This document discusses positioning nutrition in post-2015 development goals. It outlines the key accomplishments and limitations of nutrition under the MDGs. It then examines the principles guiding post-2015 discussions and how nutrition can contribute to new goals. Potential new goal candidates and views from experts are presented, focusing on reducing malnutrition. The document considers options to include nutrition, prioritizing goals that have high impact and adoption likelihood.
1. The document discusses the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) established in 2000 and their progress and shortcomings.
2. It provides an overview of the 8 MDGs and their targets and indicators. Overall progress on the health-related MDGs like reducing child mortality and improving maternal health was substantial but varied significantly across regions and countries.
3. Key shortcomings of the MDGs discussed are that important themes were missing, goals were narrowly defined without exploiting cross-links, and they did not sufficiently promote national ownership, equity, or multi-sectoral approaches within health systems.
The UN Sustainable Development Goals - A guided tour in the context of food, ...SIANI
This presentation was held by Alan AtKisson at the interntional seminar 'Livestock Resources for Food Security in the Light of Climate Change' co-hosted by SIANI and SLU Global in Uppsala on the 11th of March 2016.
Sustainable Development Goals and the Climate Change Agreement Mabel Tola-Winjobi
Felix Dodds is a Senior Fellow at the Global Research Institute and a Senior Affiliate of the Water Institute at the University of North Carolina and an Associate Fellow at the Tellus Institute.
This document discusses the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It provides background on the SDGs, noting they were adopted in 2015 and include 17 global goals addressing urgent environmental, social and economic challenges. The goals aim to be achieved by 2030 and cover issues like ending poverty and hunger, improving health and education, making cities sustainable, combating climate change, and protecting oceans and forests. Each goal has specific targets and indicators to measure progress. The document outlines the goals and some of their key targets to work towards achieving environmentally, economically and socially sustainable development worldwide by 2030.
Sustainable development aims to meet human needs while preserving natural systems. The document outlines the evolution and definitions of sustainable development through reports like the Brundtland Commission and Earth Summit. It discusses the needs, benefits, and goals of sustainable development, including reducing poverty and hunger while promoting health, education, gender equality, clean water and sanitation, renewable energy, economic growth, and more. Key ways to achieve sustainable development include appropriate technology, reduce-reuse-recycle approaches, environmental education, utilizing resources within carrying capacities, and improving overall quality of life.
1. The document discusses the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) established in 2000 and their progress and shortcomings.
2. It provides an overview of the 8 MDGs and their targets and indicators. Overall progress on the health-related MDGs like reducing child mortality and improving maternal health was substantial but varied significantly across regions and countries.
3. Key shortcomings of the MDGs discussed are that important themes were missing, goals were narrowly defined without exploiting cross-links, and they did not sufficiently promote national ownership, equity, or multi-sectoral approaches within health systems.
The UN Sustainable Development Goals - A guided tour in the context of food, ...SIANI
This presentation was held by Alan AtKisson at the interntional seminar 'Livestock Resources for Food Security in the Light of Climate Change' co-hosted by SIANI and SLU Global in Uppsala on the 11th of March 2016.
Sustainable Development Goals and the Climate Change Agreement Mabel Tola-Winjobi
Felix Dodds is a Senior Fellow at the Global Research Institute and a Senior Affiliate of the Water Institute at the University of North Carolina and an Associate Fellow at the Tellus Institute.
This document discusses the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It provides background on the SDGs, noting they were adopted in 2015 and include 17 global goals addressing urgent environmental, social and economic challenges. The goals aim to be achieved by 2030 and cover issues like ending poverty and hunger, improving health and education, making cities sustainable, combating climate change, and protecting oceans and forests. Each goal has specific targets and indicators to measure progress. The document outlines the goals and some of their key targets to work towards achieving environmentally, economically and socially sustainable development worldwide by 2030.
Sustainable development aims to meet human needs while preserving natural systems. The document outlines the evolution and definitions of sustainable development through reports like the Brundtland Commission and Earth Summit. It discusses the needs, benefits, and goals of sustainable development, including reducing poverty and hunger while promoting health, education, gender equality, clean water and sanitation, renewable energy, economic growth, and more. Key ways to achieve sustainable development include appropriate technology, reduce-reuse-recycle approaches, environmental education, utilizing resources within carrying capacities, and improving overall quality of life.
The document provides an overview of health development strategies related to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and introduction to the post-2015 development agenda. It discusses the status and impact of the MDGs, lessons learned, and shortcomings. It then outlines the process underway to develop Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to succeed the MDGs beyond 2015, including input from the Rio+20 conference, a High-Level Panel, and an Open Working Group establishing proposed goals and targets. One of the proposed goals is to attain healthy lives for all, with targets related to reducing mortality from various causes and achieving universal health coverage.
The document discusses the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) which were developed in 2000 by the United Nations to combat poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy, and environmental degradation. It outlines the 8 goals and 18 targets of the MDGs including eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, reducing child and maternal mortality, and combating diseases like HIV/AIDS. The document also discusses opportunities and challenges for health in achieving the MDGs, including strengthening health systems and mobilizing more resources for health in poor countries. It provides an overview of progress on health-related MDGs and resources for further information.
This document summarizes a summer school on transforming nutrition held in July 2015. It was convened by the Transform Nutrition research consortium, funded by UK DFID and CIFF. The summer school was facilitated by IDS and IFPRI. It provided an introduction to nutrition challenges and definitions. It outlined the course purpose to integrate ideas on nutrition from causes to interventions to building commitment. It also included a schedule of topics to be covered each day of the week-long course.
This document discusses nutrition in the context of post-2015 development goals. It summarizes the incomplete treatment of nutrition under the Millennium Development Goals and proposes ways to strengthen the inclusion of nutrition in the new Sustainable Development Goals. Key points include expanding the World Health Assembly nutrition targets, including indicators for dietary diversity and political commitment to nutrition, and estimating costs and financing required to meet global nutrition targets through evidence-based interventions.
This document discusses nutrition in the context of post-2015 development goals. It summarizes that nutrition was not adequately addressed in the Millennium Development Goals. The proposed Sustainable Development Goals aim to better incorporate nutrition, including an explicit target to end all forms of malnutrition by 2030. However, more work is needed to fully capture the World Health Organization's nutrition targets and ensure political commitment and financing for nutrition. The document outlines a methodology to estimate the costs and financing required to meet the targets through scaling up evidence-based interventions, in order to inform upcoming global discussions on nutrition and development funding.
This document summarizes a presentation on monitoring and impact evaluation for scaling up IFAD's goals from 2010 to 2015. Some key points:
- IFAD aims to reach 90 million people and lift 80 million out of poverty by 2015, requiring increased efficiency and effectiveness.
- Better understanding of what works, where, and how is needed to scale up impacts through learning agendas, indicators, and M&E/IE systems.
- Questions remain about understanding cause-effect relationships and differing impacts between projects and areas. Learning organizations specify assumptions and test hypotheses through learning agendas.
- Tomorrow's event will discuss IFAD's corporate M&E agenda, and issues papers and information will address topics like poverty definitions, methods
Presentation on SDG-1 : No poverty. Overview and objectives of SDG-1. International case studies on policies and programmes to avoid poverty. Overview of a publication " A world free from Child labour". How Sustainable goals contributing for habitat and environment planning and how SDG-1 contributing for Habitat and environment planning.
ICN2-Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2FAO
Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2
Chizuru Nishida
Coordinator, Nutrition Policy and Scientific Advice
Department of Nutrition for Health and development
WHO/HQ
The document summarizes the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which were established in 2000 to address global poverty, hunger, disease, and lack of access to clean water. It provides an overview of the 8 goals and related targets to be achieved by 2015. Progress made so far is discussed for each goal, such as reducing extreme poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, and improving maternal health. Challenges that remain are also noted, such as providing employment, eliminating hunger, and reducing maternal mortality and improving sanitation.
Santiago Levy
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Controversial Issues on the Role of Conditional Cash Transfer Programs to Improve Nutrition
19th Annual Martin J. Forman Memorial Lecture
APR 17, 2009 - 03:30 PM TO 04:30 PM UTC
Write just one small paragraph only ( like your opinion, do you agre.docxrochellwa9f
Write just one small paragraph only ( like your opinion, do you agree or disagree based on what you have written in the second assignment MDG)
There are 2 views: write just ONE for each view and not too long paragraph just a brief one
1) In the year 2000, 189 signatories assented to a plan named the UN millennium development goal to be attained by 2015. Most of these goals were aimed at addressing the issues that faced the world at that time. Though efforts were made to attain those goals, most of these goals have not been achieved. The failure to achieve those goals was as a result of poor planning and placing unreasonable timelines. The issues of hunger, disease control, access to water and electricity, mortality rate and internet use in the developing countries have only be achieved at very low levels. However, some policies like increased women participation in employment, access to better jobs and universal education have performed above average an illustration of the commitment of the signatories to this Course.
Having gotten to the set deadline. There is a lot to be achieved. In the new goals for the period beyond 2015, the summit needs to prioritize on areas that performed poorly on the first period. Given that the society is aware of the challenges that are likely to be faced during the implementation process, the policy makers need to set target limit that will be attainable over the next development period. Emphasis needs to be placed on global basic education, universal access to healthcare and eradication of hunger and poverty. These three remain to be the most pertinent issues affecting the current society. Additionally, there are some issues that were minute in 2000but have gained global attention in the world especially in regard to world peace. The developers need to incorporate security goal as the other goals are all dependent on security. This will go far in enabling the global society attain the vision of millennium dream.
2)
In 2000, the Millennium Development Goals were established. The plan was for all 189 nations to come together and develop goals to improve people’s life. With the goal going as planned, 8 goals was set which was, extreme poverty, universal primary education, gender equality, child mortality, maternal health, HIV/AIDS and other diseases, environmental sustainability, and to develop a global partnership for development. All the goal that has been set have exact dates which they plan to reach. Over the year so of the goal has not been met due to the time frame that was set for them. In other goals thins has changed but at a very small scale. Things such as gender equality has become better than in the past. Also globalization has been a major tool to reach their goals. Due to globalization information for health care has been available for many other people. With funds to the World Bank, IMF and the African Development Bank billions of dollars of debt has been taken care of for some poor cou.
1) NCDs are a growing global problem but international consensus and evidence-based strategies exist, though development resources and making NCDs a domestic priority remain challenges.
2) To make progress, the region needs to strengthen capacity to support countries and drive societal change, health system reforms, and multisectoral policies.
3) Lessons can be learned from addressing HIV/AIDS through innovations, multisectoral partnerships, and reforming health systems to manage chronic conditions.
The document provides an overview of an economics project on the Millennium Development Goals. It discusses what the MDGs are, the 8 specific goals to reduce poverty, hunger, disease, and more by 2015, and provides statistics on current progress and challenges. It also covers criticisms of the MDGs for being too ambitious and not accounting for country differences, as well as strategies like economic growth, education investment, and women's empowerment to help accelerate progress toward the goals.
Poverty and inequality in a changing contextLindsey Cottle
This document outlines poverty, inequality, and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It defines poverty in monetary, capability, and participatory terms. It discusses measuring poverty through monetary indicators like consumption, capability indicators like health and education, and inequality indicators like income distribution. It notes most of the world's poor now live in middle-income countries rather than low-income countries. The document then outlines the MDGs on eradicating poverty, improving health, education, gender equality, and the environment. It discusses options for a post-2015 framework, including both macroeconomic approaches like foreign aid and microeconomic approaches like employment creation and public services. It proposes evaluating the MDGs from different perspectives and discourses.
Corinna Hawkes
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Virtual Event - The New Nutrition Reality: Time to Recognize and Tackle the Double Burden of Malnutrition!
DEC 1, 2020 - 09:30 AM TO 11:15 AM EST
What are the United Nations Millennium Development Goals? Why they are important, and how you can help.
This is a presentation that I gave to about 300 Chinese students at an Open Forum hosted by the World Academy for the Future of Women (WAFW) at Sias International University. As a member of the World Academy, all women design and execute service projects, linked to one or more of the UN Millenium Development Goals.
Presentation slides from David Hulme,Executive Director, Brooks World Poverty Institute and Professor of Development Studies at the University of Manchester, Sussex Development Lecture, Learning from the Millennium Development Goals
semester ya 3 Designing and planning nutrition programmesDavid mbwiga
This module examines designing and planning nutrition programs. It aims to explore public health nutrition issues in the country, provide tools for gathering information and designing intervention strategies, and develop skills for implementing, monitoring, and evaluating nutrition programs. The module discusses causes of malnutrition and different preventive and recuperative intervention approaches. It emphasizes the importance of the development window from pregnancy to age 2 when children are most vulnerable and responsive to nutrition interventions.
These set of slides were presented at the BEP Seminar "Targeting in Development Projects: Approaches, challenges, and lessons learned" held last Oct. 2, 2023 in Cairo, Egypt
Caitlin Welsh
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Food System Repercussions of the Russia-Ukraine War
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More Related Content
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The document provides an overview of health development strategies related to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and introduction to the post-2015 development agenda. It discusses the status and impact of the MDGs, lessons learned, and shortcomings. It then outlines the process underway to develop Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to succeed the MDGs beyond 2015, including input from the Rio+20 conference, a High-Level Panel, and an Open Working Group establishing proposed goals and targets. One of the proposed goals is to attain healthy lives for all, with targets related to reducing mortality from various causes and achieving universal health coverage.
The document discusses the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) which were developed in 2000 by the United Nations to combat poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy, and environmental degradation. It outlines the 8 goals and 18 targets of the MDGs including eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, reducing child and maternal mortality, and combating diseases like HIV/AIDS. The document also discusses opportunities and challenges for health in achieving the MDGs, including strengthening health systems and mobilizing more resources for health in poor countries. It provides an overview of progress on health-related MDGs and resources for further information.
This document summarizes a summer school on transforming nutrition held in July 2015. It was convened by the Transform Nutrition research consortium, funded by UK DFID and CIFF. The summer school was facilitated by IDS and IFPRI. It provided an introduction to nutrition challenges and definitions. It outlined the course purpose to integrate ideas on nutrition from causes to interventions to building commitment. It also included a schedule of topics to be covered each day of the week-long course.
This document discusses nutrition in the context of post-2015 development goals. It summarizes the incomplete treatment of nutrition under the Millennium Development Goals and proposes ways to strengthen the inclusion of nutrition in the new Sustainable Development Goals. Key points include expanding the World Health Assembly nutrition targets, including indicators for dietary diversity and political commitment to nutrition, and estimating costs and financing required to meet global nutrition targets through evidence-based interventions.
This document discusses nutrition in the context of post-2015 development goals. It summarizes that nutrition was not adequately addressed in the Millennium Development Goals. The proposed Sustainable Development Goals aim to better incorporate nutrition, including an explicit target to end all forms of malnutrition by 2030. However, more work is needed to fully capture the World Health Organization's nutrition targets and ensure political commitment and financing for nutrition. The document outlines a methodology to estimate the costs and financing required to meet the targets through scaling up evidence-based interventions, in order to inform upcoming global discussions on nutrition and development funding.
This document summarizes a presentation on monitoring and impact evaluation for scaling up IFAD's goals from 2010 to 2015. Some key points:
- IFAD aims to reach 90 million people and lift 80 million out of poverty by 2015, requiring increased efficiency and effectiveness.
- Better understanding of what works, where, and how is needed to scale up impacts through learning agendas, indicators, and M&E/IE systems.
- Questions remain about understanding cause-effect relationships and differing impacts between projects and areas. Learning organizations specify assumptions and test hypotheses through learning agendas.
- Tomorrow's event will discuss IFAD's corporate M&E agenda, and issues papers and information will address topics like poverty definitions, methods
Presentation on SDG-1 : No poverty. Overview and objectives of SDG-1. International case studies on policies and programmes to avoid poverty. Overview of a publication " A world free from Child labour". How Sustainable goals contributing for habitat and environment planning and how SDG-1 contributing for Habitat and environment planning.
ICN2-Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2FAO
Nutrition policies:from 1992 ICN to 2014 ICN2
Chizuru Nishida
Coordinator, Nutrition Policy and Scientific Advice
Department of Nutrition for Health and development
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The document summarizes the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which were established in 2000 to address global poverty, hunger, disease, and lack of access to clean water. It provides an overview of the 8 goals and related targets to be achieved by 2015. Progress made so far is discussed for each goal, such as reducing extreme poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, and improving maternal health. Challenges that remain are also noted, such as providing employment, eliminating hunger, and reducing maternal mortality and improving sanitation.
Santiago Levy
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Controversial Issues on the Role of Conditional Cash Transfer Programs to Improve Nutrition
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Write just one small paragraph only ( like your opinion, do you agre.docxrochellwa9f
Write just one small paragraph only ( like your opinion, do you agree or disagree based on what you have written in the second assignment MDG)
There are 2 views: write just ONE for each view and not too long paragraph just a brief one
1) In the year 2000, 189 signatories assented to a plan named the UN millennium development goal to be attained by 2015. Most of these goals were aimed at addressing the issues that faced the world at that time. Though efforts were made to attain those goals, most of these goals have not been achieved. The failure to achieve those goals was as a result of poor planning and placing unreasonable timelines. The issues of hunger, disease control, access to water and electricity, mortality rate and internet use in the developing countries have only be achieved at very low levels. However, some policies like increased women participation in employment, access to better jobs and universal education have performed above average an illustration of the commitment of the signatories to this Course.
Having gotten to the set deadline. There is a lot to be achieved. In the new goals for the period beyond 2015, the summit needs to prioritize on areas that performed poorly on the first period. Given that the society is aware of the challenges that are likely to be faced during the implementation process, the policy makers need to set target limit that will be attainable over the next development period. Emphasis needs to be placed on global basic education, universal access to healthcare and eradication of hunger and poverty. These three remain to be the most pertinent issues affecting the current society. Additionally, there are some issues that were minute in 2000but have gained global attention in the world especially in regard to world peace. The developers need to incorporate security goal as the other goals are all dependent on security. This will go far in enabling the global society attain the vision of millennium dream.
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In 2000, the Millennium Development Goals were established. The plan was for all 189 nations to come together and develop goals to improve people’s life. With the goal going as planned, 8 goals was set which was, extreme poverty, universal primary education, gender equality, child mortality, maternal health, HIV/AIDS and other diseases, environmental sustainability, and to develop a global partnership for development. All the goal that has been set have exact dates which they plan to reach. Over the year so of the goal has not been met due to the time frame that was set for them. In other goals thins has changed but at a very small scale. Things such as gender equality has become better than in the past. Also globalization has been a major tool to reach their goals. Due to globalization information for health care has been available for many other people. With funds to the World Bank, IMF and the African Development Bank billions of dollars of debt has been taken care of for some poor cou.
1) NCDs are a growing global problem but international consensus and evidence-based strategies exist, though development resources and making NCDs a domestic priority remain challenges.
2) To make progress, the region needs to strengthen capacity to support countries and drive societal change, health system reforms, and multisectoral policies.
3) Lessons can be learned from addressing HIV/AIDS through innovations, multisectoral partnerships, and reforming health systems to manage chronic conditions.
The document provides an overview of an economics project on the Millennium Development Goals. It discusses what the MDGs are, the 8 specific goals to reduce poverty, hunger, disease, and more by 2015, and provides statistics on current progress and challenges. It also covers criticisms of the MDGs for being too ambitious and not accounting for country differences, as well as strategies like economic growth, education investment, and women's empowerment to help accelerate progress toward the goals.
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This document outlines poverty, inequality, and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It defines poverty in monetary, capability, and participatory terms. It discusses measuring poverty through monetary indicators like consumption, capability indicators like health and education, and inequality indicators like income distribution. It notes most of the world's poor now live in middle-income countries rather than low-income countries. The document then outlines the MDGs on eradicating poverty, improving health, education, gender equality, and the environment. It discusses options for a post-2015 framework, including both macroeconomic approaches like foreign aid and microeconomic approaches like employment creation and public services. It proposes evaluating the MDGs from different perspectives and discourses.
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This is a presentation that I gave to about 300 Chinese students at an Open Forum hosted by the World Academy for the Future of Women (WAFW) at Sias International University. As a member of the World Academy, all women design and execute service projects, linked to one or more of the UN Millenium Development Goals.
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Similar to Post2015 Nutrition Consultation - Session 1 - Lawrence Haddad (20)
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2023 Global Report on Food Crises: Joint Analysis for Better Decisions
Post2015 Nutrition Consultation - Session 1 - Lawrence Haddad
1. Positioning Nutrition in the
Post-2015 Debate
Some Background
Lawrence Haddad
Institute of Development Studies
IDS
Brighton, UK
February 20, 2013
2. Outline
1. What have the MDGs accomplished?
2. What have the MDGs done for nutrition?
3. Which principles are guiding post 2015 discussions?
4. What can nutrition do for the next set of goals?
5. What are the emerging candidates for new goals?
6. How do we want the new goals to help reduce
malnutrition?
7. What are the options for nutrition and how to
prioritise?
8. Final Reflections
2
3. 1. What have the MDGs accomplished?
• Rallying call for international development
• Linked public support for development with
measurable progress
• Probably led to increased ODA flows
• Probably directed more to Sub-Saharan Africa
• May have increased ODA allocation to
HIV/AIDS, malaria and TB
• If they had not accomplished anything, we
wouldn’t be talking about them so much
3
4. 2. What have the MDGs done for
nutrition?
• Underweight: one (sub-optimal) indicator in
one sub-goal of one MDG
• Nevertheless, probably important in allowing
development agencies justify an increased
investment in nutrition over the past
• Location in the MDG1 probably particularly
helpful in supporting World Bank leadership
4
5. 3. Which principles are guiding post 2015
discussion?
• Make goals global
• Get a better balance of outcomes, outputs and
inputs
• Greater focus on environment
• Greater focus on equity
• More on transparency and accountability
• More on peace and security
• Keep number of goals small, achieve greater
public recognition
• Put in place an M&E plan!
5
6. 4. What can nutrition do for the next
set of goals?
• Generate individual level poverty outcomes;
help with equity
• Help give the MDGs a longer term perspective
• Help bridge the development and
humanitarian space (e.g. individual resilience)
• Make links/highlight tradeoffs between goals
6
7. 5. Emerging candidates for new goals
Contribution from CIGI Karver, Kenny and Sumner 2012
2010-2030
1. Poverty: $2/day, malnutri on
2. Health: Life expectancy, child mortality
3. Educa on: Literacy, secondary educa on
4. Gender: Popula on disparity under the age of five
5. Sustainable Development: Forest area; alterna ve
energy as a percentage of total, GHG emissions,
species ex nc on
Post-2015 Goals,
Targets, and Indicators
6. Peace: Military expenditure as % GDP
Background Paper 7. Infrastructure: Access to mobile signal, access to
Paris, April 9-11, 2012 improved energy sources
Barry Carin and Nicole
Bates-Eamer. CIGI.
8. Development: Duty Free Access, Aid 0.7%
MDGs 2.0: What Goals, Targets and Timeframe?
Jonathan Karver, Charles Kenny, and Andy Sumner
July 2012 . IDS Working paper. 398
7
8. Suggestions for Sustainable Development Goals
Rio 2012 Issues Briefs 25 CSOs (10 N, 15 S),
Produced by the UNCSD Secretariat No. 6 supported by 1400 CSOs
8
9. Contribution from
Oxfam:
“The Doughnut”
Source: Oxfam. The
11 dimensions of the
social foundation are
illustrative and are
based on
governments’ priorities
for Rio+20. The nine
dimensions of the
environmental ceiling
are based on the
planetary boundaries
set out by Rockström
et al (2009b)
9
10. What will the new goals look like? My
view.
• There will be goals!
• They will balance human appeal, resource use,
political feasibility and be more faithful to the
Millennium Declaration
o “One world”, with differentiated responsibilities
o Inequality will be taken more seriously
o Resource intensity and emissions issues built into
people centred goals, not the other way around
o Governance—rights, responsibilities, accountability,
capacity, transparency—will figure more strongly
10
11. 6. What do we want the new goals
to do for nutrition?
• Stimulate progress on reducing malnutrition
priorities
– Increasing pace of stunting reduction
– Increasing pace of wasting reduction
– Improving nutrition status of girls and women of
reproductive age
– Slow down and reverse increases in overweight and
diet related risk factors
• Help identify the nutrition sensitive opportunities
• Make nutrition efforts more visible and
accountable
11
12. 7. Options for nutrition in post 2015 space
• Recent initiatives from UN and elsewhere
• Views of 26 email respondents (half nutrition,
half development with a strong interest in
nutrition)
• 3 sets of options
• Criteria for prioritising
12
13. Recent initiatives
• SUN: new nutrition goals need to support SUN!
• WHA global targets on nutrition
1. stunting 171m in 2010 to 100m in 2022
2. reduction of anaemia in women of reproductive age
3. 50% reduction of low birth weight
4. No increase in childhood overweight
5. Increase exclusive breastfeeding rates in the first six months of life
to at least 50%
• Zero Hunger Initiative/Zero Hunger Challenge
1. 100 percent access to adequate food all year round
2. zero stunted children
3. make all food systems sustainable
4. increase smallholder productivity and income by 100 percent.
5. zero loss or waste of food
• Universal Health coverage
• Save the Children: 12 nutrition related indicators embedded
within 5 goals (out of total of 10 goals)
13
14. Views of 26 experts
• Undernutrition
– Stunting: inclusion a minimum non negotiable (under 2s
and under 5s)
– Wasting: should be included for under 5s
– Female BMI should feature strongly
• Include overweight and obesity
– growing shared agenda around healthy diets
• Include all countries
– global food system, double burden of malnutrition
• Goal?
– Nutrition community: Separate goal
– Broader development community: Strategic integration
with other goals more realistic
– All: Minimalist--replace underweight with stunting 14
15. Option Advantages Risks
1. Separate • Nutrition harder to ignore by • High risk given the lack of
nutrition goal those who care about MDGs political momentum & home
• Supports SUN directly for a nutrition goal
• “Reducing malnutrition” is easy • Nutrition easier to ignore by
to communicate other sectors and other goals
2. Incorporate • More feasible • Nutrition remains invisible –no
nutrition • New goal “buckets”, especially single champion
indicators and (1) separation of poverty and • Fractures reporting on
targets into hunger and (2) clustering of nutrition progress
other goals health, may favour nutrition • Divides nutrition community
• Potential leveraging of larger
resource flows & energy of
other goals
3. Minimalist— • Improvement on status quo • Too unambitious—too weak a
only replace • Feasible negotiating position
underweight • No reason to think stunting will
with stunting be more visible than
underweight 15
16. Criteria for prioritising options?
• Most likely to have a big impact on nutrition if
adopted
– Galvanise energy
• nutrition community
• wider development community
• wider public
– Guide action
• nutrition specific
• nutrition sensitive
• Likelihood of adoption
– Political feasibility
• among rich countries
• among emerging/high burden countries
– Ease of technical reporting
16
17. Final reflections
• Positioning nutrition smartly in the Post 2015
settlement is vital to lock in current momentum
• This is about politics (domestic, international,
interagency, inter-INGO). Technical considerations
are important but one level down
• Need to unify nutrition community around one option
and then rally potential allies in other goal buckets to
support it
• Wise to have a strong plan B
• There is time, but it is rapidly running out. MDG high
level panel reports in May/June; open question on
how much movement post-Sept 2013 UNGASS 17