WDEV Subscription Special: Subscribe now and get 14 months for the price of 12!
deutschsprachige Version

Our new website address:  
www.wdev.eu  

Home Mission Statement Subscriptions Sample Copies Services Blogs Background Links Archives

My WDEV
Show shopping cart
Proceed to check-out
My account
Monitoring G8 Europe Global The New South UN Reform Global Finance Doha Final

Lisbon Treaty and EU Development Cooperation
In December 2010 the Lisbon Treaty came into force. What difference will this make for European Union development co-operation and humanitarian assistance? Mirjam van Reisen identifies the changes in the legal framework and interprets what difference this will make for the policy in practice.
>>> more

Ahead of the Curve: Ideas that Changed the World
"Ideas matter, people matter" - and powerful ideas "become embedded in institutions" said two authors of the United Nations Intellectual History Project series, Sir Richard Jolly and Thomas G. Weiss, at a meeting at UNCTAD's headquarter this month arguing that the UN, despite its shortcomings, has had a massive positive influence on the world.
>>> more

Reconciling Climate and Livestock Production?
The 2009 State of Food and Agriculture report was delayed for several months. After the disaster of Copenhagen, one could have expected it to provide the necessary guidance to policy changes for saving the Planet from further increases of greenhouse gases emitted from livestock. But FAO's suggestions are comparable to rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic.
>>> more

The Superiority of the Financial Transaction Tax
There is an extraordinary strong support of civil society in Europe for the Financial Transaction Tax (FTT). This reflects a general trend in public opinion. Not only many politicians - Merkel, Sarkozy, Brown, Barroso - have supported the FTT, there is - like all opinion polls show - an overwhelming majority of people in favour of stricter regulation and taxation.
>>> more

Global Unemployment on Record Levels
The number of jobless worldwide reached nearly 212 million in 2009 following an unprecedented increase of 34 million compared to 2007, on the eve of the global crisis, the International Labour Office (ILO) says in its recent annual "Global Employment Trends" report.
>>> more

A New Beginning in European Development Policy?
The European Union (EU) has a number of new faces in its Commission, a European Parliament whose hand has been strengthened by the Treaty of Lisbon, and a promise by the member states to improve the coordination of European foreign policy in its various facets.
>>> more

Copenhagen: A Serious Step towards Global Ruin
Two years of climate change negotiations have now ended in a farce in Copenhagen. Rather than grappling with complex issues, President Barack Obama decided instead to declare victory with a vague statement of principles agreed with a handful of other countries. The rest were handed a fait accompli, which some accepted and others denounced.
>>> more

Slow Economic Recovery or Double-Dip Recession?
After a sharp and synchronized global downturn, United Nations economists expect the world economy to bounce back with a mild 2.4 per cent growth in 2010. The rebound is due to the massive and to some extent concerted policy actions taken by the major economies. But a double-dip recession cannot be excluded.
>>> more

Climate Change: Does Copenhagen Really Matter?
While the world watches the Copenhagen UN climate negotiations and the enormous differences between the magnitude of the climate challenge and the ability of the world's governments to agree on anything in these negotiations, we may well realize that the world never has been changed by consensus or a unanimous UN decision.
>>> more

Mapping Social Protection in South Asia
Social protection has become a key area of policy interest on the international development agenda. Developing countries and donors alike are promoting social protection as a prominent policy intervention. And indeed, it can be an enabler for development - but only if the right policies are in place.
>>> more

Quo Vadis, German Development Cooperation?
The German development community has been through uncertain times since the federal elections took place in late September. The Social Democrats lost, and the liberal FDP, the main winner of the elections had put forward the demand of doing away with an independent development ministry in its election campaign.
>>> more

The Commission's "Whole of the Union" Smokescreen
Today, development policymakers need more than ever to work with colleagues to prevent and remediate negative impacts of finance, trade and other policies on developing countries. At the same time, the European Commission is proposing to change directions on policy coherence for development, undermining its power as an EU Treaty obligation.
>>> more

China's Amazing Rise in Organic Food Production
Is China at the "onset of an organic revolution"? Undoubtedly, the flood of food certificates creates the impression that one third of agricultural land is already under eco-food production. And clearly, there is a growing interest in "green food" by consumers. But not everything which claims to be "organic", really is.
>>> more

Towards Alternatives to IMF and World Bank
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank are controversial among governments and civil society organisations for many reasons: their unfair governance structures, their harmful loan conditionality, and last not least the fossil-based project policies of the Bank.
>>> more

The Tobin Tax Lives Again
Tobin tax-like proposals are back on the agenda. Latest example: France and Germany managed to get the financial transaction tax (FTT) proposal de facto into the Pittsburgh Declaration of the G20. The IMF is tasked to prepare a report. Dani Rodrik comments the new momentum.
>>> more

Development Aid and Low Tax Developing Countries
For countries with low tax rates or lax enforcement of tax laws, the air is growing increasingly thin. Against the background of the present global financial and economic crisis, so-called tax havens are finding themselves faced with growing pressure to improve the transparency of their tax systems and discontinue unfair practices.
>>> more

World Bank/FAO: Deceptive Fortune Tellers
The dimensions are truly gigantic: Four million km2 of Guinea Savannah, "one of the largest underused agricultural land reserves in the world", could be developed for commercial agriculture, says a new FAO-World Bank study.
>>> more

The Scent of Money and the Stench of Corruption
When there is a chance to push a big loan out the door, some people just can't say no. Every World Bank President since James Wolfensohn has committed to fight the cancer of corruption. For more than ten years, the Bank has talked the talk, but has not walked the walk.
>>> more


Issue 1/Jan-Feb 2010
The Superiority of the Financial Transaction Tax + Global Unemployment on Record Levels + New Beginning in European Development Policy? + Clean Development for the South


>>> more


Issue 6/Nov-Dec 2009
Global Economic Prospects for 2010 + Does Copenhagen Really Matter? + Quo Vadis, German Development Cooperation? + Mapping Social Protection in South Asia


>>> more

Issue 5/Sep-Oct 2009
Tobin Tax Back on the Agenda + A New Exchange-Rate Management + Dams and Corruption + World Bank Promotes Land Grab + ODA and Low Tax Countries


>>> more

Issue 4/Jul-Aug 2009
EU Presidency outlook for development + Luxembourg: Tax haven or financial centre? + Moyos book as an opportunity + 3 Fs Crisis in South Asia + New LDC report


>>> more

Archives
of of all other issues since 2006


>>> more

For subscribers only
All issues, articles and special reports


>>> more


WDEV Dossier: The New Age of Hunger
World hunger is not new. Before the current price increase, 850 million people were chronically hungry. Now, the crisis has driven another 100 million into hunger.


>>> more


WDEV Dossier: Global Crisis and the South
Recent optimism that the corner was being turned on poverty thanks to faster growth in emerging markets and even some very poor economies is turning to anxiety, as the economy downshifts.


>>> more


South African Free Trade Experiences with the EU
How South Africa's Free Trade Agreement has been linked up to EPA negotiations + WTO Plus issues in EU-South African trade


>>> more

Democracy in the Light of Globalisation
What is democracy? + What is new in globalisation? + Global democracy? + Why does global democracy fail? + What could be done?


>>> more

Climate Change and Human Rights
Two dimensions of equity + Impacts on human communities + Rights-based climate policy + Mitigation and adaptation + Whose atmosphere?


>>> more

Femme Globale (I + II)
With contributions on Gender Perspectives in the 21st Century


>>> more


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Continue





Top of page

Imprint General Terms and Conditions RSS Feeds Site Map