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The future UN development agenda: contrasting visions, contrasting operations

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Abstract

‘Sustainable development’ – as currently and politically correctly formulated – provides an inappropriate basis on which to frame a future-oriented UN agenda, and risks perpetuating patterns of assistance in which most UN organisations perform poorly and in the shadow of alternative and more able multilateral and bilateral sources. UN operations should take as their point of departure the comprehensive agenda outlined by the two world summits of 2000 and 2005. This agenda recognises the value-based UN as the only universal-membership organisation, which combines the concerns of satisfying human needs while ensuring security, human rights, justice and sound governance. The post-2015 agenda should not look only at development and environment but aspire to what a million global voices canvassed by the UN in ‘the world we want’ campaign are clamouring for.

Notes

1. Quadrennial Comprehensive Policy Review of Operational Activities for Development of the United Nations System: Recommendations (qpcr), unedited version, 15 August 2012, 9–10, http://www.un.org/esa/coordination/pdf/sg_qcpr_report_adv_unedited_version.pdf. The quotation is not in the final document.

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18. qpcr, unedited version, 31 May 2012, 8, http://www.un.org/esa/coordination/pdf/sg_report_for_2012_qcpr.pdf. The quotation is not in the final document.

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25. qpcr, 15 August 2012, 10.

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31. Angus Deaton, The Great Escape. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2013, 273.

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34. unctad, World Investment Report 2013. Geneva: unctad, 2013.

35. Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson, Why Nations Fail. London: Profile Books, 2012.

36. Andy Sumner and Richard Mallett, The Future of Foreign Aid: Development Cooperation and the New Geography of Global Poverty. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.

37. Bruce Jenks and Bruce Jones, United Nations Development at a Crossroads. New York: Centre on International Cooperation, 2013.

39. Graciana del Castillo, “Rebuilding War-torn States: Is the UN System up to the Challenges?” In Browne and Weiss, Post-2015 UN Development, 144–159.

40. Thomas G. Weiss and Ramesh Thakur, Global Governance and the UN: An Unfinished Journey. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2010.

41. Stephen Browne, Foreign Aid in Practice. New York: New York University Press, 1990.

42. A Million Voices: The World We Want, http://www.worldwewant2015.org/millionvoices.

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