[Ip-health] The Right to Development Criteria, applied to TDR and the Global
Fund
James Love
james.love@keionline.org
Fri Sep 18 08:08:12 2009
Source URL: http://keionline.org/r2d-tdr-tgf
The Right to Development Criteria, applied to TDR and the Global Fund
By James Love
Created 18 Sep 2009 - 5:50am
For several years, the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) has been working on
mechanisms to implement a 1986 UN Resolution on the "Right to
Development." To this end, the HRC has created a Working Group on the
Right to Development, and a High Level Task Force On The Implementation
Of The Right To Development.
The Right to Development (R2D) is an interesting and important concept
-- it encompasses all other human rights, and creates obligations on
governments, private sector organizations and even individuals to
collectively organize and cooperate to make development happen. One such
obligation is the creation of new global institutions and partnerships
that will address development concerns.
Earlier this year the Task Force commissioned studies about the R2D,
including one involving the WHO IGWG process, which was done by Lisa
Forman, and two other health programs, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria (TGF), and the Special Programme for Research
and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR). I was the investigator for the
TGF and TDR studies. The citation for my report is as follows:
The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the Special
Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases and the right
to development. Prepared for the UN Human Rights Council, Working Group
on the Right to Development, High Level Task Force on the implementation
of the right to development. A/HRC/12/WG.2/TF/CRP.4/Rev.1. 2009 June 18
[1].
Among the novel issues raised in the report on TGF and TDR are, (1)
should agencies be evaluated both for what they have done, and what they
have not done? How does the R2D framework extend to cases where
philanthropic actors have replaced governments or UN agencies as norm
setting and governance organizations?
>From the introduction:
1. The right to development as a human right is a concept that
has been explored in a variety of academic, policy and political fora,
and has been the subject of a 1986 declaration by the UN General
Assembly.3 As a human right, the right to development has yet to attain
the type of formal and enforceable status that is associated with many
other human rights, but remains profoundly important.4 Much of the
world's population lives in a state of appalling circumstances with
limited resources and opportunities, under conditions that are
extraordinarily worse than those with higher incomes within and between
countries. The existence of persistent under-development is both an
enduring shame for the global community and an intellectual mystery.
Despite enormous achievements in technology, vast investments in
scholarship and development aid, endless workshops and conferences, and
the creation of public and private institutions to understand and
promote development, the global community has collectively failed to
meet countless development benchmarks and goals.
2. This review will consider the appropriate criteria for the
periodic evaluation of global partnerships for development in the
context of the right to development. This evaluation addresses the
United Nations Millennium Development Goal Number 8 (MDG-8), =E2=80=9Cto de=
velop
a global partnership for development.=E2=80=9D In particular, the evaluatio=
n
will consider two such partnerships: the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria (TGF); and the Special Programme for Research
and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR). Among the specific questions
that have been asked are the following:
(a). What are the areas of potential congruence and synergy of the
framework and process guiding the operations of the Global Fund and TDR,
and right to development?
(b). What are the lessons learned from the mapping exercise that can
aid in present efforts to develop and refine the right to development
criteria in relation to Target 8E of the MDGs?
(c). How could the right to development criteria be better reflected
in the work of the Global Fund and TDR?
(d). How could the Global Fund and TDR contribute to the realization
of the right to development?
FN3 Declaration on the Right to Development, adopted by General
Assembly resolution 41/128 of 4 December 1986.
FN 4 Development As a Human Right- Legal, Political, and Economic
Dimensions, edited by B=C3=A5rd A. Andreassen and Stephen P. Marks, Harvard
School of Public Health, 2007; Reflections on the Right to Development,
Edited by Arjun Sengupta, Archna Negi and Moushjumi Basu, Sage, 2005.
The full report is available here [1].
Links:
[1]
http://keionline.org/sites/default/files/A-HRC-12-WG2-TF-CRP4-Rev1.pdf
--
James Love, Director, Knowledge Ecology International
http://www.keionline.org | mailto:james.love at keionline.org
Wk: +1.202.332.2671 | US Mobile +1.202.361.3040 | Geneva Mobile +41.76.413.=
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