Posts tagged united nations

united-nations:

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon traveled by train to Washington, DC, on Thursday to take part in World Bank meetings on education, poverty reduction and more.Tune in on Friday between 11:00 a.m.-12:10 p.m. EDT (15:00-16:10 GMT) when he and World Bank President Jim Kim hold an interactive online conversation on ending poverty.Details: http://bit.ly/ittakes419Photo: Ban Ki-moon is seen here with UN Peacekeeping chief Hervé Ladsous and Oscar Fernandez-Taranco from the UN’s Department of Political Affairs.

My field research leads me to interesting new places, and one of those places in November was the World Bank. After interviewing a handful of anonymous staff and affiliated NGOs, I learned there is a real [something] brewing around Dr Kim’s leadership. It appears many people are/were anxiously awaiting more details on his shifting the Bank’s focus to poverty alleviation.
Without giving away too many spoilers, one of my research findings is that you are successful as the head of a global organisation IF you are able to make your agenda the global agenda.
See? See how Dr Kim is developing that here?
I must say, this is probably good news for Ban. With the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) reaching their end-goal period in 2015, Ban (if reappointed as Secretary-General) will need to redefine the goals of the UN since former Secretary-General Kofi Annan introduced the MDGs as the world’s new agenda. 
And poverty reduction/alleviation sounds good to me! If you can get it in a dual package between the UN and the World Bank, you’re that much more likely to be seen as a effective executive head.
Well done, Dr Kim.

united-nations:

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon traveled by train to Washington, DC, on Thursday to take part in World Bank meetings on education, poverty reduction and more.

Tune in on Friday between 11:00 a.m.-12:10 p.m. EDT (15:00-16:10 GMT) when he and World Bank President Jim Kim hold an interactive online conversation on ending poverty.

Details: http://bit.ly/ittakes419

Photo: Ban Ki-moon is seen here with UN Peacekeeping chief Hervé Ladsous and Oscar Fernandez-Taranco from the UN’s Department of Political Affairs.

My field research leads me to interesting new places, and one of those places in November was the World Bank. After interviewing a handful of anonymous staff and affiliated NGOs, I learned there is a real [something] brewing around Dr Kim’s leadership. It appears many people are/were anxiously awaiting more details on his shifting the Bank’s focus to poverty alleviation.

Without giving away too many spoilers, one of my research findings is that you are successful as the head of a global organisation IF you are able to make your agenda the global agenda.

See? See how Dr Kim is developing that here?

I must say, this is probably good news for Ban. With the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) reaching their end-goal period in 2015, Ban (if reappointed as Secretary-General) will need to redefine the goals of the UN since former Secretary-General Kofi Annan introduced the MDGs as the world’s new agenda.

And poverty reduction/alleviation sounds good to me! If you can get it in a dual package between the UN and the World Bank, you’re that much more likely to be seen as a effective executive head.

Well done, Dr Kim.

12 notes 

united-nations:

More than five million Syrians have been forced to flee their homes and more than 70,000 have died, including thousands of children. In the name of all those who have suffered, the United Nations top humanitarian officials have joined together to call on governments to find a political solution. Read and share their joint message: “Enough.”  ©UNHCR/A. Branthwaite/Oncupinar refugee camp, Turkey

united-nations:

More than five million Syrians have been forced to flee their homes and more than 70,000 have died, including thousands of children. In the name of all those who have suffered, the United Nations top humanitarian officials have joined together to call on governments to find a political solution.

Read and share their joint message: “Enough.”


©UNHCR/A. Branthwaite/Oncupinar refugee camp, Turkey

10 notes 

un-library:

12 February 2013 – The United Nations Security Council is holding an emergency meeting to discuss possible collective action after the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) announced it had conducted its third nuclear test, an action condemned by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and other…

you’re doing it right, UN.

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Greece must improve detention conditions for migrants – UN experts

A group of United Nations independent experts today stressed that Greece must improve the conditions of detention for migrants and effectively implement recent legislation to enhance screening procedures for asylum-seekers.
“In most detention facilities visited by the Working Group, the conditions fall far below international human rights standards, including in terms of severe overcrowding,” stressed one of the members of the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Vladimir Tochilovsky.

See also, Special Rapporteur on racism Mutuma Ruteere says, ‘Spain must make fighting racism and xenophobia a priority’, particularly,

Spanish authorities must show leadership in the fight against racism and xenophobia in the country, an independent United Nations expert said today, adding that, against a backdrop of pervasive unemployment, the Government must ensure vulnerable groups such as immigrants are not blamed for the nation’s economic woes.

photo courtesy of UN News

Greece must improve detention conditions for migrants – UN experts

A group of United Nations independent experts today stressed that Greece must improve the conditions of detention for migrants and effectively implement recent legislation to enhance screening procedures for asylum-seekers.

“In most detention facilities visited by the Working Group, the conditions fall far below international human rights standards, including in terms of severe overcrowding,” stressed one of the members of the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Vladimir Tochilovsky.

See also, Special Rapporteur on racism Mutuma Ruteere says, ‘Spain must make fighting racism and xenophobia a priority’, particularly,

Spanish authorities must show leadership in the fight against racism and xenophobia in the country, an independent United Nations expert said today, adding that, against a backdrop of pervasive unemployment, the Government must ensure vulnerable groups such as immigrants are not blamed for the nation’s economic woes.

photo courtesy of UN News

Independent UN inquiry determines Israeli settlements in serious violation of Geneva convention.

The report states that Israel is committing serious breaches of its obligations under the right to self-determination and under humanitarian law.
…
“In compliance with Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, Israel must cease all settlement activities without preconditions,” said Christine Chanet, chair of the three-member inquiry.

photo courtesy of UN News, which is also available as a free app that I highly recommend.

Independent UN inquiry determines Israeli settlements in serious violation of Geneva convention.

The report states that Israel is committing serious breaches of its obligations under the right to self-determination and under humanitarian law.

“In compliance with Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, Israel must cease all settlement activities without preconditions,” said Christine Chanet, chair of the three-member inquiry.

photo courtesy of UN News, which is also available as a free app that I highly recommend.

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I give $5 a month to WFP, because it’s really all I can afford as a migrated PhD student in the UK. But this is serious, folks. See here, if you did not see Mia Farrow’s recent reports from Lebanon.

I’m challenging you all, please give. If £45/$72 will take food off your plate this month, please consider giving half, $36; it will provide a Syrian family with food and heat for 2 weeks. Tumblr, I gave £45; you can give something, can’t you? Please consider and do one thing today to change the situation on the ground in Syria and the nearby refugee camps.

We are all equal. We are one people. International solidarity now!

From the World Food Programme:

We’re short on funds to carry on our vital work in Syria.

Since November, we’ve been providing 1.5 million people in Syria with food and helping hundreds of thousands of refugees in neighbouring countries. But without more funding, we will have to scale back our operations meaning thousands could go hungry as early as March. Please don’t let this happen.


Bread and fuel shortages in Syria are pushing people to the breaking point. A loaf of bread cost 40p before this crisis began; today that same loaf costs over £2!

Our staff and partners are working day and night to help families get food and feed their children in brutal winter conditions. But we need your help to carry on saving lives.

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anoncentral:

Mr. Ban Ki-moon also knows what’s up but his office is too weak to take any action against israel.
via @ibmlove

My doctoral research - does executive leadership matter in international organisations (in the context of state power).
Now if only the U.N. guy LOOKED like Ban, I could use it in my thesis!

anoncentral:

Mr. Ban Ki-moon also knows what’s up but his office is too weak to take any action against israel.

via @ibmlove

My doctoral research - does executive leadership matter in international organisations (in the context of state power).

Now if only the U.N. guy LOOKED like Ban, I could use it in my thesis!

42 notes 

Not to go to the UN would be suicidal for the Palestinian Authority. All these people [in Gaza] took the brunt of the attack and now we should chicken out because they [the US and Israel] will cut off some money? What we’re doing is not violent; it’s not military; it’s not illegal. The world should see that if they keep maintaining the status quo, it will get you nothing but more bloodshed. That’s the lesson from Gaza.

Senior Palestinian official Nabil Shaath - Assuring the Guardian’s Chris McGreal that Palestinians resolve to seek recognition of statehood from the United Nations would be broken by monetary threats. Several countries, most notably the US and UK, have been pressuring the Palestinian Authority to make various concessions ahead of its next attempt to gain international recognition on November 29. Much of the concern allegedly stems from the Israeli’s government’s fear that it will be dragged before the International Criminal Court on war crimes charges related to the Gaza offensive that took place four years ago. source (via shortformblog)

REBLOG FOR INSTITUTIONS! reblog for justice.

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I made a conscious decision not to attend this year’s WTO Public Forum in Geneva (mostly financial). Listening to this inaugural speech by Ms Micheline Calmy-Rey makes me wish I were there - almost exclusively for the diplomatic slap in the face she’s giving those who determined the outcome of the Uruguay Round (1986-1994) for stalling much-needed progress on the Doha Round (2001-present).

IMO, listen to the start of her speech, the middle bit around Swiss exports is miss-able, but absolutely, BE SURE to ‘tune-in’ around the 12 minute mark when she starts discussing the attempts of the world’s ‘superpowers’ to undermine the truly international goals of international organizations, such as the United Nations and the WTO.

Now this is international relations; this is new institutionalism fighting back; this is a fantastic frame to kick off a public forum (trade-based or otherwise).

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united-nations:

On Friday, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed a former UN staffer back to UN Headquarters — Aung San Suu Kyi.




SO.MUCH.LIBERALISM.HAPPY.

united-nations:

On Friday, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed a former UN staffer back to UN Headquarters — Aung San Suu Kyi.

SO.MUCH.LIBERALISM.HAPPY.

16 notes 

unicef:

PHOTO OF THE WEEK: 18 September 2012
A woman and her infant in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Data released on 13 September 2012 shows significant progress in reducing child mortality: globally, the number of under-five child deaths fell from nearly 12 million in 1990 to an estimated 6.9 million in 2011. To further accelerate action on maternal, newborn and child survival, a global movement – ‘Committing to Child Survival: A Promise Renewed’ – has garnered the support of over 100 governments since its June 2012 launch.
©UNICEF/Marta Ramoneda
To see more: www.unicef.org/photography

I’m always on about who’s ‘wrong’, what’s ‘wrong’, so on. I’m not saying UNICEF is always a ‘win’ for me, but like … 9.5 times out of 10, yep, spot on, well done, UNICEF. gotta stay critical, ya know - 9.5 times. BUT THE PHOTOS THEY USE - WIN!

unicef:

PHOTO OF THE WEEK: 18 September 2012

A woman and her infant in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Data released on 13 September 2012 shows significant progress in reducing child mortality: globally, the number of under-five child deaths fell from nearly 12 million in 1990 to an estimated 6.9 million in 2011. To further accelerate action on maternal, newborn and child survival, a global movement – ‘Committing to Child Survival: A Promise Renewed’ – has garnered the support of over 100 governments since its June 2012 launch.

©UNICEF/Marta Ramoneda

To see more: www.unicef.org/photography

I’m always on about who’s ‘wrong’, what’s ‘wrong’, so on. I’m not saying UNICEF is always a ‘win’ for me, but like … 9.5 times out of 10, yep, spot on, well done, UNICEF. gotta stay critical, ya know - 9.5 times. BUT THE PHOTOS THEY USE - WIN!

174 notes 

On August 16, 2012, gunmen stopped a passenger bus in Mansehra, pulled 20 Shia Muslims off and killed them in cold blood. This is the third incident of targeted killing against the Shia community in Pakistan in the last 6 months.

Pakistan: Shia Target Killings Continue (via globalvoices)

Source cites 18 killed on 23 February and 9 killed on 3 April, additionally. Another source (via social media) cites four total incidents of targeted Shia killings.

@sheerazhaider: #ShiaKilling This is 4th time in 4 months,1st one kosistan,2nd chelas,3rd manwar gilgit,and last babusar naraan today.CJP Are You Awake?

Two other sources (via social media) call out the labeling of the targeted killing (as Shia or Sunni).

@AnjumKiani: if u want to call it a  #ShiaGenocide then call It, If u want to term it as a  #SunniGenocide Do it. For me its a  #MuslimGenocide. #Gilgit

One of which accuses Khawarji (also as spelled Khawariji) Muslims of the killings. The best my research can determine, the Kharijites differ from Sunni and Shia Muslims in their former belief in the leadership of ‘final Rashidun Caliph Ali ibn Abi Talib, the son-in-law and cousin of the Islamic prophet Muhammad’. The wiki says something about condemning other Muslims to death for differing beliefs, but the wiki cannot be verified.

@javhb: RT @AnjumKiani: The 16 martyred in #Gilgit by Khawarji terrorist were neither 16 Sunni’s or 16 Shia’s, They were Pakistani Muslims. Full Stop!

Two things occur to me:

  1. The pervasive ‘Western’ (and ‘ignorant’) belief that Muslims kill each other over religious differences, and that this sort of genocide and war have been occurring for centuries. This perspective justifies inaction as a historical derivation.
  2. Genocide is genocide. Past, present, and future, it’s still genocide. Many of us (who have become global activists via social networking) reject the predominant ‘Western’ justification of such genocide and call for action.

I’d like to use this terrible event to propose (and possibly reinforce) a multi-agency perspective to global awareness and action. I mean agency in the historical institutionalist sense, as possessing the capacity to affect action.

(1) Syria, Rwanda, the DRC, Chechnya, etc, demonstrate that international organizations like the United Nations fail to manage and prevent such conflict; I argue this is likely because of (domestic) political reasons, rather than international structural design, but this is a separate discussion. (2) Amnesty International, Medicines Sans Frontiers, various NGOs have had more success at managing on the ground conflict; but they are often victims of conflict themselves and receive little protection from ‘global governance’ institutions. (3) Finally, social media (Facebook, Twitter, Avaaz, blogs) provide on the ground, verifiable information and necessary clarification about on-going conflict; they engage global communities and provide mechanisms for action and support but are also unsupported by global institutions.

What I am trying to convey is that we (as global scholars and activists) have been just as divided about international governance and the prevention (and subsequent intervention) of genocide. If we keep approaching governance, peace-keeping, global activism in these differing camps (1-3 above), we do little to quiet the rumors that international awareness and activism have been ineffectual for decades and will continue to be. …I’m drawing an analogy.

When I was interviewing at the WTO, an interviewee suggested that the WTO perspective of global governance has the UN at the top of the triangle, the WTO to one side, and the World Bank and the IMF to the other side (peace-keeping, trade, and banking/development - the three pillars of global governance).

I propose another triangle of global governance. With global institutions like the UN at the top, NGOs to one side, and global citizens (via social networking) to the other (institutions, NGOs, and citizens - the three pillars of global governance all in advocacy for peace-keeping and development). This conceptualization isn’t ‘new’ or ‘novel’, but it’s another example of how academia and activism unite to inform institutional and private-sector responses to international conflict and crises.

Something there’s been much too little of in this century.

4 notes 

unicef:

UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Danny Glover and a boy use learning tiles to form words in Shipibo, the local indigenous language, during his visit to the primary school in the indigenous Shipibo-Conibo community of Nuevo Saposoa in the Peruvian Amazon. The school provides bilingual inter-cultural education for indigenous children. All classes are taught in the Shipibo language. In Ucayali Region, the Ministry of Education and UNICEF are providing books written in the local language and supporting teacher-training in the indigenous language and culture.
© UNICEF/Susan Markisz
http://www.unicef.org

this.

unicef:

UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Danny Glover and a boy use learning tiles to form words in Shipibo, the local indigenous language, during his visit to the primary school in the indigenous Shipibo-Conibo community of Nuevo Saposoa in the Peruvian Amazon. The school provides bilingual inter-cultural education for indigenous children. All classes are taught in the Shipibo language. In Ucayali Region, the Ministry of Education and UNICEF are providing books written in the local language and supporting teacher-training in the indigenous language and culture.

© UNICEF/Susan Markisz

http://www.unicef.org

this.

35 notes 

le sigh.
I’ve just been to the library and was distracted for about 15 mins in the legal section of the ‘nook’ reserved for the UN and human rights literature.
Just like so many bitter medicines, it’s difficult to consume this critically engaging, performanced-based, normative literature knowing that THOUSANDS of academics, civil servants, state delegates working for international cooperation and peace has been perverted by a few who seised an opportunity during crisis in the name of nationalism and other bigotries, see Stephen Gill (2012) Global Crises and the Crisis of Global Leadership. 
humanrightswatch:

More than 140 countries have passed counterterrorism laws since the attacks of September 11, 2001, often with little regard for due process and other basic rights.
While every government has a responsibility to protect its population from attack, many have used the new measures to prosecute journalists, protesters, opposition politicians, and religious or ethnic groups under the guise of counterterrorism.

le sigh.

I’ve just been to the library and was distracted for about 15 mins in the legal section of the ‘nook’ reserved for the UN and human rights literature.

Just like so many bitter medicines, it’s difficult to consume this critically engaging, performanced-based, normative literature knowing that THOUSANDS of academics, civil servants, state delegates working for international cooperation and peace has been perverted by a few who seised an opportunity during crisis in the name of nationalism and other bigotries, see Stephen Gill (2012) Global Crises and the Crisis of Global Leadership.

humanrightswatch:

More than 140 countries have passed counterterrorism laws since the attacks of September 11, 2001, often with little regard for due process and other basic rights.

While every government has a responsibility to protect its population from attack, many have used the new measures to prosecute journalists, protesters, opposition politicians, and religious or ethnic groups under the guise of counterterrorism.

24 notes