Millennium Development Goals
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) "are the most broadly supported, comprehensive and specific development goals the world has ever agreed upon. These eight time-bound goals provide concrete, numerical benchmarks for tackling extreme poverty in its many dimensions. They include goals and targets on income poverty, hunger, maternal and child mortality, disease, inadequate shelter, gender inequality, environmental degradation and the Global Partnership for Development.
"Adopted by world leaders in the year 2000 and set to be achieved by 2015, the MDGs are both global and local, tailored by each country to suit specific development needs. They provide a framework for the entire international community to work together towards a common end – making sure that human development reaches everyone, everywhere. If these goals are achieved, world poverty will be cut by half, tens of millions of lives will be saved, and billions more people will have the opportunity to benefit from the global economy." [1]
Criticism
- Ian Taylor, "The Millennium Development Goals and Africa: Challenges facing the Commonwealth", The Round Table, 95: 385, 2006, pp.365 — 382. (response by Myles Wickstead)
Resources and articles
Related Sourcewatch
- World Water Council
- Amir Attaran
- Dena Merriam
- ImagineNations Group
- Michael W. Doyle
- Julian Lob-Levyt
- United Nations Global Compact
- Micah Challenge International
- Action for Global Health
- CEO Water Mandate
- Flavio Lotti
- Brian Wesley Ames
- West Africa Water Initiative
- Copenhagen Consensus
- Global Call to Action Against Poverty
- One World Broadcasting Trust
- World Sustainable Development Forum - founded to implement MDGs
References
- ↑ Millennium Development Goals, UNDP, accessed July 19, 2010.