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Post-2015 Un Development
Making Change Happen?

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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In 2000, at the United Nations Millennium Summit, world leaders agreed to the Millennium Declaration. The Declaration included development targets to be reached by 2015, which were to become known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Progress has been made towards the achievement of the MDGs, but poverty remains widespread.

With the terminal year approaching, the international community has begun the process of determining the goals which might follow the MDGs. While the UN is driving the process, there has been very little introspection on its own organizational capacity to help countries to meet the goals and is being increasingly sidelined by other more effective development organizations and initiatives.

Based on extensive original research that has critically examined the role and functions of the organizations of the UN development system, this book seeks to capture in a single volume a comprehensive review of the UN's performance and prospects for development. The contributors each offer extensive experience and familiarity-as practitioners and researchers-with the UN and development; and the book will contribute to the urgently needed debate on the reform of the UN development system at a critical juncture.

The main rationale for this book, and its timing, is the unusual opportunity provided by the 2015 threshold to re-think the UN development system and to empower it to support a new development agenda and will be of interest to students, scholars of International Organizations and development studies.


About the author










Stephen Browne is Co-Director of the Future of the UN Development System (FUNDS) Project and Senior Fellow at the Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies at The CUNY Graduate Center. He worked for more than 30 years in different organizations of the UN development system, sharing his time almost equally between agency headquarters and country assignments. He has written books and articles on aid and development throughout his career, his most recent being The United Nations Development Programme and System (2011), The International Trade Centre (2011), and The United Nations Industrial Development Organization (2012).

Thomas G. Weiss is Presidential Professor of Political Science and Director of the Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies at The City University of New York's Graduate Center. He is Past President of the ISA (2009-10). His most recent single-authored books include Global Governance: Why? What? Whither? (2013); Humanitarian Business (2013); What's Wrong with the United Nations and How to Fix It (2012); and Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas in Action (2012). He is co-editor of the Routledge "Global Institutions Series" and co-director of the Wartime History and the Future United Nations Project and of the Future UN Development System Project.


Summary

Based on extensive original research that has critically examined the role and functions of the organizations of the UN development system, this book seeks to capture in a single volume a comprehensive review of the UN’s performance and prospects for development.

Product details

Authors Thomas G. Weiss, Stephen Browne
Assisted by Stephen Browne (Editor), Browne Stephen (Editor), Thomas G Weiss (Editor)
Publisher Routledge Academic
 
Content Book
Product form Paperback / Softback
Publication date 15.07.2014
Subject Non-fiction book
Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education
 
EAN 9780415856638
ISBN 978-0-415-85663-8
Dimensions (packing) 14 x 21.7 x 1.6 cm
 
Series Global Institutions
Subjects Weiss, UN, Civil Society, POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, Development, POLITICAL SCIENCE / NGOs (Non-Governmental Organizations), POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / Treaties, Developing Countries, Human Development Index, Humanitarian Aid, International institutions, Development Studies, Development economics & emerging economies, Development economics and emerging economies, East Timor, Socioeconomic development, Peacebuilding strategies, Wilkinson, PBC, eleventh hour, DDR Program, international aid effectiveness, DDR Process, Security Development Nexus, Civil Society Advisory Committee, Pacific Islands Development Forum, UN system reform for sustainable development, accountability in global governance, organisational reform analysis, socioeconomic policy evaluation, multilateral development cooperation, voluntary consensus standard setting, PBC., High Level Political Forum, post-2015 development agenda, Rorden Wilkinson, Development Pillar, Bjørn Skogmo, IATI, Thomas G. Weiss, Roberto Bissio, Richard O'Brien, David Hulme, Rio+20, Peace Building Support Office, Richard Golding, Non-core Funding, Graciana del Castillo, W. Andy Knight, Michael von der Schulenburg, Silke Weinlich, Robert Picciotto, Stephen Browne, Longer Term Development Objectives, System Wide Evaluation, Craig N. Murphy, Post-2015 DA, United Nations Development System, Global Sustainable Development Facility, Cécile Molinier
 

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