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From Michael Hutak on Will this ad help the SDGs?
You can't arrive unless you know where you are going. In my view, the collective agreement to pose targets and a deadline *IS* the plan. The plan is to mobilise action and resources around meeting the targets, action that will now be tracked and monitored and be advocated for. If by plan you mean process, ie. logframes, workplans, and "frameworks for action", we all know there'll more of those to come in spades.
From Lydia Kaforau on Poor political governance in Solomon Islands – is culture the cause?
Thanks Terance
From Alex Erskine on The SDGs, gender and Beyoncé: feminist, but not flawless
I think one practical means of promoting gender equality through the SDGs is to advocate actively promoting women into positions of responsibility, as that will make it more likely that illicit financial flows are curbed (Goal 16, target 16.4) and crimes are combatted (Goal 16, target 16a.). Women commit many fewer crimes than men, even allowing for their often-gender-limited roles.
From Alex on Will this ad help the SDGs?
I hear your concerns, but as a big fan of llamas I can't help but like this ad
From Terence Wood on Will this ad help the SDGs?
I agree the ad does a very good job of distilling the essence of the goals into a single sentence (or, at least, it does a great job of distilling a particular interpretation of the goals). But there's at least one glaring inaccuracy. No one has a plan: the Goals are desired targets; but we don't have a plan for meeting them (which is a good thing given we know comparatively little about the development process).
From Michael Hutak on Will this ad help the SDGs?
"The UN has launched a plan to fight poverty, injustice and climate change." What could be more direct? Succinctly captures the key messages, reinforces the logo and presents the iconic UN chamber as the world's meeting place. Anthropomorphising animals and linking them to national archetypes is a trope familiar to all ages. I think its brilliant.
From Walid Tamim on The effectiveness of Australian aid to Afghanistan: our thoughts on the Senate’s tough evaluation task
I am Walid Tamim, I used to work for ABC Australia for more then 7 years and now I have established a TV channel exclusive for children and teenagers in Afghanistan. I am sharing the brief note and would be pleased to be forwarded to the relevant department/person for expansion of this TV network across the country. Currently we are in Kabul and Mazar e Sharif:
Aria TV in Brief:
Afghanistan, for the first time in its history, has the opportunity to practice modern democracy. In lessons learned from developed countries, multi-media has been an important source of knowledge and education for the masses. The role of media in promoting democracy, educating people about their civic rights, encouraging people to participate in politics and civics, is always recognized.
This has been experienced in Afghanistan in last ten years. Therefore, it is critical, at this point of Afghanistan’s history, to educate society, especially the young generation, about the positive changes democracy can have on society using the experiences of other countries.
ARIA TV was launched as a channel exclusively for children and teenagers to educate them about their civic rights and to do a sort of behavior change. The target audience is preschoolers, school students, and out of school children. The principle of this channel is “Education through Entertainment.”
ARIA TV focuses on democracy promotion and aims at the children and teenagers as a hope for the future. The TV programming is designed to achieve this as a main aim. (Visit: www.aria.af)
Objectives of ARIA TV are:
• Teach civic responsibilities;
• Teach social responsibilities (how contributing to keeping their communities clean, an education, respecting their parents and elders all make for a better society);
• Teach the importance of a peaceful, democratic, and modern society;
• Teach the dangers of terrorism and extremism;
• Teach the danger of drugs;
• Teach that their effective contribution and engagement to their communities can bring change to the lives of everyone;
• To teach children’s rights, women’s rights, right to education, right to a peaceful life, and so on;
• To change children and teenagers to a productive and better citizens; and
• To encourage school attendance
Best,
Dr. Walid Tamim (MD, PgD in Economics)
President-Aria TV
Wazir Mohammad Akbar Khan, Str. 15, Main Rd, House No. 835
Kabul-Afghanistan
Cell: +93 7 96700898 (Afghanistan)
Email: walid.tamim@aria.af
Website: www.aria.af
From Vern Hughes on Why poor countries should try to avoid the SDGs
Excellent review. The question remaining is: how is it possible that this farcical process and outcomes were allowed to take place? And then a second question: how do we reform the UN/INGO/development system to stop this sort of thing happening?
From Vern Hughes on Easterly on the SDGs: utopian and worthless
I read the Easterly piece not knowing who Easterly is (it is assumed that readers of this blog are part of the aid/development industry and are familiar with him: his identity is not explained to readers). I read the piece because I have indeed been 'slightly nauseous' this week on reading the hullaballoo about the SDG goals, as Ashlee indicates. For the life of me I cannot believe the hype generated by a statement of 2030 goals that is, as far as I can see, unlikely to make the slightest bit of difference to sum total of global poverty, disadvantage, discrimination and fear anytime soon.
This is utopianism. Wild utopianism, given credibility by an assembly of world governments who presumably felt obliged to concur with the goal of ending world poverty by 2030. Did anyone suggest it might be done by 2025? Or 2040? That's not the point, of course. It's the intent, not the detail that matters.
Which is why, presumably, I have read statements from some governments and civil society organisations suggesting that these goals might be difficult to budget for, and not easy to implement. Indeed. Implementation and budgeting for utopian goals are not easy to do.
From Jo Spratt on Will this ad help the SDGs?
Thanks Terence. Watching it again, my impression is the same: I like it. The ad highlights the fact that every state agreed, and every state is expected to work towards the goals in some shape or form, not just developing countries: everyone, together. It is also great to see the effort kicked-off so quickly, unlike the MDGs where it took about five years before the promotional programme really got going. The aim was to promote the SDGs to as many people as possible within seven days (7 billion people, even) - a good idea, and one that indicates the UN is going to work hard to 'sell' these goals.
For sure, there are major issues, as Philippe Krause from Team Chimera pointed out. But the realities on the ground should not prevent aspiration, and that's what the SDGs are more than anything. I think the ad captures this well.
Besides, who can resist Liam Neeson?
From Alex Erskine on The SDGs, gender and Beyoncé: feminist, but not flawless