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Tuesday 25 March 2014

March 2014 Newsletter from DI

 

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Development Initiatives

Dispatches Newsletter. Development Initiatives exists to end absolute poverty by 2030.

March 2014

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The road to ending extreme poverty.

Last week the Development Initiatives Africa Hub, working in collaboration with the Chronic Poverty Advisory Network (CPAN), launched the third Global Chronic Poverty Report, in Nairobi, Kenya. The report looks at what can be done to ensure the post-2015 development agenda leaves no one behind. The launch also included highlights of our forthcoming East Africa Chronic Poverty Report which will investigate why despite a decade of significant gross domestic product growth rates over 20 million East Africans are still classified as either chronically poor or experiencing extreme poverty. Read more

 

 

Whose value for whose money? Views from the ALNAP conference in Addis

How can people who are caught up in crises have more of a say in what assistance they receive? Sophia Swithern looks at the 29th ALNAP conference and the increasing role of financial transparency in engaging crisis-affected people.
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Open Data Day 2014: promise and hope for Nepal's open movement
Bhibusan Bista, CEO of Young Innovations, looks back on his highlights from the second Open Data Day celebrations in Kathmandu. The event brought together techies, journalists and civil society organisations to discuss the open movement in Nepal and to participate in interactive workshops on open data.

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Photo by Gates Foundation / CC BY-NC-ND

Impact investments to end poverty - joint event with Business Fights Poverty
All resources flowing to developing countries – domestic and international, public, private and commercial – can be used for ending poverty. Harpinder Collacott introduces our blog series with Business Fights Poverty on the role of the private sector in ending poverty by 2030.
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Charting progress – How much aid goes to mobilising domestic resources (DRM)?
In 2011 just 0.07% of ODA went to domestic resource mobilisation (DRM) specific projects. Ahead of the Global Partnership meeting in Mexico this April we take a closer look at the figures
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Charting progress – The UK's path to 0.7% of national income provided as aid

Analysis of the UK budget shows that Britain is still on track to become the first G7 country to reach the 0.7% target. Official figures should confirm this on 2 April 2014.Read more...

 

 

Development Initiatives is an independent organisation that sees improving resource effectiveness as key to the elimination of absolute poverty. We have offices in Bristol, UK, and Nairobi, Kenya, and work in partnership with Development, Research and Training (DRT) in Uganda. We receive funding from a number of organisations including the Hewlett Foundation and donor governments. You can read our privacy policy here..

 

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