黑料专区

Social Development

We believe in the future. We believe that people and planet can thrive as one. We believe that lessons learned can guide generations to come. We believe that moving forward means leaving no one behind. We believe that sustainability is survival. And that equality will become universal. We know the challenges are extraordinary. But we can achieve the extraordinary. And we believe that working together is what makes the world strong. At , we believe in everything we do. Now we can do even better.

The question is formulated at the (HLPF),  the core UN platform for follow-up and review of the Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs). This next (6-15 July) focuses on a sustainable and resilient recovery from COVID-19. The HLPF will review 9 of the 17 SDGs, where ministers and other participants will explore policies and international cooperation to control the pandemic and its impacts. To reach a better and more sustainable future for all by 2030, the world needs to be back on track in less than a decade.

parents holding smiling little girl

Observed every year on 1 June, the Global Day of Parents provides an opportunity to appreciate all parents throughout the world for their "selfless commitment to children and their lifelong sacrifice towards nurturing this relationship." Families bear the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic. Family-friendly workplace policies and practices help to promote children鈥檚 safety and wellbeing. Vaccines help to keep families and communities safe. They are the best hope we have of ending the COVID-19 pandemic and getting back to doing the things we enjoy with the people we love.

Students sitting in a classroom watch tablet screens.

Recovery from the COVID-19 crisis is an opportunity to reset socioeconomic policies in order to restart economic growth. This means sustainably improving the living standards and well-being of all people as an integral part of efforts to promote the socially just transition to sustainable development envisioned in the 2030 Agenda. Digital technologies can facilitate that transition and create a more inclusive, equitable, resilient and sustainable society for all. Focused on this topic, the 59th session of the Commission for Social Development (CSocD59) starts today in New York.

Despite ample examples, quantitative evidence on the link between epidemics and social unrest is scant.  fills this gap by offering global evidence of this link in recent decades. History is replete with examples of disease outbreaks casting long shadows of social repercussions: shaping politics, subverting the social order, and some ultimately causing social unrest. Why? One possible reason is that an epidemic can reveal or aggravate pre-existing fault lines in society.

The (HDR) doubles down on the belief that people鈥檚 agency and empowerment can bring about the action we need if we are to live in balance with the planet in a fairer world. It shows that we are at an unprecedented moment in history, in which human activity has become a dominant force shaping the planet. These impacts interact with existing inequalities, threatening significant development reversals. Nothing short of a great transformation is needed to change the path we are on. The Report explores how to jumpstart that transformation.

Amid a global health crisis and widely varying government responses, a group of 16 former heads of states, ministers, eminent economists, and social scientists 鈥 offers a set of new solutions for governments to build back better, greener and fairer after COVID-19.

In Barrio Curita, in the General San Mart铆n municipality of Buenos Aires, an unlikely group of men and women helped connect 450 homes to water services 鈥 a lack of access to water is an all too common issue in low-income neighbourhoods.

The coronavirus crisis is pushing critical economic, social and environmental development targets beyond reach, warned through its .

A woman working in a street print and photocopy shop

The lack of decent work opportunities exacerbates inequalities among societies. Not only are growing inequalities preventing people from achieving their full potential, they are also putting a burden on economies. The only way we are going to achieve social justice, tackle inequality, reduce poverty and address climate change, is if we put people and planet first, says the (ILO).  On Social Justice Day 2020, under the theme 鈥淐losing the Inequalities Gap to Achieve Social Justice,鈥 the ILO is asking you to tell policy makers around the world, why is important to you, using the hashtag #MyFutureOurPlanet.

two kids studying in Benin

Inequality has risen to historical levels, according to the 2020 World Social Report. High inequality can impact economic prosperity and social development for millions of people if effective policies are not put in place. The report, 鈥淚nequality in a rapidly changing world,鈥 to be launched at noon EST on 21 January, states that major global trends, including technological change, the climate crisis, urbanization and international migration, can be harnessed to reduce inequality, or can be left to further divide us. The briefing will be .

The world economy has barely had the time to recover from a string of shocks that began with the 2007 financial crisis, and we can already see another global slowdown looming large.

peacekeeper helps woman with her load of firewood

Human Solidarity is one of the fundamental values of international relations in the 21st Century, wherein those, who either suffer or benefit least, deserve help from those who benefit most. Consequently, in the context of globalization and the challenge of growing inequality, strengthening international solidarity is indispensable. Therefore, the UN General Assembly proclaimed 20 of December as International Human Solidarity Day to promote this concept as a crucial element in the fight against poverty

In Belarus, Aliaksandr (Sasha) Audzevich serves as a UN Volunteer Inclusion and Disabilities Officer with the 黑料专区 Development Programme (). He is part of the UNDP-UNV Talent Programme for Young Persons with Disabilities, which enables youth with disabilities to acquire experience and contribute to the 黑料专区 as . Sasha shares on the occasion of .

The Human Development Report 2019 in Bogota, Colombia on 9 December. Titled 鈥,鈥 the report shows that a new generation of severe inequalities in human development is emerging, even as the gap is narrowing on many of the unresolved inequalities of the 20th century. These emerging dynamics 鈥 under the shadow of the climate crisis and technological change 鈥 demand new approaches in policies at national and global levels.