User Online: 2 | Timeout: 04:14Uhr ⟳ | email | BNE OS e.V.  | Info | Portal Klimabildung  | Auswahl | Logout | AAA  Mobil →
BNELIT - Datenbank zu Bildung für nachhaltige Entwicklung: wissenschaftliche Literatur und Materialien
Bildung für nachhaltige Entwicklung: wiss. Literatur und Materialien (BNELIT)
Datensätze des Ergebnisses:
Suche: Auswahl zeigen
Treffer:1
Sortierungen
1. Urheberwerk
(Korrektur)Anmerkung zu einem Objekt von BNE-LITERATUR per email Dieses Objekt in Ihre Merkliste aufnehmen (Cookies erlauben!) in den Download Korb (max. 50)!
Urheber:
Urheber Kürzel:
Hauptsachtitel:
Development Co-operation report 2014: Mobilising Resources for Sustainable Development.
Erscheinungsort:
o.O.
Erscheinungsjahr:
ISBN:
9789264210912
Kurzinfo:
Verlagsinfo:
Der Development Co-operation Report (DCR) ist der jährliche Bericht des Ausschusses für Entwicklungshilfe der OECD (Development Assistance Committee, DAC), der mittlerweile als Standardreferenz für die Entwicklungszusammenarbeit gilt. Die aktuelle Ausgabe ist der zweite Teil einer Trilogie (2013 bis 2015), die sich vor allem der Frage widmet, wie Entwicklungshilfe in der nahen Zukunft, also ab 2015, aussehen kann. Dazu untersucht der Bericht, welche Finanzquellen Entwicklungsländer haben und macht Vorschläge, um den Klimawandel zu bekämpfen, Frieden und Sicherheit zu fördern und fairen und gleichberechtigten Handel zu schaffen.

The Development Co-operation Report (DCR) is a yearly report by the Chair of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) that addresses important challenges for the international development community and provides practical guidance and recommendations on how to tackle them. Moreover, it reports the profiles and performance of DAC development co-operation providers and presents DAC statistics on official development assistance (ODA) and private resource flows.

The Development Co-operation Report 2014: Mobilising resources for sustainable development is the second in a trilogy (2013-15) focusing on "Global Development Co-operation Post-2015: Managing Interdependence". The report provides an overview of the sources of finance available to developing countries and proposes recommendations on how to mobilise further resources. It also explores how to mobilise resources to finance the provision of global public goods: for example, to combat climate change, promote peace and security, and create a fair and equal trading system.
Inhaltsverzeichnis :
Acronyms and abbreviations
Editorial: More and better financing for development
by Erik Solheim
Executive summarry
Chapter 1. How to better mobilise resources for sustainable development
by Raundi Halvorson-Quevedo, Hildegard Lingnau and Julia Sattelberger
A broader agenda will require broader finance
Where will the financing for the global Sustainable Development Goals come from?
In my view: Korea′s use of ODA can guide other countries in their development,
by Yun Byung-se
Smart ODA can have a multiplier effect
The time for ideas is now
Notes
References

Part I
Existing sources of financing for sustainable development
Chapter 2. Keeping ODA focused in a shifting world
by Suzanne Steensen
There are large differences in developing countries′ needs and access to finance
The relative importance of ODA is diminishing, but not everywhere
Least developed countries are the most dependent on ODA
Middle-income countries still face many development challenges
In my view: The Structural Gap approach offers a new model for co-operation with middle-income
countries, by Alicia Bárcena
ODA growth is slowing in those countries that need it most
In my view: Half of all ODA should go to the least developed countries,
by Gyan Chandra Acharya
Official finance must be used to its greatest potential
Key recommendations
Notes
References
Original-Quelle (URL):
 
DOI:
10.1787/dcr-2014-en
Datum des Zugriffs:
18.11.2014