New Challenges, New Beginnings: Next steps in European development cooperation
Author : Overseas Development Institute
Date : February 10, 2010
The ratification of the Lisbon Treaty, and the arrival in Brussels of a new leadership team, together provide an opportunity to re-invigorate European collaboration and collective action in the realm of international development. This publication is the result of a collaboration between 25 researchers from four of Europe’s leading think-tanks on international development. It stems from a shared commitment to European development cooperation, and a sense of urgency about the need to rethink policy for new and challenging times. A new Europe, facing new challenges, will be tested in many fields and sectors. The authors assess the task of reaching the Millennium Development Goals, and rethinking the goals for the period beyond 2015. They make the case for joined-up thinking across the institutions and policies of the EU, emphasising the importance of Policy Coherence for Development. And they examine specific policy areas – trade, state/peace-building, climate change, migration, finance, and the private sector. They lay out an agenda for partnership with developing countries, and examine how actors in the EU system can work better together. The report makes the case for five priorities:
New EU leadership in thinking about how development cooperation can help deal with shared global problems.
EU states to meet their aid promises and improve the targeting and effectiveness of aid spending.
New efforts to ensure coherence between development and other policies.
Providing new life to development partnerships.
Improved cooperation between Member States, so that the EU really does work as one.
You can read the entire report here.
Can we manage this crisis differently? Bailing out the poor, not just the banks
Author : Minouche Shafik
Date : January 26, 2009
In every economic crisis, it is the poor that suffer the most. Whether it is individuals or countries, they are the most vulnerable and lack the savings and the institutions to support them during difficult times. In past crises, we have focused too late on adverse effects on poor people. Can we do it differently this time
How will the financial crisis affect the South, and how can European Aid help developing countries face this challenge?
Author : ID4D (multi-author)
Date : November 5, 2008
The debate was initiated at the European Development Days 2008 in Strasbourg and the discussion continues. Rendez-vous in Stockholm for the 2009's edition, and until then "To your keyboards"!
Fighting climate change for the sake of the poor
Author : Rajendra Kumar Pachauri
Date : October 7, 2008
Over the last 18 months or so there has been a major surge in the spread of public understanding on the subject of climate change, particularly in respect of human actions being a cause for changes in the earth's climate system. However, this increase in awareness has not yet translated into action at the global level to bring about a reduction in the emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs), the increased concentration of which has now increasingly affected the earth's climate. The impacts of climate change are particularly harmful for some of the poorest societies on earth.








