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heather dawson
December 18, 11:32 AM
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This report provides a comprehensive overview of legal foundations that can anchor just transitions in durable, equitable, and enforceable rules. It synthesizes relevant international law, from the Paris Agreement and ILO instruments to emerging human rights jurisprudence and shows how countries increasingly translate these principles into national legislation governing labor protections, energy transitions, critical minerals, agriculture, natural resources, and financing mechanisms.
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heather dawson
December 18, 11:29 AM
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The International Labour Organization (ILO) has launched this learning portal to transform the forced displacement response. The portal turns years of field experience into practical, interactive resources to help practitioners, policymakers, and partners improve responses to forced displacement worldwide. Designed for policymakers, practitioners, and key stakeholders in forced displacement contexts, this platform offers actionable tips and learnings across 10 key interventions.
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heather dawson
December 18, 7:00 AM
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Cambridge Core - Economic Development and Growth - Trade in Tasks
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heather dawson
December 11, 7:42 AM
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This report investigates how inequality, climate change, and digital exclusion intersect to shape Asia’s future. Drawing on data from across the region, the report reveals that how the richest 1% and 10% continue to accumulate wealth and power while billions remain trapped in poverty and vulnerability. It features how climate disasters, gender disparities, and unequal […]
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heather dawson
December 10, 2:13 PM
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This brief examines how the rights and needs of assistive technology users can be more effectively addressed in DRR and climate action.
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heather dawson
December 10, 2:09 PM
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heather dawson
December 3, 3:54 AM
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This guide provides updated and detailed definitions and practical guidance on applying the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) evaluation criteria specifically adapted for humanitarian action.
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heather dawson
November 19, 4:43 AM
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This evaluation assesses a pilot project where the Australian Red Cross and the Victorian Dargo community co-designed a preparedness platform using local knowledge, open data and artificial intelligence. It showcases how ethical, inclusive technology development can empower communities against climate risk, while highlighting challenges and innovations in co-designing disaster resilience tools with local stakeholders.
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:51 AM
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Amid rising global temperatures and intensifying climate impacts, UNEP’s 2025 Adaptation Gap Report: Running on Empty finds that a yawning gap in adaptation finance for developing countries is putting lives, livelihoods and entire economies at risk. Amid rising global temperatures and intensifying climate impacts, UNEP’s 2025 Adaptation Gap Report: Running on Empty finds that a yawning gap in adaptation finance for developing countries is putting lives, livelihoods and entire economies at risk.
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:51 AM
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In times of public health crises, leaders and decision-makers face immense pressure to act quickly and effectively. Their choices regarding public health and social measures (PHSM) must not only protect communities but also minimize disruptions to daily life and the economy. Their decisions on selecting and adjusting PHSM during public health emergencies require careful consideration of a complex array of factors, including the epidemiological situation, health system capacity, availability of medical countermeasures, along with resource availability, political and legal feasibility and public acceptance of the PHSM being considered. WHO has developed the PHSM Decision Navigator to provide a clear, systematic, and equitable framework for making these critical decisions.
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:48 AM
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The finance sector can play a critical role in promoting responsible mining, particularly in the context of the rising demand for energy transition minerals such as lithium, cobalt, and rare earth elements. These minerals are essential for the global shift to sustainable energy systems, and the massive investments required, from exploration and extraction to processing and refining, present a unique opportunity to drive transformative change. Supplying the energy transition minerals at the scale envisaged will require a substantial increase in investment in the mining and processing industries. However, if this growth in mining is implemented according to current mainstream practices, it will result in considerable social and environmental damage, negatively affecting the local communities and environment where the mines are located. This assessment report covers the major issues that will need to be addressed if the low-carbon energy transition is to be supplied with the minerals it needs in a timely and responsible manner. The report focuses on how the financing of the extraction of these minerals should be reformed to help bring about their environmentally and socially responsible production, and the equitable distribution of the resulting financial and other economic and social benefits. It explores the scale of the challenge, in terms of both increasing the supply of primary metals, and the need to manage the demand for them through circular economy approaches and resource efficiency policies. Finally, it describes how ‘sustainable finance’ combined with ‘responsible mining’ could lead to the emergence of a mining industry that contributes to the sustainable development of local communities and countries that host the mines, and the countries that import them for their low-carbon technologies, as envisaged by the Sustainable Development Licence to Operate (IRP 2020).
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:47 AM
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Thirty years after the first World Summit for Social Development in Copenhagen, a new generation of social challenges demands a new kind of response. This paper, launched at the 2025 World Summit for Social Development in Doha, redefines how countries can achieve lasting prosperity in an age of climate volatility, debt pressures, and rapid technological change. Drawing on new UNDP simulations across 126 developing countries, the paper finds that distribution-led growth could lift 411 million people above context-specific prosperity floors, while adaptive social protection could halve poverty volatility and reduce time spent in poverty by up to 0.9 percentage points per decade.
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:44 AM
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Amid uneven SDG progress and overlapping crises, efforts to deliver sustainable development that leaves no one behind continue to face persistent, intersecting barriers—even where commitments are strong. This policy brief highlights five dimensions where exclusion is often observed—affordability, access, governance, participation and external shocks, among others—and illustrates how governments are responding in each through policy examples and observations.
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heather dawson
December 18, 11:30 AM
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heather dawson
December 18, 11:18 AM
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Pharmaceutical Policy Lab Just launched by LSE Health. It will investigate health, economic, and social impacts of pharmaceutical policies worldwide. Projects include drug policies in USA; economics of drugs, medicine pricing. The website onclude policy papers, news and articles
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heather dawson
December 15, 9:30 AM
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📄✍️ ICVA Network has signed onto a collective NGO statement – released on behalf of 89 local, national, regional, international, women-, and refugee-led non-governmental organisations and networks, alliances, and fora upon today’s launch of the 2026 Global Humanitarian Overview (GHO).
The position piece highlights a range of critical issues in this challenging year, notably the dire consequences of strained aid, funding cuts, and declining political will amid escalating emergencies and unprecedented humanitarian needs worldwide – driven by conflict, climate disasters, displacement, and deepening inequality. Families are paying the price through worsening hunger, shrinking protection services, and rising gender-based violence.
We’re joining partners in reiterating the imperative for decisive action: ❗️Commit to accelerating true systemic reform that is more people-centred, efficient, agile, lean, plural, inclusive of and accountable to crisis-affected groups, including those often marginalised. ❗️Re-evaluate roles, embrace complementarity over competition, and reconsider which actors are best placed to respond. ❗️Prioritise localisation and equitable partnerships, quality and timely funding, risk-sharing, gender-responsive approaches, along with meaningful local leadership and participation in coordination and decision-making processes. ❗️Defend humanitarian norms and values, improve compliance and oversight, as well as operationalise and strengthen the humanitarian-development-peace nexus. ❗️End violations, safeguard civilians, respect human rights, and uphold all obligations under international law.
Continue reading ⤵️
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heather dawson
December 10, 2:18 PM
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heather dawson
December 10, 2:09 PM
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The United Nations outlined how it intends to advance one of its most comprehensive system-wide reform efforts in decades, as Under-Secretary-General for Policy Guy Ryder presented the UN80 Initiative Action Plan. The plan brings the Secretary-General’s major UN80 reform proposals into a single, coherent structure to streamline efforts that will make the UN system deliver better.
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heather dawson
December 9, 3:12 AM
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heather dawson
November 25, 4:50 AM
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At the Forum on Internet Freedom in Africa (FIFAfrica) in Windhoek, Namibia that happened on 24-26 September 2025, I had the chance to share my thoughts on some of the central narratives shaping AI governance in Africa. My reflections fundamentally stemmed from conducting tech policy research from an Afro-feminist lens across the African continent for years, which has left me apprehensive about how much AI and other technologies will indeed meet the continent’s needs for an inclusive society, as aided by the dominant policy-making narratives and approaches. In seeking to understand this, I realise that we are far from this realisation at the moment. To fully understand how this policy making is informed in Africa, it is important to acknowledge how narratives are formed. They require discourse around emerging and existing conversations which we use as guides, conscious or unconscious, in sense-making around any topics, events or issues. Narrative entails the underlying stories we use to rationalise what happens, or explain actions taken among other things. I highlighted that over the last few years, the narrative that AI will somehow lead to the continent’s development has gained consensus, and been promoted by actors primarily in the policy-making space. These include governments and regional bodies, multi and bilateral development partners, civil society, grassroots movements as well as the technical landscape which has adopted this language in their functions across Africa. While expressed differently across these actors, this narrative can be summed up as "AI for Development" (AI4D). In brief, this article centrally argues that because Africa’s engagement within the global AI ecosystem has so far been shaped by unequal power relations. This position merits a fundamental rethinking of what AI4D should mean in practice through policy and governance thinking which looks structurally at the continent’s intertwined crises and challenges in relation to AI’s real potential for overcoming them.Continue reading at GenderIT.org.
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heather dawson
November 17, 4:09 AM
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Rio Conventions Synergy Platform https://rioconventions.org/ A new portal which covers the integration of The UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which emerged from the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, These examine climate change, biodiversity and land management. It constains news, polocies, programmes and data at the intersection and intgrating all themes.
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:51 AM
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This 2025 Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) report, for the first time, overlays data on climate hazards and multidimensional poverty to assess how exposed poor people are to environmental shocks.
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:50 AM
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This report exposes how global aid cuts—estimated at USD 78 billion—are devastating women’s rights organizations and civil society groups on the frontlines of ending violence against women and girls. Based on a survey of 428 organizations, the report shows how life-saving services are being decimated, prevention work halted, and hard-won progress on gender equality put at risk. Urgent, sustained investment is needed.
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heather dawson
November 13, 5:48 AM
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The report analyses land as a social-ecological system and its links to freshwater and biodiversity. It explores how ecological connectivity via natural and social processes can promote sustainable land management and restoration, addressing global environmental crises.
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Scooped by
heather dawson
November 13, 5:46 AM
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