
Perspectives africaines sur les défis mondiaux (dans le cadre du processus d'agenda post-2015)
Adopté par l'Assemblée Générale des Nations Unies en 2001, les Objectifs du Millénaire pour le Développement (OMD) expireront en 2015, sans avoir atteint tous les objectifs. L'extrème pauvreté, des inégalités croissantes, ainsi que d'importantes différences régionales dans la réalisation des objectifs restent les défis majeurs sur la voie vers "un meilleur avenir pour tous". Dans ce contexte, un processus de discussion de "l'agenda post-2015" est actuellement en discussion au niveau de l'ONU, avec pour but d'identifier les lacunes des OMD et pour développer un nouveau modèle de coopération à l'échelle mondiale après 2015. Notre projet «Perspectives africaines sur les défis mondiaux (dans le cadre du processus d'agenda post-2015)" a pour but d'accompagner d'un point de vue résolument africain et critique les discussions sur l'agenda post-2015 et l'intégration des objectifs de développement durable (SDG). Lors de la formulation des OMD, les causes historiques et structurelles d’injustice globale et surtout entre l’Afrique et l’Europe n’avaient pas été suffisamment considérées. Hors, l'objectif déclaré de l'agenda post-2015 est d'impliquer les pays du Sud et du Nord aussi bien dans le processus de négociation. Dans ce contexte AfricAvenir souhaite à travers ce projet faire connaître les points de vue africains en Allemagne, les appréhender et les discuter afin de formuler ensemble avec nos partenaires des objectifs et des visions africano-européennes et d'ainsi contribuer au processus de prise de décisions politiques. Un de nos objectifs est d’apprendre de l’Afrique, de respecter et de soutenir des chemins spécifiques de développement pour relever les défis communs de développement durable.
Il n'y a pas d'évènement.
Background & Motivation
In times of global upheaval, opportunities and transformation, solutions to the inherent challenges can only be found based on a common, global and holistic approach. One of these shifts is undoubtedly the expiry of the Millennium Development Goals in 2015 and the increasing pressure on the international development cooperation system to adapt to the new circumstances and deliver results. In the process of a desperately needed redefinition of global partnership, we can already see that conventional development co-operation will continue to play a minor role.
In this context, high-level UN-committees have begun to work on the formulation of a new Post-2015 Agenda to succeed the current development goals. Ambitious, realistic and measurable, as well as easily communicable and limited in numbers – that's the formula for the new agenda goals. In addition, a new ecological focus will be prompted by the so-called Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and will be prominently added to the goal of poverty reduction. An expert commission has been inaugurated in order to secure the financing of the new agenda.
The UN Secretary General initiated the Post-2015 Agenda at the 2010 UN-MDG summit in New York. At the “Special Event” on 25th September 2013, the UN General Assembly passed a roadmap for the worldwide process. This roadmap scheduled the beginning of global negotiations, the presentation of results by late 2014 and the formulation of precise goals at the General Assembly in autumn 2015.
Despite the publicly stated aim to engage in a broad dialogue with representatives of worldwide civil societies and an open and participative consultation process throughout the development of the new agenda, voices from the Global South are still marginalized and have not been sufficiently incorporated in the agenda process. The UN’s approach still bears too strong a resemblance to the old pattern according to which the north designed development strategies for the Global South. Underlying historical and structural inequalities are largely overlooked and alternative, self-determined perspectives on “development” dismissed. This makes a sustainable and socially just fight against global poverty and hunger through an equal North-South partnership impossible.
On this account, we would like to critically trace the last stage in the development of this new agenda for ecologically-sustainable reduction of global poverty and hunger along the UN roadmap in the coming year. By giving African and Afro-German experts and representatives a platform to voice their opinions, we would like to address interested members of the German and global public and sensitize them to African and southern perspectives on the MDGs/SDGs and the Post-2015 Agenda as well as engage them in the process.
During the first year of our project, we will gather critical voices from the Global South through three discussion forums and one symposium, which will follow and critically reflect upon the Post-2015 Agenda and the formulation of the SDGs. Afterwards, we intend to communicate these insights through diverse channels and instruments to reach the German and international public. Finally, by December 2015 we intend to have launched a parallel dialogue with political decision-makers and representatives of NGOs especially in Germany.
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International conference “The Post-2015 Development Agenda – African Perspectives on Global Challenges”, 05.12.2014 – 06.12.2014
JugendKulturZentrum PUMPE
Lützowstraße 42
10785 Berlin
The historical and structural causes of global injustice, especially between Africa and Europe, were insufficiently considered when the MDGs, which expire in 2015, were first drafted. The declared goal of the post-2015 agenda is to involve both the Global South and north in the negotiation process. Despite public declarations that a broad dialogue will be held and include representatives of global civil society as part of an open and participatory consultation process on developing the new agenda, voices from the Global South are still insufficiently involved in this process. The UN’s approach essentially consists of stating the Global North’s goals for the Global South. Historically and structurally conditioned unequal distribution is largely ignored when analysing the problems. And an alternative, self-determined perspective on “development” is being totally ignored. Thus, a sustainable and socially just fight against global poverty and hunger, as a part of an equal north-south partnership, is still impossible.
Against this backdrop, AfricAvenir is launching its two-year project entitled "African Perspectives on Global Challenges (as part of the post-2015 agenda processes)". We aim to create an opportunity for presenting African views on the post-2015 agenda to a broad public in Germany. Together with our partners, we will formulate and discuss African-European goals and visions for the coming post-2015 agenda. We would also like to contribute to the decision-making process and learn from African experiences with a view to managing common and specific development challenges in the future.
As part of this project, an international conference will be held in Berlin from 5th to 6th December 2014. Notable speakers from academia and civil society will raise questions about African perspectives on the post-2015 agenda and the SDGs and discuss indigenous, independent developmental paths. Another aim is to encourage networking between African activists and representatives of German non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and associations in the development and climate policy sectors. The following guests will be attending: Dr. Chika A. Ezeanya, Nigerian political scientist and blogger, Boniface Mabanza, literary scholar, philosopher and theologian from the Church Work on Southern Africa (KASA) in Heidelberg and Dr. Dereje Alemayehu, development economist and chairman of the Tax Justice Network Africa and the Global Alliance on Tax Justice.
For more information on the conference, please contact:
Karenina Schröder
k.schroeder(at)africavenir.org
Tel: 030-26934764
Conference Agenda
5th December 2014
16.00 Arrival and registration, welcome and introduction to the conference program
16.30 World Café: Exchange, getting to know each other, expectations and ideas for the conference
17.45 Coffee break
18.00 Introductory lecture by Dr. Boniface Mabanza (KASA, Heidelberg): Von den MDGs zu den SDGs. Anspruch und Wirklichkeit des globalen Entwicklungsdiskurses aus afrikanischer zivilgesellschaftlicher Perspektive.
19.30 Dinner
Evening programme: Selected African short films, informal get-together
6th December 2014
09.00 Welcome and introduction to the day
09.15 Lecture Dr. Chika Ezeanya (University of Rwanda): What comes after 2015? Visions from an African perspective with questions and discussion
10.15 Coffee break
10.30: Future workshop I in small groups: Visions for global sustainable development/the new agenda
12.00 Lecture Dr. Dereje Alemayehu (TJNA): Curbing illegitimate resource outflows to reliably finance the Post-2015 goals in Africa, with questions and discussion
13.00 Lunch
14.30 Future workshop II: Visions for global sustainable development/the new agenda
16.00 Coffee break
16.15 Plenary: Results from the "future workshop" working phases
18.00 Philani Mthembu: Resume, concluding remarks and outlook: What would a partnership on equal terms between the Global South and North mean for Europe?
19.15 End of conference
Registration Fees: 30€ (reduced 20€)
Registration: Natalia Kolodziejska n.kolodziejska(at)africavenir.org
With the friendly support of the Landesstelle für Entwicklungszusammenarbeit und Engagement Global.
Liens
Sites recommandés
- Post 2015 is a hub for ideas, debate and resources on what comes after the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and has an interesting blog section on Southern Voices. The website is facilitated by the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), UK's leading independent think tank on international development and humanitarian issues.· https://csoforffd.wordpress.com/
- Civil Society Organizations for the 3rd Financing for Development Conference is a site organized by the Addis CSO Coordination Group for the civil society preparations to the 3rd Financing for Development Conference to be held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, July 13-16 2015.
- MDGs in Africa provides updates and news on the Millennium Development Goals in Africa. The aim of this youth-initiated tool is to connect young people to the inspiring stories of the eight goals in Africa. This helps to promote continuous efforts towards sustainable development on the continent. The more positive stories we share, the better Africa becomes.
- NGOsbeyond2014.org is a resource for all stakeholders in the post-2015 development agenda process who are interested in sexual and reproductive health and rights, including maternal health, and young people and gender issues. It serves NGOs who are trying to ensure that these topics are strongly represented in the new SDGs. The website is run by the Commonwealth Medical Trust (Commat) and is sponsored by donors such as the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the International Planned Parenthood (IPPF).
- The World We Want 2015 enables people to engage, visualise and analyse people’s voices on sustainable development. It gathers the priorities of people from every corner of the world and helps build a collective vision that will be used directly by the United Nations and World Leaders to plan a new development agenda launching in 2015, one that is based on the aspirations of all citizens.
- The African Women’s Development and communication Network (FEMNET) is an NGO set up in 1988 to share information, experiences, ideas and strategies among African women’s NGOs as a strategy for strengthening women’s capacity to participate effectively the development of the continent. This is done through advocacy, training, communication and networking. FEMNET frequently publishes articles in which the process of constructing post-2015 agenda is being critically analysed from the African females perspectives.
Organisations de la société civile et initiatives
- Afrodad (African Forum and Network for Debt and Developement is a civil society organisation established in 1996 as a regional platform and organisation for lobbying and advocating for debt cancellation and addressing other debt related issues in Africa.
- ENDA (environment et développement du tiers monde) est un reseau établi à Dakara qui s'engage pour la promotion d'une société plus juste et plus équitable, plurielle et inclusive, par le changement politique, économique et social
- Femnet (African Women's Developement and Communication Network) is a regional, membership-based non-governmental organisation (NGO) set up to share information, experiences, ideas and strategies among African women's NGOs as a strategy for strengthening women's capacity to participate effectively in the developement of our continent.
- Beyond 2015 is a global civil society campaign, pushing for a strong and legitimate successor framework to the Millennium Development Goals. Beyond 2015 brings together more than 1000 Civil Society Organizations from 132 countries all over the world. Of these, 56% are Southern CSOs and 44% are Northern CSOs - in 41 countries in Africa, 29 countries in Asia and the Pacific, 35 countries in Europe, 2 countries in North America and 26 countries in Latin America.
- The International Youth Council (IYC) is a civil society organization founded at the Youth Assembly at the United Nations in 2007.The vision of the International Youth Council is to build a global forum and platform on which all young people can develop a unified voice and take collective action toward social, economic, and environmental progress.
- Center for Economic and Social Rights (CESR) is a NY-based organisation working to promote social justice through human rights.
- Southern Voice - On Post-MDG International Development Goals is a structured initiative to allow the global South to channel their evidence-based policy inputs into the ongoing discussion on post-2015 framework and targets.
- Participate is a network of 18 participatory research organisations working with poor and marginalised groups in 29 countries. The initiative provides high quality evidence on the reality of poverty at ground level, bringing the perspectives of the poorest into the global debate on what should follow the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) when they expire in 2015.
- The Global Call to Action Against Poverty (GCAP) is one of the world's largest civil society networks, with National Coalitions and Constituency Groups in more than eighty countries. It is a southern-led movement that challenges the structures and institutions that perpetuate poverty and inequality. GCAP constituents are participating in national, regional and thematic consultations, both in person and online, to influence the post-2015 process.
- Women Deliver is a global advocacy organization bringing together voices from around the world to call for action to improve the health and well-being of girls and women. As Post-2015 negotiations are coming to a close, Women Deliver has been surveying their colleagues and partners to develop key recommendations for ensuring that maternal, sexual and reproductive health and rights will be at the center of the new framework, and advocating for these recommendations to be considered at the highest level.
- African Monitor is an independent African body, which aims to be an independent catalyst to monitor development funding commitments, delivery and impact on the grassroots and to bring strong additional African voices to the development agenda.
Journaux, magazines et autres publications
- Leadership is one of Nigeria’s most influential newspapers and has published a range of articles about the MDGs
- AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa - aggregating, producing and distributing 2000 news and information items daily from over 130 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Lagos, Monrovia, Nairobi and Washington DC. It publishes around 2,000 reports a day from more than 130 news organizations and over 200 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic.
- Pambazuka News is produced by a pan-African community of some 2,600 citizens and organisations - academics, policy makers, social activists, women's organisations, civil society organisations, writers, artists, poets, bloggers, and commentators who together produce insightful, sharp and thoughtful analyses and make it one of the largest and most innovative and influential web forums for social justice in Africa.
Suggestions de lecture
Les OMD
- “Millennium Development Goals: A critique from the South.” Samir Amin. Pambazuka 498, 2010.
- UN Website on Millennium Development Goals and Beyond 2015
L'agenda post-2015
- "The Problem with Saving the World" Jason Hickel, Jacobin, 08.08.2015
- Illustrative Indicators For A Post-2015 Fiscal Revolution: Proposal for human rights sensitive indicators for the goals 10, 16 and 17. ChristianAid and the Centre for Economic and Social Rights. March 2015.
- First UN post-2015 development agenda session: Southern perspectives on broad contours, principles and imperatives. Bhumika Muchhala (Third World Network). Global Policy Watch, February 2015.
- Confronting Development: A Critical Assessment of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Barbara Adams and Kathryn Tobin (RLS NY Office) give their take on the post-2015 process and suggest how various actors can intervene to shape proposed new goals. January 2015.
- Conclusions on a transformative post-2015 agenda. The Council of the European Union. December 2014. More information on our website.
- W&E Dossier: Hype oder Hoffnung? Entwicklungsjahr 2015. Informationsbrief Weltwirtschaft und Entwicklung
- “After 2015, then what?“ Chika A. Ezeanya. Pambazuka 621, 2013.
- “MDGs 2015: Africa’s Development Agenda in a Post MDGs World.” Chika A. Ezeanya. The African Executive.
- “The Common African Position on the Post-2015 Development Agenda: A unique opportunity for Africa to be heard.” Ibrahima Hathie. Post2015.org.
- “The Pre-2015 Agenda: Status of Efforts to Devise the Post-2015 Development Agenda.” Faye Leone. IISD Reporting Services.
- „Jenseits von neuer Rhetorik: Welche Entwicklungsagenda braucht es angesichts der Herausforderungen der großen Transformation?“ Boniface Mabanza. KASA-Newsletter, 3/2014.
- “Beyond MDG Framework: Exploring the Potentials of Youths And Children.” Willice Onyango, Chairperson of the International Youth Council Chapter in Kenya, a Children and Youth Working Group nominee to the Beyond 2015 Drafting Committee and Africa Youth Ambassador for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
- “Science and technology in Africa’s Post 2015 world – and the crucial role of business.” Alvaro Sobrinho. Post2015.org.
- “The Key to Unlocking this African moment.” Charles Mwangi Waituru. The Huffington Post. February 2015.
- “Africa: an increasingly powerful post-2015 player? The common African post-2015 position and the continent’s role in the negotiations.” Saskia Hollander. The Broker Online.
- "The Africa we want post-2015". Pre-Meetings of the Global Thematic Consultation on Governance and the Post 2015 Development Agenda
- Forum social mondial 2015, 27 mars: Agenda post-2015: quel développement, pour qui et pour quoi?
- Summary of the fifth session of the intergovernmental negotiations on the post-2015 development agenda, 18-22 May 2015, International Institute for Sustainable Development
- Report of the UN Secretary General about the transformation from MDGs to SDGs and the challenges associated with it, 24 avril 2015
Sujets liés
- For AU Agenda 2063, think agenda now now! Steve Sharra, Pambazuka Issue 731, 2015
- "African Lives Matter" by Yvette Kathurima, Head of Advocacy at FEMNET
- Theo Sowa: We Need The Voices of African Women, TEDxChange
- TTIP und die Entwicklungsländer: Gefahren, Potenziale und Politikoptionen. Gabriel Felbermayr und Wilhelm Kohler, ifo Schnelldienst 2/2015 vom 29. Januar 2015
- Lagos plan of action for the economic development of Africa 1980-2000, Organisation of African Unity, 1980
Proposition de l'Open Working Group pour les ODD
- Proposal by the Open Working Group on Sustainable Development Goals SDGs
- Addendum to the proposal of the Open Working Group containing reservations and positions of member states.
- "African Lives Matter" by Yvette Kathurima, Head of Advocacy at FEMNET
Rapport de synthèse de l'ONU SG 2014
- "The road to dignity by 2030." Synthesis Report presented by the UN Secretary-General in December 2014. The report comments on the contributions to the post 2015 agenda so far, explicitly welcoming the SDG-proposal of the Open Working Group.
- Comments and critique of the synthesis report by the NGO network Concord stressing the failure to identify structural causes of poverty and inequality.
- Analysis of the financing aspects within the report by Concord.
Financement du développement post-2015
- Third FfD FAILING to FINANCE DEVELOPMENT - Civil Society Response to the Addis Ababa Action Agenda on Financing for Development, July 16, 2015
- Outcome document of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development: Addis Ababa Action Agenda, July 15, 2015
- FINANCING FOR DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE 2015: VIEWS FROM THE GLOBAL SOUTH, de Manuel F. Montes (South Center), Avril 2015
- "Tackling Illicit Financial Flows From and Within Africa", Position Paper prepared for the African Civil Society Circle by Dr. Fanwell Kenala Bokosi and Tafadzwa Chikumbu, March 2015
- "AFRODAD welcomes the AU adoption of the High Level Panel Report on Illicit Financial Flows", Press release AFRODAD, February 2015
- Civil Society response to the FfD Elements Paper. Addis CSO Coordination Group for the civil society preparations to the 3rd Financing for Development Conference to be held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, July 13-16 2015. January 2015.
- Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries: 2003-2012. Dev Kar and Joseph Spanjers. Global Policy Forum. December 2014. The report provides estimates of the illicit flow of money out of the developing world–as a whole, by region, and by individual country–from 2003-2012, the most recent ten years of data availability, finding that between 2003 and 2012, the developing world lost US$6.6 trillion in illicit outflows.
- Report of the Intergovernmental Committee of Experts on Sustainable Development Financing. UNGA
- "My journey into the Tax Justice Movement.” Dereje Alemayehu. The Huffigton Post. June 2013.
- “The Road to Addis Ababa.” Hernán Cortés Saenz. Eurodad. September 2014. Commentary on the Report of the Intergovernmental Committee of Experts on Sustainable Development Financing.
- "Why fighting illicit capital is not a priority?" by Martina Ponti, Social Watch
- "La santé publique et les flux financiers illicites en provenance d'Afrique: Rapport du Groupe de haut niveau sur les financements illicites en provenance d'Afrique." Bertrand Livinec. Pambazuka News 362.
- Saleh Akram: Passage from MDGs to SDGs - harnessing domestic resources, The Financial Expert
- NTSAKISI MASWANGANYI, African leaders advised to focus on tax policies, 21 APRIL 2015, Business Day live
- Lynley Donnelly, Illicit financial flows costing Africa billions - Mail&Guadian, mai 2015
- Paul Quintos, Post-2015 negotiations: Are governments passing the buck to businesses?, avril 2015
- Financing the SDGs for health in Africa - opportunities and risks, published in Health Matters
- Money Talks: Africa at the G7 - Oxfam's report on tax evasion, June 2015
- EU Council conclusions on a New Global Partnership for Poverty Eradication and Sustainable Development after 2015, May 26th 2015 and the critique from Eurodad, May 27th 2015
- Women's Rights and Illicit Financial Flows - an interview with Nebila Abdulmelik, Head of Communications in FEMNET, published on Mail&Guardian Africa on June 15th 2015
- Women's Rights and Illicit Financial Flows - an interview with Nebila Abdulmelik, Head of Communications in FEMNET, published on femnet.wordpress.com on June 15th 2015
- Studie: Arm finanziert reich, published by European Network on Debt and Development, July 2015
Calendrier pour les négotiations post 2015:
25–27 Septembre: UN Summit: Delivering on and Implementing a Transformative Post–2015 Development Agenda
With financial Support by:


