Transcript Slide 1

UNDP
EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING
AGENDA ITEM 5
Human Development Report
New York, 11 June 2013
HDR 2013
Timely and relevant – presenting a
human development perspective to
global change and overall progress
Considerable interest and policy
discussions
• Online
• Special events
Spring time launch reverts to earlier
timeline and longer ‘shelf-life’
HDR 2013
Key findings
• A dramatically changing, more connected world
• Rapid and strong human development across the world – significant
human progress in low HDI countries; sharp rise of the middle class
• Key success factors
- Proactive developmental states
- Tapping global markets
- Social policy innovations
• Historic opportunity to sustain human progress through promoting
equity, voice and accountability
• Need for aligning existing global governance structures to new realities;
specific proposals on new mechanisms to broaden and sustain progress
HDR 2013
Consultations covered:
– 6 regions, diverse constituencies, ExB informals
Global launch in Mexico with President Enrique Peña Nieto and UNDP
Administrator Helen Clark
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Wide global and regional media coverage
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More than 40 major launches and special events so far with
leading policymakers, advocates and media
HDR 2013 editions published in 21 languages
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Full reports in the 6 official UN languages plus German, Hindi,
Japanese and Portuguese
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Summaries in Basque, Bengali, Danish, Farsi, Italian, Khmer,
Korean, Norwegian, Swahili, Swedish and Vietnamese
HDR 2013 LAUNCH – GLOBAL UPTAKE
Online HDR impact
• A record 640,000 website visitors in the month after the global launch,
with total visits likely to exceed 4 million in 2013
• Web-page views of 2013 HDR reached a record 1.6 million in one week
after the launch
• Social media: in the first month-HDR Facebook page visited by record
333,000 people and first global tweeting campaign reached several million
Extensive coverage by international news media
• TV news/discussion on Al Jazeera, CNN, Univision, others
• Substantial coverage in major wire services/newspapers: The Economist,
Financial Times, Guardian, The Hindu, Le Monde, New York Times, El Pais,
South China Morning Post, others
• Media focused on the topic and report messages rather than HDI rankings
DEEPENING GLOBAL KNOWLEDGE ON
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Human Development analysis & policy influence
• Regional and National Human Development Reports influence
policy discussions at regional/national levels and contribute to
agenda setting
• Update of R/NHDR guidance note to strengthen UNDP support
system for quality assurance
• 16 national and 3 regional reports launched over the last year,
with 32 national and 3 regional reports under preparation
• Global Human Development Forum initiated for high level policy
dialogue and agenda setting. The first took place in March 2012 in
Istanbul (on 2011 report) and the next one planned for autumn
2013 (on the 2013 report)
• Special events like the Flagship Forum in Berlin 12-13 June hosted
by the German Govt on the 2013 report further dialogue on key
issues
DEEPENING DIALOGUE ON HUMAN
DEVELOPMENT
Strengthening partnerships
• Deepening existing and developing new partnerships with
academic institutions to broaden and link research and
teaching on human development
Measurement
• Regular review of Human Development Indices with
experts from the statistical/development community
• Involvement of eminent partners, such as Amartya Sen,
Joseph Stiglitz, Jean-Paul Fitoussi
HDR 2014
Reducing vulnerabilities and
deepening progress
HDR 2014
Consultations
• As for the 2013 report, HDRO plans extensive consultations for the 2014
report:
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Diverse constituencies: participants from governments, academia, civil
society
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Regional balance: Africa, South and East Asia, Latin and North America,
Arab States, Europe
• Advice from distinguished members of the Advisory and Statistics Panel
• Informal briefing with EB in October/November
• Given emerging human/financial resource constraints, piggy backing on
‘like’ events (HDCA conference in Managua, Global Human Development
Forum, etc.) and pursue co-sponsoring of key consultations (e.g. the East
Asia consultation with JICA in March 2013)
HDR 2014
Why this topic? Why now?
• Vulnerability is of universal relevance – need for a better
understanding to deepen human development progress
• HDR 2014 will focus on deepening human progress by reducing
vulnerabilities (and strengthening resilience)
• Re-visit inter-related subject of human security in the context of
changing vulnerabilities due to rapidly transforming, more
connected world
• Highly relevant for the post-2015 agenda discussion
• Report will identify the underlying factors contributing to
vulnerability, assess the policy actions and institutional
arrangements critical to increasing resilience
HDR 2014
The concept
• To reduce vulnerabilities, capabilities, both individual and societal, have to
be enhanced at the national and global level
• Reducing vulnerabilities is essential for making human development
progress more robust (resilient)
• The HDR 2014 will introduce the concept of ‘structural vulnerabilities’,
which pose complex long-term challenges to societies
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Focus on vulnerabilities caused by structural contexts that make some
individuals or groups more vulnerable than others – what prevents
them from taking advantage of available opportunities?
• Explore ‘life cycle’ capabilities, e.g. nutrition and nurture, pre-natal and
from 0-3 years, has profound impacts on life-long learning and health
outcomes
• To analyze policies and institutional arrangements that help reduce
vulnerabilities in different areas of human life
Thank you!
http://hdr.undp.org/en/