World Bank [to 31 October 2015]

World Bank [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/all
[We generally limit coverage to regional and global level initiatives, recognizing that a number of country-level announcements are added each week]

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Central Asian Countries among Top Improvers in Doing Business 2016 report
ALMATY, October 30, 2015 – Today, the World Bank Group hosted the regional launch of Doing Business 2016: Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency in Central Asia. In this year’s report, Kazakhstan,…
Date: October 30, 2015 Type: Press Release

Ending Poverty: How health and innovation can lead the way
Global Developmentand Poverty InitiativeConference on Shared Prosperity and Health: Advancing Global Development through Innovation and Institutions, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA
Date: October 29, 2015 Type: Speeches and Transcripts

Doing Business Report Finds More than 60% of World’s Economies Improved Their Business Rules in Past Year
WASHINGTON, October 27, 2015 – Developing economies quickened the pace of their business reforms during the last 12 months to make it easier for local businesses to start and operate, says the World Bank Group’s annual ease of doing business measurement.
Doing Business 2016: Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency finds that 85 developing economies implemented 169 business reforms during the past year, compared with 154 reforms the previous year. High-income economies carried out an additional 62 reforms, bringing the total for the past year to 231 reforms in 122 economies around the world…

IPU Inter-Parliamentary Union [to 31 October 2015]

IPU Inter-Parliamentary Union [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.ipu.org/english/news.htm
Selected Press Releases/Briefings

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MPs propose action to boost peace and security through gender equality
29 OCTOBER 2015
MPs have called for fresh action to help ensure that UN Security Council resolution 1325 on women, peace and security is more widely implemented and respected as they marked its 15th anniversary. Their recommendations, aimed at boosting parliamentary involvement in promoting the women, peace and security agenda, include speeding up the adoption of National Action Plans on 1325; increasing the participation and leadership of women in parliaments, particularly in work relating to peace and security; and ensuring that 15 per cent of peace and security funding is dedicated to gender-related issues such as boosting women’s political participation and protecting women and girls from violence. The recommendations followed a discussion by IPU’s Meeting of Women MPs on gender equality as an indispensable element of sustainable peace and security. The Meeting of Women MPs, a permanent fixture of IPU Assemblies, works to advance gender equality and women’s rights. This includes promoting the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and working alongside the CEDAW Committee.

WHO call for stronger parliamentary engagement on health
29 OCTOBER 2015
World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Dr Margaret Chan has urged MPs around the world to step up their efforts to improve the health of their citizens, stressing the importance of political solutions in a new generation of complex challenges. In her first address to an IPU assembly, Dr Chan stressed the vital role of MPs in a wide range of strategies including delivering universal health coverage, taxing tobacco, improving food labelling and fighting tax, trade and insurance policies which impacted on the poor. She warned of new threats including drug-resistant pathogens, the globalized marketing of unhealthy products, and the growing rates of chronic non-communicable diseases such as heart disease, cancer and diabetes – which have overtaken infectious diseases as the world’s biggest killers. Dr Chan also offered to strengthen WHO’s collaboration with IPU through structured technical support to IPU’s advisory bodies and confirmed a new role for parliamentarians in jointly organized side events at WHO assemblies, the organization’s supreme decision-making body. Her address builds on the existing cooperation between WHO and IPU in fields including women’s and children’s health, family planning, violence against women and girls and harmful traditional practices.

New guidelines help MPs step up HIV action
29 OCTOBER 2015
New guidelines on how parliamentarians can speed up HIV treatment have been published by IPU and UNAIDS. Fast-tracking HIV treatment: Parliamentary action and policy options defines a range of measures parliaments can take to try and ensure all citizens with HIV have access to treatment. HIV treatment is a cornerstone of the AIDS response – helping prevent deaths and new infections – but is still not accessible to all who need it. Vital agents of change, MPs have a pivotal role in delivering social justice and human rights, including access to HIV treatment. The guidelines provide examples of good practice by parliaments and individual members on the issue. The wealth of information in the publication includes details of the fast-track targets the world must meet to end the AIDS epidemic as a global health threat by 2030, the human rights-based approach to HIV, the patenting of drugs and ensuring it does not restrict access to treatment, and how to mobilize resources and finance treatment of the disease.

Crucial tool for MPs to tackle migration issues
29 OCTOBER 2015
A new Handbook for Parliamentarians giving vital guidance to MPs and parliaments on migration has been published by IPU and partners, the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the UN’s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR). Handbook no.24 “Migration, human rights and governance covers the issues and provides the tools and policy responses to the international movement of people. A complex and highly divisive issue, international migration is motivated by a range of economic, political and social factors. With xenophobia growing and the migration debate predominantly negative, parliamentarians must help ensure there is a meaningful, balanced and informed response to migration through fair and effective policies that maximize the benefits of human mobility whilst addressing the challenges that origin, transit and destination countries and migrants face. This latest Handbook for Parliamentarians offers policy responses to questions such as root causes for migration, social cohesion and migration governance.

Action pledge follows nutrition seminar
29 OCTOBER 2015
MPs from nine countries in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) pledged parliamentary action to tackle malnutrition, which affects more than 180 million of the world’s under-fives, during a meeting in Namibia earlier this month. The MPs examined issues such as the stubbornly high rates of malnutrition as well as the emerging challenge of obesity in their region. They recognized the critical importance of food and nutrition security to economic development, the survival and healthy growth of children, and breaking intergenerational cycles of poverty. The MPs made a commitment to ensure that the necessary laws and budgets on nutrition were in place, to scrutinize government policies, galvanize action by raising awareness of the unacceptably high malnutrition rates, and work in cooperation with other groups and bodies. The meeting, hosted by the Namibian Parliament, was organized by IPU and UNICEF.

Conference to focus on answers to statelessness
29 OCTOBER 2015
A conference in South Africa will explore how parliaments can combat statelessness, which deprives many people of basic rights but which can be solved with relatively simple changes to laws and practices. Statelessness, caused by a variety of factors including discrimination and the redrawing of national boundaries, affects some 10 million people around the world. MPs attending the conference on 26-27 November in Cape Town, organized by IPU, the South African Parliament and the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, will learn more about the impact of legal reforms such as changes to the law in Senegal and Algeria that have enabled women to transfer their nationality to their children and end a major cause of statelessness. They will also learn more about promoting accession by their States to two UN conventions on statelessness which provide the framework for a united international response. The conference is expected to result in a parliamentary action plan to end statelessness.

International Criminal Court (ICC) [to 31 October 2015]

International Criminal Court (ICC) [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.icc-cpi.int/en_menus/icc/Pages/default.aspx

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30/10/2015
President of Palestine, H.E. Mr Mahmoud Abbas visits the ICC Prosecutor
Today, Friday 30 October 2015, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal (“ICC” or the “Court”), Mrs Fatou Bensouda and representatives of her Office received H.E. Mr Mahmoud Abbas, the President of Palestine and his delegation at the Seat of the Court in The Hague, Netherlands. The meeting was held in the margins of President Abbas’ official visit to the Kingdom of The Netherlands.

CARE International [to 31 October 2015]

CARE International [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.care-international.org/news/press-releases.aspx

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Koppu Leaves Huge Damage in Northern Philippines, CARE Immediately Responds
PHILIPPINES
26 OCTOBER 2015
CARE immediately deployed an emergency response team in Nueva Ecija and Aurora provinces to conduct damage and needs assessment, as well as provide immediate food assistance to severely affected families in the province of Nueva Ecija.

CARE: Europe Still Failing to Prevent Humanitarian Crisis in the Balkans
BALKANS
26 OCTOBER 2015
CARE welcomes new EU commitment to provide shelter to an additional 100,000 migrants and asylum-seekers arriving in the Balkans. However, with winter approaching and increasing numbers of women and children travelling to and through Europe, these commitments are completely insufficient to prevent suffering and fear on Europe’s borders.

ECPAT [to 31 October 2015]

ECPAT [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.ecpat.net/news

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NEW THEMATIC REPORT: Unrecognized Sexual Abuse and Exploitation of Children in Child, Early and Forced Marriage
Posted on 10/28/2015, 14:18
The 10th Asia Pacific Regional Conference on Child Abuse and Neglect (APCCAN2015) took place from 25-28 October 2015 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, with the theme of ‘Investing in Children: Every Child Counts’.

ECPAT, Plan International and APCCAN co-hosted a Panel on Child Marriage during the conference, and a new Thematic Report supported by Plan International was launched, titled, ‘Unrecognised Sexual Abuse and Exploitation of Children in Child, Early and Forced Marriage’.

The paper aims to contribute to examining the broadly unexplored, yet critical links existing between two kinds of severe violations of children’s rights – Child, Early and Forced Marriage and Sexual Abuse and Exploitation of Children.

As a joint effort of ECPAT International and Plan International, the paper argues that early marriage acts as a major channel to child sexual exploitation, and can also amount to a form of sexual exploitation of children in itself. It investigates, in particular, the impact of early marriage on child protection, focusing on ways by which, in most regions of the world where this traditional harmful practice is perpetuated, it exposes child brides to early forced sexual initiation and activity, non-consensual sex, unwanted pregnancies, trafficking, forced child labour, and being exchanged for the payment of a bride price…

The full Thematic Report is available here.

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Refugee crisis in Europe and rights of children
ECPAST Statement
Posted on 10/28/2015, 13:54

Heifer International [to 31 October 2015]

Heifer International [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.heifer.org/about-heifer/press/press-releases.html

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Heifer International Weekly
Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2015

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Six Months After Earthquake, Heifer Participants and Communities Recovering
25 Oct 2015
Six months ago, a 7.8-magnitude earthquake devastated Nepal. Heifer International and Heifer Nepal immediately acted to provide temporary shelter supplies to nearly 23,000 families in 97 Village Development Committees (VDCs) and across 13 districts who lost their homes and livelihoods.

Members of Heifer’s Self-Help Groups and Cooperatives played a key role in immediate relief support before government or other assistance arrived, ensuring distributions went smoothly and each family received some support.

After those immediate needs were met by Heifer and other relief organizations working in the country, and because it was clear the rebuilding and recovery would require a long-term approach, Heifer established a revolving fund for communities that saw the worst damage. Participants advocated for this approach and felt it would allow the communities to make joint decisions about how to best distribute and utilize funds…

IRC International Rescue Committee [to 31 October 2015]

IRC International Rescue Committee [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.rescue.org/press-release-index

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Press Release
30 Oct 2015
IRC: Refugees Continue to Surge into Lesbos Despite Onset of Winter; Lack of European Support Hindering Overall Response

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Remembering Bob DeVecchi, former IRC President and champion of refugees
Posted by The IRC on October 30, 2015
The Board of Directors, Overseers and staff of the International Rescue Committee are deeply saddened by the loss of Bob DeVecchi, our former President and CEO

ICRC [to 31 October 2015]

ICRC [to 31 October 2015]
https://www.icrc.org/en/whats-new

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Philippines: Farmers in Negros enjoy benefits of new corn mill
Farmers Segondo Cañafuego and Cenona Estrada used to grind corn manually – a process that takes long hours with very little output.
30-10-2015 | Video

Israel: Access to health care is non-negotiable
Jerusalem (ICRC): The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is concerned about the difficulties faced by hospitals to provide medical and health care services in light of the current situation.
30-10-2015 | Article

Ukraine: 80,000 receive help in Lugansk as winter approaches
With winter looming people living close to the front line are even more vulnerable.
29-10-2015 | Video

Philippines: Improving lives in conflict-affected communities
In parts of Luzon and the Visayas, communities suffer from the effects of a protracted armed conflict between government security forces and the New People’s Army.
29-10-2015 | Article

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas visits ICRC Headquarters
The Vice-President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Christine Beerli, met with an official delegation from Palestine today led by President Mahmoud Abbas, to discuss the humanitarian situation in Israel and the occupied Palesti
28-10-2015 | Statement

Afghanistan / Pakistan: Earthquake injures over 2,000 people
Afghan and Pakistan Red Crescent Societies are helping people affected by Monday’s M7.5 earthquake whose epicentre was in Jerm district in the Afghan province of Badakhshan close to the border with Pakistan.
28-10-2015 | News release

Iraq: Food and relief aid for tens of thousands in Abu Ajil
Over a year of heavy fighting in the town of Abu Ajil, Salahuddin province in Iraq resulted in massive displacement of people and destruction of houses and infrastructure.
27-10-2015 | Video

Lebanon: New diploma offers specialized training for weapon-wounded
The ICRC and the Lebanese University have launched a new “diplôme universitaire” on the clinical management of weapon-wounded patients. The new Module is integrated in the curriculum of the Faculty of Medical Sciences of the Lebanese University duri
26-10-2015 | Article

Jordan: ICRC continues to assist Syrians at the northeastern border
With the Syrian crisis showing no signs of abating, people continue to cross into Jordan through the northeastern border seeking safety and international protection.
26-10-2015 | Article

Islamic Relief [to 31 October 2015]

Islamic Relief [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.islamic-relief.org/category/news/

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Health care for refugees
October 28, 2015
Mobile clinics are being used in Jordan to help Syrian refugees and poor Jordanians access free health care.

Disaster experts travel to remote areas
October 27, 2015
Experts from our Afghanistan and Pakistan offices have travelled to areas affected by the earthquake to assess the needs of the local communities.

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 31 October 2015]

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news-stories/press/press-releases

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Press release
South Sudan: Rising Violence in Southern Unity State Creates Unprecedented Crisis
October 30, 2015
JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN/NEW YORK—Rising violence against civilians in southern Unity State, South Sudan, is creating an unprecedented humanitarian crisis, depriving the population of shelter, food, and medical care, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned today, calling for increased protection of civilians and safe access for humanitarian organizations.

Press release
Yemen: Denial of Hospital Bombing by Saudi-Led Coalition Contradicts All Facts
October 29, 2015
PARIS/NEW YORK—Despite denials by the Saudi-led coalition, it is beyond doubt that it struck and destroyed a hospital supported by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in Haydan, Yemen, on October 26, MSF said today, adding that the hospital had previously been damaged by coalition attacks.

Press release
South Africa Should Override Patent on Key HIV Medicine After Widespread Stock Out Problem
October 28, 2015
JOHANNESBURG—After six months of persistent supply problems with the key HIV medicine lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r), the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) urged the South African government to put the public’s health first and override pharmaceutical company AbbVie’s patent with a “compulsory licence,” in order to allow generic versions of LPV/r to be used in the country.

Press release
Yemen: MSF Hospital Destroyed by Airstrikes
October 27, 2015
SANAA/PARIS/NEW YORK—Airstrikes carried out late last night by the Saudi-led coalition in northern Yemen destroyed a hospital supported by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), MSF announced today.

Press release
Ukraine: MSF Strongly Refutes False Allegations by Donetsk Authorities
October 26, 2015
The international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) strongly refutes false allegations made in the media by the Humanitarian Committee of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) regarding MSF’s medical humanitarian activities in Donetsk.

Press release
Yemen: Medical Aid Blocked from Entering Besieged Area in Taiz
October 25, 2015
TAIZ, YEMEN/AMSTERDAM—Despite weeks of intense negotiations with Ansarallah (Houthi) officials, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) cannot deliver stocks of essential medical supplies to two hospitals in a besieged enclave of the city of Taiz, in southern Yemen, MSF said today, calling for vital supplies to be let in.
MSF’s trucks have been stopped again today at Houthi checkpoints and denied access to the area.

Field news
Pakistan Earthquake: After Initial Response, MSF Assessing Further Needs
October 27, 2015
An earthquake recorded between 7.6 and 8.1 on the Richter scale rocked parts of northeastern Afghanistan and northwestern Pakistan on the afternoon of October 26. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) medical projects in northwestern Pakistan were faced with an initial influx of seriously wounded in the first hours.

Field news
Slovenia: People in Transit in Urgent Need of Assistance
October 26, 2015
Thousands of people are entering Slovenia each day from different points along the Croatian border. While some are staying in overcrowded transit centers, others are forced to spend nights outdoors, sleeping in fields. In response, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams are working alongside the Slovenian Ministry of Health in the transit center of Brezice, in addition to increasing their provision of humanitarian aid elsewhere in the area.

Norwegian Refugee Council [to 31 October 2015]

Norwegian Refugee Council [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.nrc.no/

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Latest News
As world leaders debate Syria, thousands will flee towards Turkey if fighting continues
(30.10.2015)
As Russian, American, Saudi and Iranian leaders meet in Vienna to discuss the Syria crisis, thousands continue being forced out of their homes by the new surge in fighting. Countless families flee intensified fighting and if the fighting continues to spread they will have no choice but to head towards the Turkish border. Here, they will be piling up pressure on the already overstretched displacement settlements on both sides of the border.

Afghanistan
Reaching out to earthquake victims
Guri Romtveit (28.10.2015)
The devastating earthquake that struck Northern Afghanistan has left many homeless and in need of aid. With winter fast approaching, NRC is helping those left without shelter.

Syria
Thousands more expected to head towards overcrowded displacement sites
Karl Schembri (26.10.2015)
Thousands of Syrians fleeing their homes in the wake of increased fighting on the outskirts of Aleppo and other locations are likely to head towards already overcrowded displacement settlements.

Partners In Health [to 31 October 2015]

Partners In Health [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.pih.org/blog

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Fighting TB: No More ‘Good Enough’
Posted on October 30, 2015
Every year for the past 20 years, the World Health Organization has released its Global Tuberculosis Report and it has passed fairly directly into obscurity. This year was different. Released on Wednesday, the contents of the 204-page document were reported on by newspapers from The Wall Street Journal to The Times of India. The WHO itself described the publication as a “watershed moment.”

Why? For the first time, the number of people who died from the respiratory disease outnumbered those who died of AIDS. Last year HIV/AIDS killed 1.2 million people, while Mycobacterium tuberculosis was responsible for the death of 1.5 million people.

The WHO views this largely in a positive light. As is to be expected from a bureaucracy charged with building consensus and setting standards, they chose to focus on the fact that the death rate from tuberculosis is half of what it was in 1990. Despite low funding, the world has made measured, albeit uneven, progress. “The report shows that TB control has had a tremendous impact in terms of lives saved and patients cured,” WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said in a press release accompanying the report.

Partners In Health’s TB experts view it another way. They are of course pleased to hear of lives saved, but with TB largely curable since 1947, they find any death a moral outrage, not to mention 1.5 million. Last year, as many people died from TB as during a decade of the Vietnam War.

They are also impatient with the progress. “Although tuberculosis incidence has declined over the past 25 years, it has done so at a glacial pace of about 1.65 percent annually,” writes Dr. Salmaan Keshavjee, senior TB specialist at PIH and director of Harvard Medical School’s Center for Global Health Delivery-Dubai. “At this rate, it will take another two centuries to eliminate the disease.”

Lastly, while they applaud the WHO for pointing out dramatic shortfalls in funding, they stress that finances are only part of the problem. The end of TB will come not from calls that the disease be “controlled,” as has long been a popular policy, but that it be eradicated. “The history of TB is the failed policy of ‘good enough,’” says Dr. Joia Mukherjee, PIH’s chief medical officer.

PIH has been fighting TB for decades, beginning with a successful program battling drug-resistant TB in the slums of Peru in 1996. Currently, we’re supporting patients, improving treatment protocols, and shaping national policy everywhere from Russia to Lesotho. This year, we began a four-year, 15-country program with Medecins Sans Frontieres and Interactive Research and Development to find better treatments for drug-resistant TB. This week, PIH TB expert Dr. Michael Rich is working with the government of Liberia to devise a TB-eradication strategy and Keshavjee published “Stopping the body count: a comprehensive approach to move towards zero tuberculosis deaths” in The Lancet . The WHO report is indeed a watershed moment—and a call to do better.

Plan International [to 31 October 2015]

Plan International [to 31 October 2015]
http://plan-international.org/about-plan/resources/media-centre

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South Asia earthquake: Plan International ready to respond
26 October 2015
(Islamabad, Pakistan) – Plan International is ready to respond after a magnitude 7.5 earthquake hit north-eastern Afghanistan, with tremors felt widely in Pakistan and India.

Children remain vulnerable in post-quake Nepal
25 October 2015
(KATHMANDU, NEPAL) – Six months after the April earthquake that claimed 9,000 lives and impacted the lives of 8 million people, international child rights organisation Plan International says that the needs of children, especially girls, children with disabilities and marginalised youth, must take precedence as Nepal starts the long road to recovery.

Women for Women International [to 31 October 2015]

Women for Women International [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.womenforwomen.org/press-releases

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Blog
Global Leaders Call for More Women in Peace-building
As the 15th anniversary of the landmark UN Security Council Resolution 1325 nears on October 31st, the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security (GIWPS) released a new report highlighting the progress to date using case studies and reflections from global leaders while bringing attention to the challenges and obstacles that remain.

CONCORD [to 31 October 2015]

CONCORD [to 31 October 2015]
European NGO confederation for relief and development
http://www.concordeurope.org/news-room

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NGOs say progress to make EU policies fair to poor and vulnerable people is insufficient
(Brussels, Luxembourg, 26/10/2015) Progress to make EU policies fair to poor and vulnerable people is insufficient to seriously tackle sustainable development challenges and inequalities, according to European Development NGOs at the press conference held in Luxembourg, organised by CONCORD and Cercle de Coopération, under the patronage of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE).

The Elders [to 31 October 2015]

The Elders [to 31 October 2015]
http://theelders.org/news-media

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News 27 October 2015
Show political courage over the refugee crisis
The Elders urge European leaders to show political courage over the refugee crisis in a debate with UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Prince Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein and the Director General of the International Organization for Migration Bill Swing

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Guest blog Michael Diedring and John Dorber 26 October 2015
Refugee Crisis: how language contributes to the fate of refugees
Europe is currently facing a crisis of conscience as refugees fleeing conflict in the Middle East and Africa seek asylum. Michael Diedring and John Dorber of the European Council on Refugees and Exiles explain how calculated use of language on the crisis can create a hostile environment for refugees when used by media and politicians.

InterAction [to 31 October 2015]

InterAction [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.interaction.org/media-center/press-releases

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InterAction’s Laky Pissalidis Recognized as Security Industry Leader
Oct 27, 2015
Every year, Security magazine recognizes leaders in the security sector who have influenced the national and global security landscape through projects, programs, or departments. The recently released list of 2015’s most influential professionals included one individual from the NGO sector – InterAction Director of Security Basile (Laky) Pissalidis.

Start Network [to 31 October 2015]

Start Network [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.start-network.org/news-blog/#.U9U_O7FR98E
[Consortium of British Humanitarian Agencies]

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Sean Lowrie on how the Start Fund enables local and international NGOs to work together
October 30, 2015
Posted by Helen James in Blog.
Start Network director Sean Lowrie describes the Start Fund and says it demonstrates how local and international NGOs can work together.
The international aid system rests on a population of thousands of organisations around the world, but governments who provide most of the funding don’t have the resources to process lots of contracts to fund those organisations, so we can either consolidate or we can aggregate.

Aggregation is better for the system because it allows for a more diverse population of organisation, and diversity is more resilient, it’s more agile, it’s more responsive, and it enables the local and international NGOs to work together.

The Start Fund does just that, it provides aggregation, a single point of entry for governments to access a large population of organisations, and the ownership and power is diverse across the Start Network…

ODI [to 31 October 2015]

ODI [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.odi.org/media

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In quest of inclusive progress: exploring intersecting inequalities in human development
Research reports and studies | October 2015 | Amanda Lenhardt and Emma Samman
For 16 countries with appropriate data, this paper seeks to ascertain to what extent wealth status, urban/rural place of residence and ethnicity – and overlaps between them – explain inequalities in education and health; and how these inequalities have changed over…

Markets in crises: South Sudan case study
Working and discussion papers | October 2015 | Irina Mosel and Emily Henderson
This paper looks at how conflict and aid impact markets and businesses in Juba, South Sudan.

The European Union’s new Gender Action Plan 2016-2020: gender equality and women’s empowerment in external relations
Research reports and studies | October 2015 | Helen O’Connell, Mikaela Gavas
An analysis of the European Union’s framework, ‘Gender equality and women’s empowerment: transforming the lives of girls and women through EU external relations 2016-2020’.

Private sector and water supply, sanitation and hygiene
Research reports and studies | October 2015 | Nathaniel Mason, Mariana Matoso and William Smith
This report provides a framework and recommendations for private sector engagement in support of universal access to water supply, sanitation and hygiene.

The Ebola response in West Africa: Exposing the politics and culture of international aid
Working and discussion papers | October 2015 | Marc DuBois and Caitlin Wake, with Scarlett Sturridge and Christina Bennett
An examination of the strengths and weakness of the international aid system through the lens of the Ebola response.