the world has entered a n a world recession in 2023. The good news is after the world crisis, automatically there will be a world recovery. Take the opportunity to correct 2023 trajectory with opportunity and hope. Happy New Year 2023 to all. The BIRD
Sustainable development goals...ak 07.07.16arijitkundu88
this is a ppt of sustainable development goals mostly i covered the part associated with medical and health part. i also tried to cover millennium development goals. I hope it will help you all.
The document outlines 17 global goals for sustainable development that were agreed upon by countries in 2015, including goals to end poverty, hunger, and inequality; promote health, education, gender equality, clean water and sanitation; ensure access to affordable and clean energy; take action on climate change; and strengthen global partnerships. It provides the goals, targets, and indicators that will be used to measure progress toward achieving the goals by 2030. The United Nations Development Programme will play a key role in supporting countries' implementation of the sustainable development agenda.
This document discusses strategies for achieving SDG 1 of ending poverty at the local level. It outlines 7 targets and 14 indicators for SDG 1. It emphasizes the important role of local actors like self-help groups, panchayats, and civil society organizations in collaborating with government programs to increase livelihood opportunities, converge anti-poverty initiatives, and provide social security for vulnerable populations. The document also stresses the need to build resilience to environmental, economic, and social disasters through local disaster management and tracking impacts on poor communities. Mobilizing adequate resources from various sources to implement poverty elimination policies is also highlighted.
SDG Workshops of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals for Team Building, Leadership Training and Management for All Employees and Company Owners exclusively design for all 17 SDG Advocates by Ambassador Zara Jane Juan, the TV Host, Journalist, Book Author and Public Speaker of Peace Innovation fCAT as immediate SDG Actions of Corporate and Individual Advocates to achieve the 17 goals from now until 2030. To reserve a workshop date, please call her WhatsApp 0945.753.7525 or email: sdgsactions@gmail.com <> wellnesspilipinasinternational@gmail.com and have a 30minute meeting with the author and speaker via zoom to discuss your SDG actions and match the corresponding team building workshop and leadership training or management seminars for your company and organizations
The document discusses the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by the UN in 2015 to be achieved by 2030. The SDGs include goals to end poverty and hunger, ensure health and well-being, provide quality education, achieve gender equality, and promote sustainable industry and infrastructure. Progress will be assessed in 2020, 2025, and 2030. The SDGs replace the Millennium Development Goals and apply universally to all countries.
The High Level Panel on the Post-2015 Development Agenda today released “A New Global Partnership: Eradicate Poverty and Transform Economies through Sustainable Development,” a report which sets out a universal agenda to eradicate extreme poverty from the face of the earth by 2030, and deliver on the promise of sustainable development. The report calls upon the world to rally around a new Global Partnership that offers hope and a role to every person in the world.
This document discusses housing and community planning in the context of achieving national development goals and sustainable development goals. It outlines several goals adopted by the UN, including ensuring access to adequate and affordable housing and upgrading slums. For India's goal of sustainable cities and communities, the document outlines India's approach, which includes reforms to the real estate sector through RERA, the Atal Mission for urban infrastructure development, and the Smart Cities Mission for sustainable urbanization.
Sustainable development goals...ak 07.07.16arijitkundu88
this is a ppt of sustainable development goals mostly i covered the part associated with medical and health part. i also tried to cover millennium development goals. I hope it will help you all.
The document outlines 17 global goals for sustainable development that were agreed upon by countries in 2015, including goals to end poverty, hunger, and inequality; promote health, education, gender equality, clean water and sanitation; ensure access to affordable and clean energy; take action on climate change; and strengthen global partnerships. It provides the goals, targets, and indicators that will be used to measure progress toward achieving the goals by 2030. The United Nations Development Programme will play a key role in supporting countries' implementation of the sustainable development agenda.
This document discusses strategies for achieving SDG 1 of ending poverty at the local level. It outlines 7 targets and 14 indicators for SDG 1. It emphasizes the important role of local actors like self-help groups, panchayats, and civil society organizations in collaborating with government programs to increase livelihood opportunities, converge anti-poverty initiatives, and provide social security for vulnerable populations. The document also stresses the need to build resilience to environmental, economic, and social disasters through local disaster management and tracking impacts on poor communities. Mobilizing adequate resources from various sources to implement poverty elimination policies is also highlighted.
SDG Workshops of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals for Team Building, Leadership Training and Management for All Employees and Company Owners exclusively design for all 17 SDG Advocates by Ambassador Zara Jane Juan, the TV Host, Journalist, Book Author and Public Speaker of Peace Innovation fCAT as immediate SDG Actions of Corporate and Individual Advocates to achieve the 17 goals from now until 2030. To reserve a workshop date, please call her WhatsApp 0945.753.7525 or email: sdgsactions@gmail.com <> wellnesspilipinasinternational@gmail.com and have a 30minute meeting with the author and speaker via zoom to discuss your SDG actions and match the corresponding team building workshop and leadership training or management seminars for your company and organizations
The document discusses the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by the UN in 2015 to be achieved by 2030. The SDGs include goals to end poverty and hunger, ensure health and well-being, provide quality education, achieve gender equality, and promote sustainable industry and infrastructure. Progress will be assessed in 2020, 2025, and 2030. The SDGs replace the Millennium Development Goals and apply universally to all countries.
The High Level Panel on the Post-2015 Development Agenda today released “A New Global Partnership: Eradicate Poverty and Transform Economies through Sustainable Development,” a report which sets out a universal agenda to eradicate extreme poverty from the face of the earth by 2030, and deliver on the promise of sustainable development. The report calls upon the world to rally around a new Global Partnership that offers hope and a role to every person in the world.
This document discusses housing and community planning in the context of achieving national development goals and sustainable development goals. It outlines several goals adopted by the UN, including ensuring access to adequate and affordable housing and upgrading slums. For India's goal of sustainable cities and communities, the document outlines India's approach, which includes reforms to the real estate sector through RERA, the Atal Mission for urban infrastructure development, and the Smart Cities Mission for sustainable urbanization.
The document discusses the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which are a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity for all people by 2030. The 17 goals build on the Millennium Development Goals and cover new issues like climate change, economic inequality, and justice. The goals are interconnected and can only be achieved through global partnership and cooperation.
Join PARXTC Sustainable Development Goals Human Rights and Racial Justice Str...InternationalMediaDi
The document discusses joining a human rights and racial justice strategy to promote and accelerate achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the US and worldwide by 2030. It notes that racial justice is key to leaving no one behind, as evidence shows Black, Latinx, and Indigenous communities in the US often lack access to opportunities and have less life expectancy. When states are scored on delivering the SDGs to underserved racial groups, no state is on track to achieve the goals by 2030. Overcoming challenges like COVID-19 requires empowering communities through partnerships between organizations, businesses, and civil society.
Development finance impact project oscarOscarnartey
The document discusses development finance and its relation to achieving the UN's Sustainable Development Goals. It focuses on the first two goals of ending poverty and ending hunger. It provides facts and targets for each goal, noting that achieving them will require significant financial resources mobilized domestically. The document argues that Ghana should identify areas of comparative advantage like agriculture and promote private investment in these areas to engage more people and expand the tax base. It also calls for reforming Ghana's public sector payroll to eliminate "ghost workers" and save money.
SOURCES OF AIR POLLUTION IN BANGLADESH With SDG Developmentworkbkkictclass
The document discusses Bangladesh's involvement in implementing the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) from 2016-2030. It provides background on the SDGs, which were adopted by 136 UN member states in 2015. The SDGs consist of 17 goals, 169 targets, and 232 indicators to address urgent global challenges over the next 15 years. The document notes that Bangladesh proposed 11 goals, 58 targets and 241 indicators during the SDG negotiation process. It emphasizes Bangladesh will work to locally implement the global SDGs through programs and policies to achieve the vision of sustainable development by 2030.
This document outlines the socio-cultural dimension of sustainable development. It discusses key concepts like the socio-cultural aspects of sustainable development and definitions of poverty and sustainable development. It also lists international organizations that work on these issues like the IPCC, UNESCO, and WFP. Additionally, it provides details on programs and projects from the Philippines that promote the socio-cultural aspects of sustainable development, such as education initiatives, social protection programs, and local arts and culture projects funded by the NCCA.
- IDDRR 2023 key message
Poverty, inequality and discrimination are causes and consequences of growing disaster risk.
Inequality creates the conditions that render people exposed and vulnerable to disasters. Disasters also disproportionately impact the poorest and most at risk people, thus worsening inequality. Reducing vulnerability to disasters requires addressing these dimensions
By 2030, with current climate projections, the world will face some 560 disasters per year. An additional estimated 37.6 million people will be living in conditions of extreme poverty due to the impacts of climate change and disasters by 2030. A “worst case” scenario of climate change and disasters will push an additional 100.7 million into poverty by 2030.
We can curb the destructive power of hazards—in other words, stop them from turning into disasters—through careful and coordinated planning that is designed to reduce people’s exposure and vulnerability to harm.
Greater investments are needed in the collection and use of disaggregated data, both to better understand disproportionate disaster impacts and exposure, and to inform resilience-building plans.
The National Development Plan aims to eliminate poverty and reduce inequality in South Africa by 2030. It prioritizes growing the economy through job creation, education, healthcare access, infrastructure development, and social programs. The Eastern Cape Provincial Development Plan shares these goals and focuses on reducing poverty, inequality, and unemployment in the province by 2030.
The document discusses different approaches to rural development:
1. Past anti-poverty efforts in the Philippines from the 1960s to 1990s by successive presidents met with little success, as described by one observer.
2. A theory of change approach helps identify effective solutions to address the underlying causes of problems hindering progress, considering the UN's comparative advantages.
3. Key principles for developing a theory of change include developing it consultatively to reflect stakeholders' understanding, grounding it in evidence, and supporting continuous learning.
I am currently studying International Relations in Mexico. Not a lot of people in Mexico can understand English very well so what I tried to do was to simplify the information regarding the sustainable development goals. My target audience for this document is students who have basic knowledge of the international system. I added some maps that include some important statistics regarding these goals so people can understand why the SDGs are important to achieve. I also added their background, what they are, how they could be achieved among other things . I tried to keep it as simple and understandable as posible without leaving important details.
(2016 Report) 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development GoalsDr Lendy Spires
The document summarizes the process by which the UN established the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It describes how Indigenous Peoples actively engaged through the Indigenous Peoples' Major Group to advocate for their rights and priorities to be included. While the final SDGs included some references to Indigenous Peoples, many key issues they proposed were not adequately addressed, such as their right to self-determined development and collective land rights. The document analyzes both the opportunities and disappointments of the SDGs for Indigenous Peoples and next steps for advocacy around implementation and indicators.
The document discusses the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) related to sustainable urban development, including goals around access to housing, transportation, inclusive urban planning, reducing environmental impacts of cities, and increasing access to public green spaces. It provides indicators to measure progress on each goal.
This document summarizes the key challenges around land tenure in Asia and the Pacific region. It identifies five main issues: 1) rapid urbanization is leading to informal settlements and insecure land rights, 2) changing rural demographics are impacting small landholders, 3) climate change and natural disasters threaten vulnerable groups, 4) women and indigenous peoples often lack secure land tenure, 5) weak land administration systems cannot keep up with demand. It argues for a flexible, fit-for-purpose approach to land administration that recognizes all legitimate tenure rights and supports sustainable development.
The document outlines targets for several UN sustainable development goals including:
Goal 1 - End poverty by eradicating extreme poverty and reducing poverty globally.
Goal 2 - End hunger by ensuring food security and nutrition and promoting sustainable agriculture.
Goal 3 - Ensure healthy lives and well-being for all by reducing disease and increasing access to healthcare.
Goal 4 - Ensure inclusive, equitable quality education by achieving education for all and promoting lifelong learning.
Goal 5 - Achieve gender equality and empower women and girls by ending discrimination and violence against women.
This document outlines the key concepts of sustainable development including its definition, branches, goals and conclusion. Sustainable development is defined as meeting human development goals while sustaining natural systems. It has three branches - environmental, economic, and societal. The goals include eliminating poverty and hunger, ensuring health and education, achieving gender equality, clean water/sanitation, affordable energy, economic growth, reduced inequality and more. The conclusion states sustainable development depends on efficient resource use and the future is in people's hands.
The report finds that progress towards achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals is off track. At the midway point to 2030, many SDG targets are moderately to severely off track. The report calls for urgent action in five key areas to rescue the SDGs, including recommitting to accelerated action, advancing policies to reduce poverty and inequality, strengthening national capacity and accountability, mobilizing resources for developing countries, and strengthening the UN development system.
Presentation on the millennium development goals for august 12th 2012AmbPaulLengar
The document discusses the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and Africa's progress toward achieving them. It notes that while some countries and regions in Africa are on track, sub-Saharan Africa overall is lagging behind due to challenges like weak economic growth, governance issues, conflict, and health crises like HIV/AIDS. It outlines several "quick win" and medium-term strategies African governments can implement to make faster progress on the MDGs, such as increasing access to education, health services, and infrastructure investments to promote inclusive economic growth and reduce poverty. Political commitment, partnerships, and empowering youth and women will be key to helping more of Africa achieve the MDGs.
Fin4 dev final project sd gs for youth and childrenErika D. Bruzonic
Young people, especially those who will become young adults during the 15-year time span covered by the SDGs have the inalienable right to be informed about this turning point in international development. With half of the world under the age of 30, it is crucial that this agenda puts young people at the forefront of change and development. These youngsters from around the world have already contributed to the post-2015 process in an unprecedented way, identifying and shaping the new development priorities – now they want to ensure they are seen as equal partners in their implementation and monitoring.
The document outlines the 17 Sustainable Development Goals agreed upon by 193 UN member states in 2015. The goals aim to reduce poverty and inequality, improve health and education, promote gender equality, ensure access to water and energy, support economic growth, protect the environment, and build stronger institutions by 2030. Key targets include eradicating extreme poverty, ending hunger and malnutrition, providing universal health coverage, achieving gender equality, and combating climate change through sustainable practices.
Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition 2024, by Libby...Donc Test
Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition 2024, by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia
The document discusses the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which are a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity for all people by 2030. The 17 goals build on the Millennium Development Goals and cover new issues like climate change, economic inequality, and justice. The goals are interconnected and can only be achieved through global partnership and cooperation.
Join PARXTC Sustainable Development Goals Human Rights and Racial Justice Str...InternationalMediaDi
The document discusses joining a human rights and racial justice strategy to promote and accelerate achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the US and worldwide by 2030. It notes that racial justice is key to leaving no one behind, as evidence shows Black, Latinx, and Indigenous communities in the US often lack access to opportunities and have less life expectancy. When states are scored on delivering the SDGs to underserved racial groups, no state is on track to achieve the goals by 2030. Overcoming challenges like COVID-19 requires empowering communities through partnerships between organizations, businesses, and civil society.
Development finance impact project oscarOscarnartey
The document discusses development finance and its relation to achieving the UN's Sustainable Development Goals. It focuses on the first two goals of ending poverty and ending hunger. It provides facts and targets for each goal, noting that achieving them will require significant financial resources mobilized domestically. The document argues that Ghana should identify areas of comparative advantage like agriculture and promote private investment in these areas to engage more people and expand the tax base. It also calls for reforming Ghana's public sector payroll to eliminate "ghost workers" and save money.
SOURCES OF AIR POLLUTION IN BANGLADESH With SDG Developmentworkbkkictclass
The document discusses Bangladesh's involvement in implementing the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) from 2016-2030. It provides background on the SDGs, which were adopted by 136 UN member states in 2015. The SDGs consist of 17 goals, 169 targets, and 232 indicators to address urgent global challenges over the next 15 years. The document notes that Bangladesh proposed 11 goals, 58 targets and 241 indicators during the SDG negotiation process. It emphasizes Bangladesh will work to locally implement the global SDGs through programs and policies to achieve the vision of sustainable development by 2030.
This document outlines the socio-cultural dimension of sustainable development. It discusses key concepts like the socio-cultural aspects of sustainable development and definitions of poverty and sustainable development. It also lists international organizations that work on these issues like the IPCC, UNESCO, and WFP. Additionally, it provides details on programs and projects from the Philippines that promote the socio-cultural aspects of sustainable development, such as education initiatives, social protection programs, and local arts and culture projects funded by the NCCA.
- IDDRR 2023 key message
Poverty, inequality and discrimination are causes and consequences of growing disaster risk.
Inequality creates the conditions that render people exposed and vulnerable to disasters. Disasters also disproportionately impact the poorest and most at risk people, thus worsening inequality. Reducing vulnerability to disasters requires addressing these dimensions
By 2030, with current climate projections, the world will face some 560 disasters per year. An additional estimated 37.6 million people will be living in conditions of extreme poverty due to the impacts of climate change and disasters by 2030. A “worst case” scenario of climate change and disasters will push an additional 100.7 million into poverty by 2030.
We can curb the destructive power of hazards—in other words, stop them from turning into disasters—through careful and coordinated planning that is designed to reduce people’s exposure and vulnerability to harm.
Greater investments are needed in the collection and use of disaggregated data, both to better understand disproportionate disaster impacts and exposure, and to inform resilience-building plans.
The National Development Plan aims to eliminate poverty and reduce inequality in South Africa by 2030. It prioritizes growing the economy through job creation, education, healthcare access, infrastructure development, and social programs. The Eastern Cape Provincial Development Plan shares these goals and focuses on reducing poverty, inequality, and unemployment in the province by 2030.
The document discusses different approaches to rural development:
1. Past anti-poverty efforts in the Philippines from the 1960s to 1990s by successive presidents met with little success, as described by one observer.
2. A theory of change approach helps identify effective solutions to address the underlying causes of problems hindering progress, considering the UN's comparative advantages.
3. Key principles for developing a theory of change include developing it consultatively to reflect stakeholders' understanding, grounding it in evidence, and supporting continuous learning.
I am currently studying International Relations in Mexico. Not a lot of people in Mexico can understand English very well so what I tried to do was to simplify the information regarding the sustainable development goals. My target audience for this document is students who have basic knowledge of the international system. I added some maps that include some important statistics regarding these goals so people can understand why the SDGs are important to achieve. I also added their background, what they are, how they could be achieved among other things . I tried to keep it as simple and understandable as posible without leaving important details.
(2016 Report) 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development GoalsDr Lendy Spires
The document summarizes the process by which the UN established the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It describes how Indigenous Peoples actively engaged through the Indigenous Peoples' Major Group to advocate for their rights and priorities to be included. While the final SDGs included some references to Indigenous Peoples, many key issues they proposed were not adequately addressed, such as their right to self-determined development and collective land rights. The document analyzes both the opportunities and disappointments of the SDGs for Indigenous Peoples and next steps for advocacy around implementation and indicators.
The document discusses the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) related to sustainable urban development, including goals around access to housing, transportation, inclusive urban planning, reducing environmental impacts of cities, and increasing access to public green spaces. It provides indicators to measure progress on each goal.
This document summarizes the key challenges around land tenure in Asia and the Pacific region. It identifies five main issues: 1) rapid urbanization is leading to informal settlements and insecure land rights, 2) changing rural demographics are impacting small landholders, 3) climate change and natural disasters threaten vulnerable groups, 4) women and indigenous peoples often lack secure land tenure, 5) weak land administration systems cannot keep up with demand. It argues for a flexible, fit-for-purpose approach to land administration that recognizes all legitimate tenure rights and supports sustainable development.
The document outlines targets for several UN sustainable development goals including:
Goal 1 - End poverty by eradicating extreme poverty and reducing poverty globally.
Goal 2 - End hunger by ensuring food security and nutrition and promoting sustainable agriculture.
Goal 3 - Ensure healthy lives and well-being for all by reducing disease and increasing access to healthcare.
Goal 4 - Ensure inclusive, equitable quality education by achieving education for all and promoting lifelong learning.
Goal 5 - Achieve gender equality and empower women and girls by ending discrimination and violence against women.
This document outlines the key concepts of sustainable development including its definition, branches, goals and conclusion. Sustainable development is defined as meeting human development goals while sustaining natural systems. It has three branches - environmental, economic, and societal. The goals include eliminating poverty and hunger, ensuring health and education, achieving gender equality, clean water/sanitation, affordable energy, economic growth, reduced inequality and more. The conclusion states sustainable development depends on efficient resource use and the future is in people's hands.
The report finds that progress towards achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals is off track. At the midway point to 2030, many SDG targets are moderately to severely off track. The report calls for urgent action in five key areas to rescue the SDGs, including recommitting to accelerated action, advancing policies to reduce poverty and inequality, strengthening national capacity and accountability, mobilizing resources for developing countries, and strengthening the UN development system.
Presentation on the millennium development goals for august 12th 2012AmbPaulLengar
The document discusses the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and Africa's progress toward achieving them. It notes that while some countries and regions in Africa are on track, sub-Saharan Africa overall is lagging behind due to challenges like weak economic growth, governance issues, conflict, and health crises like HIV/AIDS. It outlines several "quick win" and medium-term strategies African governments can implement to make faster progress on the MDGs, such as increasing access to education, health services, and infrastructure investments to promote inclusive economic growth and reduce poverty. Political commitment, partnerships, and empowering youth and women will be key to helping more of Africa achieve the MDGs.
Fin4 dev final project sd gs for youth and childrenErika D. Bruzonic
Young people, especially those who will become young adults during the 15-year time span covered by the SDGs have the inalienable right to be informed about this turning point in international development. With half of the world under the age of 30, it is crucial that this agenda puts young people at the forefront of change and development. These youngsters from around the world have already contributed to the post-2015 process in an unprecedented way, identifying and shaping the new development priorities – now they want to ensure they are seen as equal partners in their implementation and monitoring.
The document outlines the 17 Sustainable Development Goals agreed upon by 193 UN member states in 2015. The goals aim to reduce poverty and inequality, improve health and education, promote gender equality, ensure access to water and energy, support economic growth, protect the environment, and build stronger institutions by 2030. Key targets include eradicating extreme poverty, ending hunger and malnutrition, providing universal health coverage, achieving gender equality, and combating climate change through sustainable practices.
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Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition 2024, by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia
In a tight labour market, job-seekers gain bargaining power and leverage it into greater job quality—at least, that’s the conventional wisdom.
Michael, LMIC Economist, presented findings that reveal a weakened relationship between labour market tightness and job quality indicators following the pandemic. Labour market tightness coincided with growth in real wages for only a portion of workers: those in low-wage jobs requiring little education. Several factors—including labour market composition, worker and employer behaviour, and labour market practices—have contributed to the absence of worker benefits. These will be investigated further in future work.
BONKMILLON Unleashes Its Bonkers Potential on Solana.pdfcoingabbar
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Vicinity Jobs’ data includes more than three million 2023 OJPs and thousands of skills. Most skills appear in less than 0.02% of job postings, so most postings rely on a small subset of commonly used terms, like teamwork.
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Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
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"Does Foreign Direct Investment Negatively Affect Preservation of Culture in the Global South? Case Studies in Thailand and Cambodia."
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Happy New Year 2023 and Sustainable Development Goal number 1 Product Breakdown Structure.pdf
1. HAPPY NEW YEAR 2023
PROSPERITY HOP
E
HOPE
Happy
New
Year
2023
HAPPY NEW YEAR 2023
BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
2. Sustainable Development Goal number 1
Product Breakdown Structure (SDG1, PBS)
Happy
New
Year
2023
BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
PROSPERITY HOPE
2023 IS A YEAR OF RECESSION
6 CONSECUTIVE MONTHS WITH A
NEGATIVE GROWTH
AFTER THE RAIN COMES THE
NICE WEATHER IS THE RETURN
TO A BETTER LIFE
YES WE CAN NO WE CANNOT
3. HAPPY NEW YEAR 2023
• HAPPY NEW YEAR 2023
• PROPSPERITY FOR ALL
• AND HOPE
Happy
New
Year
2023
BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
4. I] POVERTY ANALYSIS
AUTHOR SUPPORT:
Report of the Inter-Agency and Expert Group on
Sustainable Development Goal Indicators
(E/CN.3/2016/2/Rev.1) - Final list of proposed
Sustainable Development Goal indicators
The following global indicator framework was developed by the Inter-
Agency and Expert Group on SDG Indicators (IAEG-SDGs) and agreed to,
as a practical starting point at the 47th session of the UN Statistical
Commission held in March 2016. The report of the Commission, which
included the global indicator framework, was then taken note of by
ECOSOC at its 70th session in June 2016.
Happy
New
Year
2023
BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
5. ABSOLUTE POVERTY <1989
(AT THE END OF COLD WAR) - 1989
STATE
POVERTY
STATE
POVERTY
STATE
POVERTY
STATE POVERTY
1
2
3
Happy
New
Year
2023
CITY
VILLAGE
REFUGE
BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
6. 2015-2030: TODAY POVERTY IS FOCUSED
(Multi-dimensional, multi-layer, multi sector…)
The poverty at the end of cold WAR
(general poverty) is replaced BY a sharp
focus on specific aspects of poverty –that
are goal targets and the indicators of
the sustainable development (SDG1.i,
i=1,2,3,4,5, a and b)
Happy
New
Year
2023
BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
7. RELATED/RELATIVE POVERTY IN 2015-2030
• SDG1.1 :By 2030, eradicate extreme poverty for all people everywhere, currently
measured as people living on less than $1.25 a day
• SDG1.2: By 2030, reduce at least by half the proportion of men, women and
children of all ages living in poverty in all its dimensions according to
national definitions
• SDG1.3:Implement nationally appropriate social protection systems and
measures for all, including floors, and by 2030 achieve substantial
coverage of the poor and the vulnerable
• SDG1.4: By 2030, ensure that all men and women, in particular the poor and the
vulnerable, have equal rights to economic resources, as well as access to basic
services, ownership and control over land and other forms of property,
inheritance, natural resources, appropriate new technology and
financial services, including microfinance
• SDG1.5: By 2030, build the resilience of the poor and those in vulnerable situations
and reduce their exposure and vulnerability to climate-related extreme events
and other economic, social and environmental shocks and disasters
• SDG1.a: Ensure significant mobilization of resources from a variety of sources, including
through enhanced development cooperation, in order to provide adequate and
predictable means for developing countries, in particular least developed
countries, to implement programs and policies to end poverty in all its
dimension
• SDG1.b: Create sound policy frameworks at the national, regional and international
levels, based on pro-poor and gender-sensitive development strategies, to support
accelerated investment in poverty eradication actions
SDG 1
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8. STATE
POVERTY
Element 1
Element 2
Element 3
1
2
3
Poverty in all its form, everywhere
according to a national state
Poverty reduction per sex, age, job, geography
proportion of disaggrated data: $.125,
age,…geography
1.2
Road maps
Reduce by 50%
…..
Proportion of per age and sex less than $1.25
SDG1.1
SDG 1.2.1 SDG 1.2.2
1.1
SDG 1a,
SDG1b Death: n/100000
$ loss/GDP
Reduce 50%
exposure to
vulnerability
SDG 1.5
Reduce
exposure to
vulnerability
reduce by 50%
number of
National definition
of poverty according
to its own standards
Poverty is
a) multidimensional, -
b) multisectorial
c) Multilayers
Safety nets
Proportion of
new born,
under
18….poor,
vulnerable
SDG 1.3.1
SDG
1.41
SDG
1.42
ABSOLUTE POVERTY
(End of cold war)
POVERTY IN 2015
(SDG 1.i, i = 1, 2, 3,
4, 5, a, b)
T
A
R
G
E
T
S
G
O
A
L
(S)
SDG 1
3
2
1
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SDG
1.4.2…women,
right to land,
property title
SDG 1.4.1
People
vulnerable, right
o health,
education…..bas
ic services
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9. $ 1.25/DAY
DESAGREGATION
AGE SEX JOB
GEO
LOCATION
LGBT F M LABOR TECH INDEPEDENT EU
Africa
Asia or city a, b, c
18
15 35 50 65 75
1.1 By 2030, eradicate extreme poverty for all people everywhere,
currently measured as people living on less than $1.25 a day
urban
rural
1.1
“ONE CANNOT
MANAGE IF ONE
CANNOT
COUNT”
(Lord Kelvin)
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Construction of legal standards between
equality rights and diversity rights
WHERE ARE THE COUNTRY LEGAL STANDARDS FOR
MEASUREMENTS IN ORDER TO REDUCE?
WHAT ARE THE NATIONAL INDICATORS TO REFER TO THE
NATIONAL CONDITIONS OF POVERTY REDUCTION OF 50%
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10. $ 1.25/DAY
DESAGREGATION
AGE
SEX
JO
B
GEO
LOCATION
LGBT F M LABOR TECH INDEPEDENT EU
Africa
Asia or city a, b, c
18
15 35 50 65 75
urban
rural
1.2
1.2.1
1.2 By 2030, reduce at least by half
the proportion of men, women and
children of all ages living in poverty
in all its dimensions according to
national definitions
50%
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Construction of legal standards equality diversity rights
Definition poverty in all its dimension at national levels?
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11. SDG 1.3 = SAFETY NETS
• Proportion of population covered by social protection floors/systems, by
sex, distinguishing children, unemployed persons, older persons, persons
with disabilities, pregnant women, newborns, workinjury victims and the
poor and the vulnerable
SN
SOCIAL PROTECTION FLOOR
SEX
<
18
PRE
GNA
NT
WOM
EN
> 65
NO
WORK
DISA
BILIT
IES
NEW
BORN
WORK
INJURI
ES
POOR
AND
VULN
ERABL
E
1.3
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12. Poor and Vulnerable (“households”)
• 1.4.1 Proportion of population
living in households with access
to basic services 1.4.2
Proportion of total adult
population with secure tenure
rights to land, with legally
recognized documentation and
who perceive their rights to land
as secure, by sex and by type of
tenure
14
BASIC SERVICES
RIGHT TO LAND
WOMEN
+ MEN
+ CHILDREN
SDG 1.4
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13. People life, livelihoods and
properties (disaster
management
Economic losses, damages and
repairs (disaster
management, business
human rights)
1.5.1 Number of deaths, missing persons
and persons affected by disaster per
100,000 people
• 1.5.2 Direct disaster economic loss in relation
to global gross domestic product (GDP)
• 1.5.3 Number of countries with national and local disaster
risk reduction strategies
HAZARD MANAGEMENT
1.5
COVID 19
FLOOD
EARTH QUAKE
INFRASTRUCTURES
CATASTROPHIC
EVENTS
MEGA
VARIOUS HAZARD
NATURAL
TECHNOLOGY
WAR
DRR PLAN(S)
UN- DRR- AND
PRECAUTIONARY
PRINCIPLE
Resilience
Recovery
Post recovery
Reduce
exposure
Build
resilience
DRC
SDG 1.5
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14. Women (and girls)+Vulnerable groups
(“Government Proportions of resources allocated)”
• 1.a.1 Proportion of resources allocated by the
government directly to poverty reduction
programs 1.a.2 Proportion of total
government spending on essential services
(education, health and social protection)
• 1.b.1 Proportion of government recurrent and
capital spending to sectors that
disproportionately benefit women, the poor
and vulnerable groups
1.a
1.b
SDG 1.a +
SDG 1.b
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15. II] POVERTY SYNTHESIS
Obviously the USA decays of the past is a rebirth of the capitalism (international
development, expansion), in the face of the sustainable development,
uncertainty management).
Sustainable development always existed, but for ignored reasons, after the 2nd
world war until end of cold war, the international development and the business
output (Gross Domestic Product, GDP) played a key role in advancing the
progress, probably because the measure is very basic based on the GDP, which is
one or two digit: a GDP 10% means that People System Organizations (PSO) are
doubling their assets in 10 years time. If GDP = 1% as it likely today, it takes 100
years for child a to own an asset. During the Industrial revolution and before
1989, this understanding of basic math with the percentage help to grow the
wealth of nations(“Adam Smith invisible hand of economic market: capitalism”),
and the economic growth (this can also explain new state and government
innovations. Today, in 21st century, a new deal with changes in social economic
laws (with the erosion of ownership, property rights, for use and right to owe-
social right (instead of rights to own –economic right). So, do not keep children
poor all their entirely life – is the motto or the advocacy of NGO- None
Governmental Organizations).
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16. Initially, the United Nations proposal to add more “teeth” to the
definition of development (in order to hide the general poverty -
existing before 1989 at the end of cold war, when/where often
the poverty was inside different regions of the same country
(North , south), while the foreign countries were perfectly equal.
During history, Ethiopia for example, was compared to the African
Swisstzland and after –then it has became a general poverty
between countries. United Nations offered a solution firstly with
the new indicators of education and health to compensate the
growth indicator (based on the business outputs –good and service
produced by business is the meaning of progress, until UN adds the
role played by education and health (economy Nobel Prize
Amartya Sen defined “development is a freedom”. In 2000-2015,
there was the existing general set of 8 Millennium Development
From 1 goal (Grow Domestic Product, GDP) to 3 (GDP,
Education, Health) then 8 MDGs (General Millennium
Development Goals, 2000-2015) , ultimately 15 Sustainable
development Goals 2015-2030.
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17. The main criteria of capitalism is best express in the Builder paradox triangle (speed,
cost, quality)
While Harlem Gro Brundtland sustainable development principle is based on the 3
pillars(economy, society, ecology) that need to be in equilibrium at the same time
• The new led development system is hybrid, firstly because, Asian economies are
making exactly as USA did in the past (using the GDP), then we observed today, USA
is making planned economy, stimulus package, bank and business bail-
outs…capitalism is becoming a voluntary economy. It is exactly, and economy for
People, System and organization called the sustainable development, and annually,
NGO are reviewing during the High Level Political Forum (HPLF), the voluntary
National strategies of Member states for sustainable development. Civil society
organizations invented the today sustainable development captured by member
states. NGO agenda for action based on the sustainable development the removal
of the burden o the regalia states is the cooperation between the public and
private organization. In the meantime.
• For me, it quite clear that artificial Intelligence is to counter the sustainable
development and to return to the initial idea of pure capitalism, based on
consumption and production. To that end e-commerce is the modern unrestraint
forcing with another modern world based on the sustainable development, which is
soft fostering
• Impacts are life of nations including Voluntary economy toward a country armed
conflict and multhazards context alea (natural, technology, wars, guerrilla,
cybersecurity, terrorism…that are modern wars). Sometimes the hybrid fears of
organization around poverty reduction is lack of understanding
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18. Often one can hear organization talking about rules (rule(s) of laws(s)),
but it is one between an infinite organization strategies (and it has never
been proven that scientific management from French Engineer Fayol is the
assurance of an organization performance. The likelihood of a strategy for
performance is of a different nature based on the synergies, the
coordination's, sharing goals…etc. and these performances can be archived
with all strategies (science, culture, social, sustainable development…) in
spite of the fact that performance is perceived as a primary element of
science of urgency. I think this perception has to make with our education,
psychology, power in organizations (structural, skills) and group conflicts
rather than real evidence based policies for programming with projects
and the science of anticipation (same thinking exists between Descartes
(analytic) versus Pascal (systemic) analyses or the philosopher Socrates, (a
severe organizer likely to represent the state mindset). Opposite Plato, is
the indulgence depicting the society to be protect against discriminations.
LIKE IN POLITICS THE ORGANIZATION STRATEGIES IS HYBRID BASED ON POWERS,
CULTURES…THAT CAN ANTAGONIZE, SYNERGIZE…NEUTRAL; AND ORGANIZATION STRATEGY IS TO
USE AT THE SAME TIME ONE OR THE SEVERAL STRATEGIES DEPENDING ON THE ORGANISATION
CULTURAL VALUES IN PLACE AND TIME
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19. Rule of law is just one strategy between an
infinite ones to organize
• However, there is a multitude of ways to organize a society
- Organization Rule(s) of law (s) is winning or win-win
- Like Madonna Pop star who was reinventing permanently herself to be the winner
- Beamon the USA champion in France annual cycling racing championship, organized his team
to support him up to the final victory…
- Sustainable development goal is one of them around the natural resources, earth capacity to
provide cheap natural raw material, and capacity building of organization
- Builder paradox enacts that we cannot have the 3 corners of a construction at the same time
(speed, cost, quality). It is the reversal of sustainable development, where the 3 pillars must
be all together in equilibrium
- VNR: Voluntary National Reporting of UN-HLPF is a planned economy, using sustainable
development between 2015-2030 (and from 2063 for Africa). This planned economy is
different than the planned economy used by the capitalist states after world war 2, and the
progress made in the reconstruction of countries, which have been destroyed. The country
recovery helped to create the economic growth and the progress.
- The planned economy based on social and ecology is about the management of uncertainty
(with increasing crises (economy, social, ecology). This management is also in the market
economy, which is different from the solidarity economy (funds, philanthropy, solidarity,
mutualism…) however, it is not comparable to the planned capitalism economy, which was the
rules of development after world war II, particularly, when Marshall plan and state planning
are implement to give jobs and create an economic expansion
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20. Possibly, probably, or certainly hybrid
system between modern development
and classic development?
Country
poverty
reduction
Speed
Cost
(50%, WOMEN AND CHILDREN)
Quality
(EXISTING OF ABSENCE OF LEGAL
STANDARDS)
2023-2030
(SDG1]
Economy
Society
Ecology
Equitable
Bearable
Viable
classic modern
Builder paradox
said 2 selected
corners
automatically fixed
the corner
RULE OF THE
BUILDER PARADOX
CORNER
CORNER
Sustainable Development is the 3
comers at the same time
(economy, society, ecology)
Equitable
development
Bearable
development
Societies can
support the cost to
pay for development
The GDP is in
harmony with nature
Weak ecology
Here there is a respect of the environment
while society is discarded (human rights,
diversity…
Viable development WHEN LIVING FROM NATURE ALL
MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY ARE EQUAL
(NATURAL SOCIETY IS PREEMINCE OF
EQUITY
WEAK POINT IS THE ECONOMY – FOR
EXAMPLE MARGINAL GROUPS INDIGNOUS
PEOPLE? Forest people….
Example, If you select speed, and cost, it will play on the quality, if there is
no investment, and the speed very high, the construction is likely to be
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21. $1.25
Age
Sex
Job
region
WOMEN AND
CHILDREN
POVERTY
NUMBER
OF…$1.25
REDUCE BY
50%
National
definition of
Poverty in
all its
dimension
Elements of
negotiations of
national
definition of
Poverty in all
its dimension?
accepted rejected
I do not know if the Pyramid is
existing, however I found very
convention for the needs of
Poverty reduction to create a
pyramid for poverty reduction,
from observing and participating
to United Nations international
meetings worldwide or using the
social media. Maslow Pyramid
need hierarchy with the elements
of Harvard Negotiation combining
seems for me the perfect tool to
build a bold poverty reduction
Author personal/group Pyramid for Poverty
reduction in line with the UN Global Goals (2015-2030)
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22. Poverty (SDG1: Poverty reduction: end poverty in all its form
everywhere) is
a) multidimensional ($1.25, age, sex, job, geographical
locations),
b) multisectorial (economic loss per GDP, number of deaths
per 100.000, existing DRR plan per a country, safety net),
c) multilayers ($1.25, Women and children, defined by the
national states)
POVERTY IN ALL ITS FORM EVERYWHERE
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23. 1.1 and 1.2
• 1.1. From disaggregation (age sex, job, location)
Norms and legal standards (or statistical laws)
Diversity versus equality rights
• 1.2 to 50% poverty reduction (age, sex) according to national
definition
Of poverty reduction?!
$1.25/da
y
Age sex,
according
to
national
definition
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24. Poverty reduction $1.25/day
1.1.
1.2.
age
sex
job
Profes
sion
50%
1.2.1 Proportion of population living below the national poverty
line, by sex and age
1.2.2 Proportion of men, women and children of all ages living
in poverty in all its dimensions according to national definitions
1.2.1
1.2.2
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25. Women (and girls)+Vulnerable groups
(“Governments Proportion of resources allocated)”
• 1.a.1 Proportion of resources allocated by the
government directly to poverty reduction
programmed 1.a.2 Proportion of total
government spending on essential services
(education, health and social protection)
• 1.b.1 Proportion of government recurrent and
capital spending to sectors that
disproportionately benefit women, the poor
and vulnerable groups
1.a
1.b
SDG 1.a +
SDG 1.b
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26. POSSIBLE APPLICATION OF THE POVERTY
REDUCTION IS THE COUNTRY CASED DEALT BY THE
UNITED NATIONS SECURITY COUNCIL
• HUMANITARIAN ACTION (bandage for wounds…)
• FIGHT AGAINST IMPUNITY (Albania, France…)
• LIVESAVING PACKAGE (Costa Rica, Gabon…)
• SYRIA NEW STAGE FOR GOVERNANCE (Ecuador…)
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