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Globalization
of Media MCM404
VU
Lesson
25
"MILLENNIUM
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
(MDGS)"
Text
of handout
for
students
Note:
In this Lecture, the attention of
students has been focused on
the identification of 8 Millennium
Development
Goals and 18 corresponding targets
that have been set in
order to achieve the 8
Goals.
Coming
after a series of summit conferences of
Heads of State and
Government held during the
1990s, the
Millennium
summit at the UN in September 2000
became the first time in history
that a very large majority
of
leaders
of countries represented in the UN agreed
upon 8 specific goals for
the tangible, measurable
improvement
of disadvantaged people.
The
Human Development Report of 2003
published each year since
1990 by the United
Nations
Development
Programme devoted its entire contents to
the subject: "Millennium Development
Goad: A
compact
among nations to end human
poverty".
Student
may refer to the website:
http://hdr.undp.org for further
details about the contents of this
report,
and
of previous, and of later reports.
This
handout is the first part of the
first section of the HDR
2003 Report. It provides a relevant contextual
background
to the priorities and issues
that are pertinent to any
consideration of this subject.
Excerpt:
The
new century opened with an
unprecedented declaration of solidarity and
determination to rid the
world
of
poverty. In 2000 the UN Millennium
Declaration, adopted at the largest-ever gathering of
heads of state,
committed
countries -- rich and poor
-- to doing all they can to
eradicate poverty, promote
human dignity
and
equality and achieve peace,
democracy and environmental
sustainability. World leaders promised to
work
together
to meet concrete targets for
advancing development and reducing
poverty by 2015, or earlier.
Emanating
from the Millennium Declaration, the
Millennium Development Goals
bind countries to do
more
in
the attack on inadequate incomes,
widespread hunger, gender inequality,
environmental deterioration
and
lack
of education, health care and
clean water. They also include
actions to reduce debt and
increase aid,
trade
and technology transfer to poor
countries. The March 2002
Monterrey Consensus -- reaffirmed in
the
September
2002 Johannesburg Declaration on
Sustainable Development and the
Johannesburg Plan of
Implementation
-- provides a framework for this partnership between
rich and poor
countries.
It
is hard to think of a more propitious
time to mobilize support for
such a global partnership. In 2003
the
world
has seen even more
violent conflict, accompanied by
heightened international tension and
fear of
terrorism.
Some might argue that the
war on poverty must take a
backseat until the war on terrorism
has
been
won. But they would be wrong.
The need to eradicate
poverty does not compete
with the need to make
the
world more secure. On the contrary,
eradicating poverty should contribute to
a safer world -- the
vision
of
the Millennium Declaration.
Addressing
poverty requires understanding its
causes. The Human
Development Report 2003 adds to
that
understanding
by analyzing the root causes of
failed development. During the 1990s
debates about
development
focused on three sets of
issues. The first was the
need for economic reforms to
establish
macroeconomic
stability. The second was
the need for strong
institutions and governance -- to
enforce the
rule
of law and control
corruption. The third was
the need for social justice
and involving people in
decisions
that
affect them and their communities
and countries -- an issue
that this Report continues to
champion.
These
issues are all crucial
for sustainable human development,
and they continue to deserve
priority
attention
in policy-making. But they overlook a
fourth factor, explored here: the
structural constraints
that
impede
economic growth and human
development. The Millennium Development
Compact presented in this
Report
proposes a policy approach to
achieving the Millennium Development
Goals that starts by
addressing
these
constraints.
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The
Goals will succeed only if they
mean something to the billions of
individuals for whom they
are intended.
The
Goals must become a national
reality, embraced by their
main stakeholders -- people and
governments.
They
are a set of benchmarks for
assessing progress -- and
for enabling poor people to hold
political leaders
accountable.
They help people fight for the kinds of
policies and actions that
will create decent jobs,
improve
access
to schools and root out
corruption. They are also
commitments by national leaders,
who must be held
accountable
for their fulfillment by
their electorates.
When
adopted by communities, the Goals can
spur democratic debates about government
performance,
especially
when impartial data are
made available -- posted on the
door of every village hall. They
can also
become
campaign platforms for politicians, as
with Brazilian President Luis
Inacio "Lula" da Silva's
Fome
Zero
(Zero Hunger) campaign to eliminate
hunger, part of the manifesto for
his (successful) presidential
bid.
Civil
society groups -- from
community organizations to professional
associations to women's groups
to
networks
of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) --
have an important role in
helping to implement and
monitor
progress towards the Goals.
But the Goals also require
capable, effective states able to
deliver on
their
development commitments. And they require
popular mobilization to sustain the
political will for
achieving
them. This popular
mobilization requires open, participatory
political cultures.
Political
reforms, such as decentralizing
budgets and responsibilities for the
delivery of basic services,
put
decision-making
closer to the people and reinforce
popular pressure for implementing the
Goals. Where
decentralization
has worked -- as in parts of Brazil,
Jordan, Mozambique and the Indian
states of Kerala,
Madhya
Pradesh and West Bengal --
it has brought significant improvements. It
can lead to government
services
that respond faster to
people's needs, expose
corruption and reduce
absenteeism.
But
decentralization is difficult. To succeed, it
requires a capable central
authority, committed and
financially
empowered
local authorities and engaged
citizens in a well-organized civil
society. In Mozambique,
committed
local authorities with financing
authority increased vaccination coverage
and prenatal consultation
by
80%, overcoming capacity constraints by
contracting NGOs and private providers at
the municipal level.
Recent
experiences have also shown
how social movements can
lead to more participatory
decision-making,
as
in the public monitoring of local
budgets. In Porto Alegre, Brazil, public
monitoring of local budgets
has
brought
huge improvements in services. In 1989
just under half of city residents
had access to safe
water.
Seven
years later, nearly all did.
Primary school enrolments
also double during that
time, and public
transportation
expanded to outlying
areas.
Such
collective action improves basic services
and helps spur and
sustain political will.
Ordinary citizens
have
pressured
their leaders to deliver on
their political commitments.
And the Goals provide
citizens with a tool
to
hold their governments
accountable.
The
past 30 years saw dramatic
improvements in the developing world. Life
expectancy increased by eight
years.
Illiteracy was cut nearly in
half, to 25%. And in East
Asia the number of people surviving on
less than
$1
a day was almost halved just
in the 1990s.
Still,
human development is proceeding too
slowly. For many countries the
1990s were a decade of
despair.
Some
54 countries are poorer now
than in 1990. In 21 a larger
proportion of people is going hungry. In
14,
more
children are dying before
age five. In 12, primary
school enrolments are
shrinking. In 34, life
expectancy
has
fallen. Such reversals in survival were
previously rare.
A
further sign of development crises is the
decline in 21 countries in the human
development index (HDI, a
summary
measure of three dimensions of
human development -- living a long
and health life, being
educated
and
having a decent standard of living).
This too was rare
until the late 1980s,
because the capabilities
captured
by the HDI are not easily
lost.
If
global progress continues at the same
pace as in the 1990s, only the
Millennium Development Goals of
halving
income poverty and halving
the proportion of people without access
to safe water stand a
realistic
chance
of being met, thanks mainly to China and
India. Regionally, at the current pace,
Sub-Saharan Africa
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would
not reach the Goals for
poverty until 2147 and
for child mortality, until
2165. And for HIV/AIDS
and
hunger,
trends in the region are heading up --
not down.
That
so many countries around the world
will fall far short of the
Millennium Development Goals in the
12
years
to 2015 points to an urgent need to
change course. But past
development successes show what is
possible
even in very poor countries.
Sri Lanka managed to increase
life expectancy by 12 years
between 1945
and
1953. Botswana provides another inspiring
example: gross enrolments in primary
school jumped from
40%
in 1960 to almost 91% in
1980.
Today's
world has greater resources
and know-how than ever before to
tackle the challenges of
infectious
disease,
low productivity, lack of
basic services such as clean
water, sanitation, schools and health
care. The
issue
is how best to apply these
resources and know-how to
benefit the poorest people.
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