Zimbabwe: The Presidential Run-Off And Its Implications

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Zimbabwe: the Presidential run-off and its implications
This site is maintained by the Wilson Center. It provides free access to a webcast of an event which took place on 28th May 2008. It contains discussion of the disputed presidential election in Zimbabwe, subsequent political violence by supporters of Robert Mugabe and the implications of the re running of the election in June 2008. Participants include Ray Choto Senior Editor of the Voice of America's Studio7, a radio program on Zimbabwe based in Washington; Jamal Jafari a Senior Peace Fellow with the Public International Law and Policy Group (PILPG), Dileepan Sivapathasundaram a Senior Program Officer at the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and Gayle Smith a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress and Co-Chair of the ENOUGH Project. Technical and copyright information is displayed on the website. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=events.event_summary&event_id=4

 

Crisis in Zimbabwe coalition
The Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition is a network of over 350 pro-democracy and human rights groups in Zimbabwe. Its acts to campaign for democracy and expose human rights abuses under the rule of Robert Mugabe. The website contains materials relating to political violence following the 2008 presidential elections in Zimbabwe. These include news stories, photographs, multimedia film footage and eye witness accounts from victims. Also available are links to blogs and other news feeds from campaigners in Zimbabwe. users should note that some materials show distressing scenes of violence.
 http://www.crisiszimbabwe.org/

 

From Intute.ac.uk 

United Nations Public Administration Network[UNPAN]: Africa

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United Nations Public Administration Network: Africa

Capacity Development – Empowering People And Institutions. UNDP Annual Report 2008

Development United Nations Development Programme Trackbacks (0)
UNDP annual report 2008http://www.undp.org/publications/annualreport2008/downloads.shtml

PostGlobal: Conversations On The Power Of Governments

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PostGlobal
"PostGlobal is an interactive conversation on global issues moderated by Newsweek International ... [and] The Washington Post." It considers the impact of recent events on the power of governments such as the U.S., China, Israel, and Russia. The "Global Power Barometer" "tracks how well global players use power to advance their policy goals. ... The system tracks [and links to] thousands of news media, academic, governmental and other sources."
URL: http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postglobal/drg/index.html
LII Item: http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/26082

Annotation copyright LII.ORG 

PolicyArchive

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PolicyArchive

PolicyArchive is a joint project of The Center for Governmental Studies (CGS) and Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Library. It provides free access to an online archive / repository of public policy research outputs from over 200 (mainly US) think tank, university, government, and foundation-funded policy research centers. This includes articles, eprints, reports, working papers, documents, webcasts and other multimedia. Most items are offered in full text and date from 2007/8 onwards.. Topics covered are very wide ranging, including coverage of business, health policy, economic policy, American politics; government, social policy, educational policy, demographics, industry, military and defence and media and communications. The main emphasis is upon issues relating to the United States and North America. Users may sign up to receive newsletters. Intute.ac.uk
https://www.policyarchive.org/

Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe Trackbacks (0)

Zimbabwe: Diplomacy Monitor resources

Diplomacy Monitor is maintained by the St Thomas University School of Law. It provides real time tracking of Internet published diplomacy documents worldwide. This includes materials from major international organisations. Materials covered include: press releases, communiques, speeches, statements, papers and reports. This section of the site provides access to materials relating to Zimbabwe They include coverage of human rights and the rule of law in Zimbabwe; comment on the state of democracy under the government of Robert Mugabe, land reforms, and the political violence which occurred in the aftermath of the 2008 presidential elections. Materials are available from the EU, US State Department, British government and African Union, among others.
http://diplomacymonitor.com/stu/dm.nsf/nationaffectedd?OpenForm&cat=Zimbabwe&sta

Zimbabwe: Foreign and Commonwealth office

This site was created by the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) to provide information on British foreign policy towards Zimbabwe. It includes recent statements from the Prime Minister, FCO blog entries from embassy staff in Harare and comment from ministers. Also accessible are audiofiles of political interviews and discussion. Topics include British attitude towards the rule of Robert Mugabe, the 2008 Zimbabwe presidential elections and human rights in the region.
ttp://www.fco.gov.uk/en/newsroom/newsfiles1/zimbabwe-latest

Intute.ac.uk 

Right To Health

United Nations Health Human Rights World Health Organisation Trackbacks (0)
UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) jointly with World Health Organization (WHO) published The Right to Health: Factsheet No.31 (full-text, 2.52 MB) as part of The Human Rights Fact Sheet series. It explains what the right to health is, how it applies to various groups of individuals, and what the obligations of the states are. It also discusses the national, regional and international accountability and monitoring mechanisms.

 UN Pulse Permanent Link: Right to Health

Claiming The MDGs: A Human Rights Approach

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Claiming the MDGs: a human rights approach
A new publication by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Claiming the Millennium Development Goals: a human rights approach (full text, 57.7 MB) analyses whether there are similarities or conflicting issues between the human rights and Millennium Development Goals (MDGs); it proposes a human rights-based approach to achieving the MDGs and applies human rights to individual millennium goals.
UN Pulse entries on MDGs

UN Pulse Permanent Link: Claiming the MDGs: a human rights approach

Social Justice For Fair Globalization

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Social Justice for Fair Globalization

The International Labour Conference has adopted a declaration and resolution on Social Justice for a Fair Globalization (full text of drafts adopted, pdf, 193 KB). According to the ILO press release,

"Through the Declaration governments, employers and workers from all member States call for a new strategy to sustain open economies and open societies based on social justice, full and productive employment, sustainable enterprises and social cohesion. The Declaration acknowledges the benefits of globalization but calls for renewed efforts to implement decent work policies as the means to achieve improved and fair outcomes for all."

UN Pulse Permanent Link: Social Justice for Fair Globalization

Corruption And The Poor

Poverty United Nations Development Programme Corruption Trackbacks (0)

Corruption and the poor

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has launched a new Asia Pacific Human Development Report on corruption, entitled Tackling Corruption, Transforming Lives (full text, pdf, 895 KB). The report argues that low-level, pervasive corruption is a major burden on the region's poor and highlights ways in which communities fight the problem.

UN Pulse Economic and Social Development | | Permanent Link: Corruption and the poor

2008 High-Level Meeting On HIV/AIDS

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2008 High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS

The two-day 2008 High-Level Meeting on AIDS: Uniting the World Against AIDS opened today at the UN Headquarters in New York. The meeting will review progress made in implementing the 2001 Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS and the 2006 Political Declaration on HIV/AIDS. Follow the discussions as they happen through the UN webcast and read statements made in the opening and plenary meetings.

Related information:
Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)
Secretary-General's progress report on HIV/AIDS
UNAIDS Executive-Director's statement

UN Pulse Permanent Link: 2008 High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS

Trends In Sustainable Development 2008-2009

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Trends in Sustainable Development 2008-2009

Trends in Sustainable Development 2008-2009, recently issued by the Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN-DESA) Division for Sustainable Development, highlights recent trends in agriculture, rural development, land, desertification and drought (full text, pdf, 3.62 MB).
   The Division also issued Innovation for Sustainable Development: Local Case Studies from Africa (full text, pdf, 3.94 MB). This report sheds light on how innovative solutions have arisen at the local level to address sustainable development challenges in Africa.
   The reports contribute to the background documentation for the 16th and 17th sessions of the Commission on Sustainable Development.

UN Pulse Permanent Link: Trends in Sustainable Development 2008-2009

Children And Armed Conflict In Somalia

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Children and armed conflict in Somalia
The latest report of the Secretary-General on
children and armed conflict in Somalia has been issued (S/2008/352). According to the summary,
"The report stresses that the level of grave violations against children in Somalia has been increasing over the past year, particularly with regard to the recruitment and use of children in armed conflict; the killing, maiming and rape of children; and the denial of humanitarian access to children."

UN Pulse Permanent Link: Children and armed conflict in Somalia

World Food Programme Strategic Plan

Food, food supply and food security Trackbacks (0)

World Food Programme Strategic Plan
The Executive Board of the World Food Programme has approved the Strategic Plan 2008-2011 (WFP/EB.A/2008/5-A/1/Rev.1, pdf, 571 KB). According to the press release, the plan focuses on using local resources to provide aid.

UN Pulse Permanent Link: World Food Programme Strategic Plan

Action For A Safe South Africa

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Action for a Safe South Africa is an initiative to actively address both the context and the factors that feed the cycle of crime and violence being experienced by the country and to encourage all South Africans to be a part of the solution.

...A partnership needs to be formed between government and civil society both at policy level and at community level, to start a conversation about the way forward.  “A Safe South Africa” aims to begin this conversation for defining the solutions and then aims to set up a structure to start combating the problems outlined.

http://www.safesouthafrica.org.za/

Civil Rights Digital Library

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Civil Rights Digital Library
The Civil Rights Digital Library is maintained by the University of Georgia. It aims to provide a portal to enable users free access via the web to key materials relating to the history of the United States African American civil rights movement in the 1950s-1960s. These include links to books, documents, news films, photographs, articles, bibliographies, cartoons and other ephemera available via US websites. The site may be browsed by theme, person and event. Topics covered include school desegregation, civil rights protests, the contribution of Martin Luther King and key US civil rights legislation. The site also maintains a large teacher support section with lesson plans, timelines and annotated bibliographies of further readings. Intute.ac.uk
http://crdl.usg.edu/voci/go/crdl/home/

China Digital Times; The Second Historical Archives Of China (SHAC); And China Beat: Blogging How The East Is Read

China Trackbacks (0)

China Digital Times
China Digital times is an innovative news site maintained by the Berkeley China Internet Project. It is experimenting with new Internet technology (such as blogs and podcasts) to provide coverage of economic, political and social events within China and its emerging importance as a world power. Users may read blog postings, watch video news casts and receive RSS newsfeeds of the latest stories prepared by Berkely staff, students and guest reporters. Topics covered include the 2008 Beijing Olympics; Chinese politics and foreign policy, relations between China and Hong Kong and China and Taiwan and political transitions within the Chinese communist party. Archived blog postings from 2003 onwards can be read on the website. Intute.ac.uk
http://chinadigitaltimes.net

Second Historical Archives of China (SHAC)
The Second Historical Archives of China (SHAC) is one of the most important national government archives in China. Administered by the State it has substantial holdings of material relating to the Chinese politics and the political history of the Chinese republican governments from 1912 to 1949. This includes coverage of the contribution of Sun Yat Sen and the development of the Chinese communist party. Its English language website contains information on the archive holdings and access policies. It includes some online exhibitions containing digital images of it key holdings and treasures.
http://www.shac.net.cn/en/index.asp

China beat: blogging how the East is read
Launched in 2008 this blog features news, comment and analysis about China written by a group of scholars and journalists. Founders include Leslie Chang former Beijing correspondent of the Wall Street Journal. Coverage encompasses Chinese economics, politics and culture. Postings include reviews, book and film recommendations and comment on current events from a historical perspective. There is also a focus on analysing how the Western media covers China and Chinese current events. Topics covered include the 2008 Beijing olympic games, human rights in China and Chinese politics and relations with Tibet and Taiwan. Postings from 2008 onwards can be read via the website. users may also sign up to RSS feeds.
http://thechinabeat.blogspot.com/

From Intute.ac.uk 

"History From Below": The Ottoman Empire And The Modern Middle East: An Archive

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History from Below in the Ottoman Empire and the Modern Middle East: an archive
This site is a joint project of Binghamton University, SUNY, and the London School of Economics and Politics. It is developing an online clearinghouse to resources of academic value for researching the history of the late Ottoman Empire and the modern Middle East from below. History from below is defined to include resources relating to workers, labouring classes and the popular mass. It includes full text documents, photographs and links to other primary resources. Topics covered include colonialism, workers and the British Empire and the post-colonial world. Countries covered include: Turkey and the Ottoman Empire, Iran, the Middle East and the Arab World. Intute.ac.uk
http://bingiwas.binghamton.edu/~ottmiddl/

Zimbabwe Web Sites From Intute.Ac.Uk

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Mapping terror in Zimbabwe violence and elections: Sokwanele
Sokwanele - Zvakwana is a civil society organisation which is campaigning for pro-democracy and human rights reforms in Zimbabwe. Its website provides information on its aims and activities. It includes regular news updates, blogs and reports on social, economic, political and human rights conditions in Zimbabwe. This includes coverage of such issues as elections and human rights abuses committed by the government of Robert Mugabe. During 2008 it produced a series of online maps charting the spread and nature of violence in the aftermath of the 2008 presidential elections. It also offered access to photographs and online video film showing vicitms of torture and political violence. Most materials are produced by writers and groups based within Zimbabwe.
http://www.sokwanele.com/

Zimbabwe : RUSI analysis
This site is maintained by leading UK think tank RUSI (Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security studies). It provides access to RUSI comment, articles and transcripts of events relating to the political and economic situation in Zimbabwe from approximately 2006 onwards. This includes coverage of the rule and human rights record of the government of Robert Mugabe and the political violence following the 2008 Zimbabwe presidential elections. Access to some of the full text articles requires payment of a subscription.
http://www.rusi.org/publication/analysis/ref:A47FA0BFE7E413/act:lead/

UK Confidential [Pdf]: Challenges To Privacy In An Open Society.Demos

Privacy Trackbacks (0)
The Demos think tank in the United Kingdom consistently finds new perspectives and outlooks on important topics, and this latest collection of essays published in May 2008 is no exception. Specifically, these fourteen essays "explore the underlying challenges and realities of privacy in an open society, and argue for a new settlement between the individual and society; the public and the states; the consumer and business." The volume was sponsored in part by the telecommunications company BT, and it includes such trenchant essays as "The culture of control", "A place of greater safety? Information sharing and confidentiality", and "The social value of privacy". It is worth noting that the underlying theme of the collection is that "we get the privacy culture we deserve", and this alone is well worth thinking (and reading) about. [KMG] Scout Report

http://www.demos.co.uk/files/UK%20confidential%20-%20web.pdf

South African Government’S Response To The Xenophobia Crisis

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Fears Over the South African Government’s Response to the Xenophobia Crisis

The xenophobic violence that started on 11 May 2008 came as a big shock to the people of South Africa and, judging from its response, it came as a surprise to the state. Since the beginning of this year, isolated incidents of xenophobic violence were reported in Mamelodi, Attridgeville and Diepsloot, all in the Gauteng province. The reaction to these incidents came mostly from local government level and there was no response from the national government...

ISS Today 

Children And Armed Conflict In Somalia

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The latest report of the Secretary-General on children and armed conflict in Somalia has been issued (S/2008/352). According to the summary,
"The report stresses that the level of grave violations against children in Somalia has been increasing over the past year, particularly with regard to the recruitment and use of children in armed conflict; the killing, maiming and rape of children; and the denial of humanitarian access to children."
 UN Pulse Permanent Link: Children and armed conflict in Somalia

African Population Studies

Africa Population Trackbacks (0)
This is a peer-reviewed, bi-lingual journal produced by the Union for African Population Studies. It publishes original research on African population, development and related fields in French and English. Tables of contents and abstracts are available from this site. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.bioline.org.br/ep

Global Footprint Network

Environment Trackbacks (0)

Global Footprint Network is committed to fostering a world where all people have the opportunity to live satisfying lives within the means of Earth's ecological capacity. We are dedicated to advancing the scientific rigor and practical application of the Ecological Footprint, a tool that quantifies human demand on nature, and nature's capacity to meet these demands. Conceived in 1990 by Mathis Wackernagel and William Rees at The University of British Columbia, the Ecological Footprint is now in wide use by governments, communities, and businesses to monitor current ecological resource balances and to plan for the future.

Global Footprint Network's vision is to make the Ecological Footprint as prominent a metric as the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). By 2015, through its flagship Ten-In-Ten Campaign, Global Footprint Network aims to have ten countries managing their ecological wealth in the same way they manage their finances.

http://www.footprintnetwork.org/index.php

Africa's Ecological Footprint: Human Well-Being And Biological Capital

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Global Footprint Network’s Africa Project

Download the Factbook (PDF)
 

Living Planet Report 2006 (available also in French, Hindi, Portuguese, Swahili)
 

Methodology Paper (PDF)
 

World Trends and Overshoot
 

Ecological Creditors and Debtors

 

Africa: Ecological Footprint and Human Well-Being o

Food Crisis Report

Food, food supply and food security UNCTAD Trackbacks (0)

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has issued a new report, Addressing the Global Food Crisis: Key trade, investment and commodity policies in ensuring sustainable food security and alleviating poverty (full text, pdf, ). The report looks at the causes of the crisis and proposes responses, particularly for the long term.

UN Pulse Permanent Link: Food Crisis Report

South Africa: Protect Victims Of Xenophobic Violence

South Africa Xenophobia Trackbacks (0)

Provide Basics of Food, Water, Shelter, and Safety to Displaced

Johannesburg, June 5, 2008) – The South African government should ensure that “temporary shelter sites” for homeless and traumatized victims of recent xenophobic violence comply with international standards, Human Rights Watch said today. The UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement require states to provide food, water, shelter, medical care and security to displaced persons...

Human Rights Watch: Human Rights News 

Keeping Tabs On The Global Food Crisis

Food, food supply and food security Trackbacks (0)

This week, we offer you a selection of sites you can visit to keep tabs on the world food situation. And don’t forget to check the Food and Agriculture category over on our sister site, DocuTicker, for the latest reports from think thanks, government agencies, NGOs, etc.

+ Global Information and Early Warning System on Food and Agriculture
“Established in the wake of the world food crisis of the early 1970s, the Global Information and Early Warning System (GIEWS) remains the leading source of information on food production and food security for every country in the world, whether or not it is an FAO member. In the past 25 years, the system has become a worldwide network which includes 115 governments, 61 Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and numerous trade, research and media organizations. Over the years, a unique database on global, regional, national and subnational food security has been maintained, refined and continuously updated. GIEWS has invested in innovative methods for collecting, analysing, presenting and disseminating information, making full use of the revolution in information technology and the advent of computer communications. The System supports national- and regional-level initiatives to enhance food information and early warning systems.

“In a period when the number of food emergencies has been growing, GIEWS continues to provide policy-makers and relief agencies throughout the world with the most up-to-date and accurate information available.”

Offers mailing lists by continent and an RSS feed.

See also: United Nations Secretary-General’s Task Force on the Global Food Security Crisis

+ U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service: Factors in Food Commodity Price Increases
“The recent runup in global food commodity prices reflects both long-term trends and short-term events. Slower long-term growth in global crop production and more rapid growth in demand have tightened world balances of grains and oilseeds. In addition, about 5 years ago, global production of ethanol and biodiesel began to add to the demand for grains and oilseeds. Other factors that have put upward pressure on prices include the declining value of the U.S. dollar, rising energy prices, increasing agricultural costs of production, adverse weather conditions in 2006 and 2007 and, most recently, steps taken by some countries to curb their food exports to mitigate their own food price inflation.”

Selection of articles, reports, webcasts.

+ U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service: Briefing Room — Global Food Security
“Worldwide, some 1 billion people in 70 lower income countries are hungry, and the situation could grow worse in the poorest countries. Ironically, most of these people live in rural areas where food is produced. But food availability does not guarantee food security, which depends also on the ability to buy food and to utilize it effectively. Individual health and education levels, as well as local conditions such as safety of the water supply, affect the ability to utilize food effectively.”

Offers reports, feature articles, data, an FAQ and links to related resources.

+ International Food Policy Research Institute
“The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) seeks sustainable solutions for ending hunger and poverty. IFPRI is one of 15 centers supported by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, an alliance of 64 governments, private foundations, and international and regional organizations.”

News updates, datasets, reports, press release newsfeed.

+ ReliefWeb: Global Food Crisis
“income growth, climate change, high energy prices, globalization, and urbanization are transforming the world food situation (International Food Policy Research Institute - IFPRI). Food prices are rising (some have more than doubled) affecting not only the worldÕs poor, but also communities that had so far been food-secure. “That’s the new face of hunger, people who suddenly can no longer afford the food they see on store shelves because prices have soared beyond their reach” (World Food Programme - WFP).

“Rising prices also hamper those in need of humanitarian assistance. WFP issued an emergency appeal to reach the people it originally planned to assist this year. According to WFP, an estimated 854 million people are food insecure. High food prices are believed to remain high, intensifying concerns about food security and risking a “major setback” in the accomplishment of the UN Millennium Development Goals (WFP).”

Updates, maps, related resources, data, key documents, FAQ.

+ USAID: Global Food Insecurity and Price Increase Updates
At present, 37 countries throughout every region of the world are experiencing localized food insecurity, lack of access to food, or shortfalls in food production or supplies. In the past year, global food prices have increased an average of 43 percent, according to the International Monetary Fund. On April 14, the World Bank estimated that the doubling of food prices during the past three years could potentially push 100 million people throughout the world into extreme poverty.

Approximately 1 billion people — or nearly one-sixth of the world’s population — subsist on less than $1 per day. Of this population, 162 million survive on less than $0.50 per day. At the household level, increasing food prices have the greatest effect on poor and food-insecure populations, who spend 50 to 60 percent or more of their income on food, according to the International Food Policy Research Institute. Overall, increased food prices particularly affect the poorest people within developing countries. Among the populations affected by current food insecurity and price increase are people in Haiti and Tajikistan.

+ WashingtonPost.com: Global Food Crisis
Feature article series, graphics, news updates, links to related resources.

+ World Bank: Food Price Crisis
News, multimedia, regional information

+ Congressional Research Service report
Rising Food Prices and Global Food Needs: The U.S. Response

Resourceshelf

Human Security Brief 2007

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Human Security Brief 2007
Source: Human Security Report Project
From press release (PDF; 482 KB):

Challenging the expert consensus that the threat of global terrorism is increasing, a new report from the Canadian research team that produced the much-cited Human Security Report in 2005, reveals a sharp net decline in the incidence of terrorist violence around the world.

The Human Security Brief 2007 demonstrates that:

  • Fatalities from terrorism have declined by some 40 percent, while the loose-knit terror network associated with Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda has suffered a dramatic collapse in popular support throughout the Muslim world.
  • There has been an extraordinary, but largely unnoticed, positive change in sub-Saharan Africa's security landscape. The number of conflicts being waged in the region more than halved between 1999 and 2006; the combat toll dropped by 98 percent.
  • The decline in the total number of armed conflicts and combat deaths around the world that was reported three years ago in Human Security Report 2005 has continued.

The Brief was produced by the Human Security Report Project (HSRP) research team at Simon Fraser University's School for International Studies in Vancouver, Canada. The HSRP's research is supported by the governments of Canada, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland and the UK.

Download in sections or as full document (PDF; 1.7 MB).

Docuticker

The Growth Report: Strategies For Sustained Growth And Inclusive Development

Development Trackbacks (0)

Strategies For Sustained Growth And Inclusive Development
Source: Commission on Growth and Development

The Commission on Growth and Development released its final report,The Growth Report: Strategies for Sustained Growth and Inclusive Development, which looks at how developing countries can achieve fast sustained and equitable growth.

According to the Commission, fast sustained growth is not a miracle; it is attainable for developing countries with the “right mix of ingredients.” Countries need leaders who are committed to achieving growth and who can take advantage of opportunities from the global economy. They also need to know about the levels of incentives and public investments that are necessary for private investment to take off and ensure the long-term diversification of the economy and its integration in the global economy.

Download in sections (PDFs) or as full report (PDF: 10.3 MB).

Food Supply Scenarios. Chatham House

Food, food supply and food security Trackbacks (0)

Thinking About the Future of Food: The Chatham House Food Supply Scenarios
Source: Chatham House

+ Demand for food is increasing because the global population is rising and major developing economies are expanding. Global supply capacity, meanwhile, is struggling to keep up with changing requirements.

+ Four global food supply scenarios have been developed by the Chatham House Food Supply Project to consider the challenges created and their impact on the EU/UK:

  • ‘Just a Blip’: what if the present high price of food proves to be a brief spike with a return to cheap food at some point soon?
  • ‘Food Inflation’: what if food prices remain high for a decade or more?
  • ‘Into a New Era’: what if today’s food system has reached its limits and must change?
  • ‘Food in Crisis’: what if a major world food crisis develops?

+ Across the world the responses to change will be conditioned by uncertainties surrounding the availability of sufficient energy, water, land and skills. EU/UK stakeholders need to start planning now to develop new food supply systems that are up to the task.

+ Full Paper (PDF; 259 KB)

Docuticker

Prisoners At GuantáNamo Bay: Interrogators From Brutal Human Rights Abusing Regimes

United States of America Guantanimo Bay prisoners Prisons and prisoners Torture Trackbacks (0)

Report: U.S. Government Allows Security Forces from Brutal Human Rights Abusing Regimes to Threaten Prisoners at Guantánamo
Source: Center for Constitutional Rights

Today, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) released two reports on the conditions and treatment of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay. One report highlights numerous instances of threats and abuse of prisoners at Guantánamo by interrogators from brutal human rights abusing regimes who are given full access by the U.S. The second report demonstrates the deteriorating mental health of the overwhelming majority of Guantánamo prisoners relegated to solitary confinement at the prison.

Foreign Interrogators in Guantánamo Bay recounts interrogations of detainees by security officials from China, Uzbekistan, Libya, Jordan, Tajikistan and Tunisia – all countries that the U.S. State Department has consistently criticized for egregious treatment of detainees during interrogations in their own countries.

+ Foreign Interrogators in Guantanamo Bay (PDF; 167 KB)
+ Solitary Confinement summary (PDF; 149 KB)

Food Price Crisis: Another 'lost Decade' For Development? ODI

Food, food supply and food security Trackbacks (0)
ODI blog Monday, June 02, 2008 11:38 AM by Simon Maxwell
Blog originally published on Guardian Unlimited Comment is Free on 30th May 2008:  view the Guardian blog and comments.

 

As world leaders pack their bags for a crisis summit on food in Rome next week, the news is of food prices beginning to fall, and of large donor pledges to cover the cost of emergency needs. So, that's all right, then. Or is it?

Actually, no. The Food and Agriculture Organisation summit is a vital step in a process that will develop through a series of events in 2008, including the G8 in Hokkaido in July, and the UN Call to Action on the Millennium Development Goals, in New York in September. At this stage, the Rome summit must deliver four things...

World Bank’S Africa Region HIV/AIDS Agenda For Action 2007-2011

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Our Commitment: The World Bank’s Africa Region HIV/AIDS Agenda for Action 2007-2011 (PDF; 1.1 MB)
Source: World Bank

“Our Commitment: World Bank’s Africa Region HIV/AIDS Agenda for Action 2007-2011,” is the result of extensive consultation with over 30 African partner countries and institutions, as well as donors, UN agencies, non-governmental organizationsand others seeking to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS. It builds on what has been learned in the emergency response to HIV/AIDS and reaffirms the World Bank’s commitment to combatting HIV/AIDS in Africa.

The Agenda for Action will contribute substantially to the long-term, sustainable response required to overcome this enormous development challenge facing sub-Saharan Africa.

From: UN Pulse

Amnesty International Report 2008: State Of The World’S Human Rights

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Amnesty International Report 2008: State of the World’s Human Rights
Source: Amnesty International
From press release:

Amnesty International's Report 2008, shows that sixty years after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the United Nations, people are still tortured or ill-treated in at least 81 countries, face unfair trials in at least 54 countries and are not allowed to speak freely in at least 77 countries.

Amnesty International cautioned that the biggest threat to the future of human rights is the absence of a shared vision and collective leadership.

  • China must live up to the human rights promises it made around the Olympic Games and allow free speech and freedom of the press and end "re-education through labour"?.
  • The USA must close Guantanimo detention camp and secret detention centres, prosecute the detainees under fair trial standards or release them, and unequivocally reject the use of torture and ill-treatment.
  • Russia must show greater tolerance for political dissent, and none for impunity on human rights abuses in Chechnya.
  • The EU must investigate the complicity of its member states in "rendition" of terrorist suspects and set the same bar on human rights for its own members as it does for other countries.

+ Report at a Glance
+ The World by Region
+ Global Themes
+ Facts and Figures
+ Human Rights Treaties (PDF; 237 KB)

HIV/AIDS Interventions. WHO And UNICEF

Aids and HIV World Health Organisation UNICEF Accountability Trackbacks (0)

A new report from the World Health Organization (WHO), the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), Towards Universal Access: Scaling up Priority HIV/AIDS Interventions in the Health Sector, has been issued (full text, pdf, 5.12 MB). According to the WHO press release, nearly 3 million people were receiving treatment with antiretroviral therapy in low- and middle-income countries by the end of 2007—a more than seven-fold increase over four years.

UN Pulse Permalink 

Children And AIDS. UNICEF

Aids and HIV Children UNICEF Accountability Trackbacks (0)

Children and AIDS: Country fact sheets
This companion volume to Children and AIDS: Second stocktaking report presents statistical data for 157 countries and territories.

 


Children and AIDS: Second stocktaking report
This report reviews advances made over the past year or so in four areas where HIV and AIDS affect children. It finds that most countries have made important gains in preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV and in paediatric treatment. Some countries have made progress towards HIV prevention goals, and more AIDS-affected children are benefiting from protection, care and support services. But much more remains to be done. The report also explains the need for improved norms, standards and guidelines to ensure effective implementation of programmes.

Children And The Millennium Development Goals. UNICEF

Children Millenium Development Goals UNICEF Trackbacks (0)

Children and the Millennium Development Goals: Progress towards A World Fit for Children
Children and the Millennium Development Goals is an adaptation of the Secretary-General’s report ‘Follow-up to the special session of the General Assembly on children’ (A/62/259), 15 August 2007, considered by the General Assembly at its 62nd session in September 2007. It contains updated data and presents information from 121 country and territory reports.

The State Of The World’S Children 2008: Child Survival. UNICEF

Children UNICEF Trackbacks (0)
The State of the World’s Children 2008: Child Survival

The State of the World’s Children 2008 provides a wide-ranging assessment of the current state of child survival and primary health care for mothers, newborns and children. It examines lessons learned in child health during the past few decades and outlines the most important emerging precepts and strategies for reducing deaths among children under age five and for providing a continuum of care for mothers, newborns and children.

The State of the World’s Children 2008: Executive Summary

The State of the World's Children 2008 examines the current state of child survival and primary health care for mothers, newborns and children – and outlines strategies for reducing under-five deaths and providing a continuum of care. The pocket-sized executive summary provides an overview of the full report and includes regional summary indicators.

UN Guide To Climate Neutrality

Climate Change United Nations Trackbacks (0)

The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has issued a new publication, Kick the Habit: A UN Guide to Climate Neutrality (full text, zipped pdf, 39.3 MB). The report provides an overview of issues related to climate change, the major actors, and strategies to mitigate climate change. Throughout the text, technical terms are defined, providing an integrated glossary of key climate change concepts.

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Tokyo International Conference On African Development (4th, 2008)

Africa Development Trackbacks (0)

The Fourth Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD IV) was held at the end of May. The final documents have been issued on the website, including:

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OECD And FAO On Agricultural Commodity Prices

Food, food supply and food security Food and Agricultural Organisation OECD Trackbacks (0)

OECD and FAO see agricultural commodity prices remaining high and growing more volatile
Source: Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

Agricultural commodity prices should ease from their recent record peaks but over the next 10 years they are expected to average well above the mean of the past decade, according to the latest Agricultural Outlook from OECD and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.

The current high prices will hit poor and hungry people hardest, particularly those who are net food buyers in urban areas in low income countries. Humanitarian aid is the best short term solution for this situation while in the longer term the emphasis in these countries needs to be on improving farm productivity as well as growth and broader economic development.

+ Report summary (PDF: 1.7 MB)
+ Essential material
+ Press conference

Isandla Development Dialogue On Water Provision And Use

South Africa Trackbacks (0)

Waterwise:  Advancing life, equity and sustainable resource use

  Thursday 12 June 2008, 16h30 - 18h00 

 (tea and coffee served beforehand, please be seated at 16h30)    

Centre for the Book, Cape Town

Isandla Institute and the Open Society Foundation for South Africa invite you to a Development Dialogue on

Few South Africans have been left unaffected by the energy crisis facing South Africa. But what about the state of water in the country? The official government position states that there is no current or impending water crisis, but is that perspective shared by poor households whose access to safe water is severely constrained? Last month's High Court ruling that installing prepayment water meters in Phiri, Soweto, is unconstitutional and unlawful suggests that the South African government needs to do more to ensure that people’s right to water is realised. In light of this ruling, is it appropriate to commodify a natural resource like water and if so, what price can consumers reasonably be expected to pay? Taking a longer term view, is South Africa able to ensure consistent water supply in the face of growing demand? Given that water is a limited natural resource, are we using it wisely? And given that water is a life force, are we using it equitably and in the interest of the public good?

Jackie Dugard from the Centre for Applied Legal Studies will summarise the legal arguments put forward to the High Court on behalf of the Phiri residents and share her views on the implications of the judgment for poor communities and municipalities.  

Laila Smith, Mvula Trust, will comment on how local communities can get more involved in water management 

Osman Asmal, City of Cape Town, will bring in a municipal perspective on the challenges and possible contradictions between equitable water provision for the poor and sustainable environmental resource management.

  

The Development Dialogue will be held on Thursday  12 June 2008 from 16h30-18h00, at the Centre for the Book, 62 Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town. Tea and coffee are made available between 16h00-16h30. Kindly note that the event will start at 16h30. Afterwards, there will be an opportunity for informal interaction over drinks and snacks. 

If you are interested in attending this event, please r.s.v.p. on admin@isandla.org.za  by Tuesday 10 June. You will receive confirmation of your attendance.

We look forward to seeing you there!