Social Watch E-Newsletter - Issue 235 - October 9, 2015

Issue 235 - October 9, 2015
 
 
   
 
 

Retinking the development paradigm

   
 

The outcome reached by the international track of sustainable development objectives amounts to a dangerous twist in the concept of development, especially in terms of determining the roles of stakeholders in the development process. For example, it proposes giving the business sector the key role, being a contributor to job-generating growth. This comes before the adoption of “business-binding human rights standards.”Read more

 

   
   
 
 

U.S. Funding for the United Nations

   
 
Photo: UN WebTV

Barbara Adams talked about the money the U.S. contributes to the United Nations and how that amount compares to contributions by other countries. She also discussed the efficiency of U.N. programs.
This program was part of C-SPAN's “Your Money” series. Each Monday morning the last hour “Washington Journal” is devoted to a federal program, focusing on its mission, participants, and cost. Read more

   
   
 

In a recent report, the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Extreme Poverty, Mr. Philip Alston addressed the issue of economic inequality, drawing its connections to the enjoyment of human rights and to policy recommendations needed to tackle it. Among the recommendations offered in the report, some squarely focused on economic policies. States should “reduce inequality by adopting taxation policies that are instrumental to achieving that aim,” the report said. By linking economic inequality to human rights enjoyment and to the actions and omissions by the state (in pursuing a particular tax policy), the report constitutes yet another important building block in the emerging body of standards that connect acts and omissions of the state in the field of economic policy to human rights. Read more

 
   
   
 

 

 
SOCIAL WATCH IS AN INTERNATIONAL NGO WATCHDOG NETWORK MONITORING POVERTY ERADICATION AND GENDER EQUALITY
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