Invitation til virtuel briefing om SDG1 og FN den 20. oktober

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    flyer - briefing no. 1 En final

    https://www.ft.dk/samling/20201/almdel/ipu/bilag/3/2262942.pdf

    Date: Tuesday, 20 October 2020, 9 –10 a.m. (New York)
    Invited: Members of Parliament following development and economic issues
    Languages: English and French
    Registration: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJIvdeqtpjItH90A8DbFp5vIgLGHN24B48h5
    How many people around the world live in extreme poverty, unable to enjoy basic human rights?
    Using the World Ba k’s International Poverty Line of $1.90 per day:
    • some 700 million people, or 10 per cent of the
    world’s population, are poor today, and
    • a billion people have been lifted out of poverty
    since 1990, when the poverty rate stood at
    36 per cent.
    The 2015 UN Sustainable Development Goals were
    designed to tackle the dual challenge of poverty
    eradication and environmental preservation. SDG 1 is
    End poverty in all its forms everywhere. While
    recognizing various dimensions of poverty, it essentially
    adopts the standard of $1.90 per day.
    In his last report as UN Rapporteur on extreme poverty and
    human rights—The parlous state of poverty eradication (July 2020)—Professor Philip Alston makes the case for adopting a
    stronger definition of poverty. He notes that a yardstick of $5.50 per day more accurately captures the real condition of
    poverty, where some 3.4 billion, or 46 per cent of the world’s population, were poor in 2015. The UNDP’s
    multidimensional poverty index has the global poverty rate at about 23 per cent—more than double the 10 per cent
    estimate. As Alston observes, these much higher poverty baselines make it virtually impossible to eradicate poverty by
    2030. The triu phalist narrative of the international community—that, before the COVID-19 pandemic, poverty was
    going steadily down—is not supported by the facts. The Alston report poses tremendous challenges to the United
    Nations, governments and parliaments alike, and calls for a much deeper set of policy reforms than currently proposed.
    This first briefing for parliamentarians on United Nations processes will offer an opportunity for parliamentarians to learn
    more about the Orga izatio ’s definition of poverty and its implications for poverty eradication by 2030.
    Leading questions
    Should the UN adopt a more realistic official definition of extreme poverty to assess progress on SDG 1?
    Are UN prescriptions for eradicating global poverty commensurate to the task?
    Featuring
    Prof. Philip Alston, former UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
    Dr. George Gray Molina, Head of Strategic Engagement and Chief Economist, UNDP
    Ms. Barbara Adams, President, Global Policy Forum
    Q&A
    Parliamentarians
    For information: IPU Observer Office at the United Nations, ny-office@ipu.org
    The international community should stop hiding behind
    an international poverty line that uses a standard of
    miserable subsistence. The UN should have the courage
    of its convictions and acknowledge that the scale of
    global poverty is far more accurately reflected in its own
    indicators and reporting.
    – Philip Alston, UN Special Rapporteur
    SDG 1 and the
    UN definition of poverty
    Briefing for MPs on UN processes
    No.1
    Dansk Interparlamentarisk Gruppes bestyrelse 2020-21
    IPU Alm.del - Bilag 3
    Offentligt