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{UAH} FW: New York Global Dev Week and Global Fund replenishment: This week in development


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Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2016 16:46:45 -0500
From: info@devex.com
To: georgeokello_8@hotmail.com
Subject: New York Global Dev Week and Global Fund replenishment: This week in development

Global Development Briefing
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Sept. 22, 2016
THIS WEEK'S MUST-READ DEVELOPMENT STORIES
Michael Igoe
By Michael Igoe
Refugees and migrants take center stage in New York, the Clinton Global Initiative bids farewell, and the Global Fund hits its target — with some caveats. Meanwhile, aid convoys reach besieged populations in Syria, following Monday's deadly attack. This week in development news.

World leaders stepped up their commitments to migrants and refugees during two complementary summits at the United Nations General Assembly in New York. The first — a U.N. Summit on Migrants and Refugees — led to the adoption of a "New York Declaration on Migrants and Refugees," a broad statement that outlines states' obligations to displaced people and migrants. While many criticized this document's lack of specific commitments on refugee resettlement and migrant and refugee protection obligations, the declaration does pave the way for what many hope will be more ambitious global compacts for migrants and refugees, to be developed over the next two years. The second summit, hosted by President Obama, focused on more concrete commitments, including from private sector groups and multilateral organizations. The White House touted the summit's contribution to an additional $4.5 billion in humanitarian finance over 2015 levels, a large increase in refugee resettlement slots, and $650 million in commitments from 51 American companies. The summit also saw contributions to the World Bank's new Global Crisis Response Platform, which will provide concessional loans to low- and middle-income countries hosting refugees.

President Bill Clinton and his Clinton Global Initiative partners struck a tone of continuity at CGI's 12th and final annual meeting. Many of the initiatives that have sprung from the Clinton Foundation's broad network of partnerships and commitments, such as the Clinton Health Access Initiative — now just CHAI — will spin off to become independent entities, so they can carry on their work without too much disruption from the ongoing U.S. presidential election. Hillary Clinton's candidacy and questions about overlap between the Clinton Foundation and U.S. foreign policy have compelled the Clinton family to take a step back from their "operating foundation," and CGI is reported to be cutting "dozens" of positions this year. Devex Editor-in-Chief Raj Kumar spoke with Clinton Foundation co-chair Chelsea Clinton about CGI's legacy and the Clinton Foundation's future at the annual meeting in New York this week. "If my mom wins … we know that changes have to be made, and so all of our international work will either be transferred to partner organizations or will be spun off to be independent entities," Clinton said.

Donors at the fifth replenishment conference of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria in Montreal, Canada, helped the multilateral health fund get within sight of an "ambitious and realistic" funding goal. The replenishment raised $12.9 billion from public and private donors, falling just $100 million short of its fundraising target. "This is a floor, not a ceiling, and this replenishment conference is really the beginning of a three-year replenishment period, and we will be continuing to raise money through that period," the Global Fund's Head of Communications Seth Faison told Devex in an interview. The fifth replenishment saw new donors emerge — such as Qatar — and it saw new donation models, including tying funds to performance metrics. It's not all good news though. "Civil society members who spoke with Devex indicated that the funding shortages are more dire than they appear from the headline numbers. Funding to combat HIV/AIDS for example has been falling for the past half-decade as donors move on to other causes," Flavie Halais reported for Devex from Montreal.

Aid convoys in Syria resumed efforts to deliver humanitarian relief, following a convoy attack on Monday — the deadliest in Syria in the five-year civil war. According to the U.N., a 25-truck convoy with food supplies for 40,000 people arrived in the town of Moadamiya, and more trucks are scheduled to leave on Friday and Saturday. American officials are accusing Russia of Monday's attack — which Russia denies, blaming Syrian rebels of violating the truce. During a U.N. Security Council meeting on Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called for the immediate grounding of the Syrian air force in order to restore the weeklong ceasefire.
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FROM THE EDITOR
Top picks this week
By Devex
This year's #GlobalDev Week produced a step forward in addressing the refugee crisis — the so-called New York Declaration, which could affect 65 million people forcibly displaced worldwide. Devex's Michael Igoe was on the ground in the Big Apple, where he noted that "concrete actions and real policy shifts are still promises, and some are already being broken."

This week's top stories on Devex include on-the-ground reporting from the final CGI annual meeting, a sit-down interview with Chelsea Clinton, an op-ed advocating for private sector support for the SDGs, a rundown on the pledges made at the fifth replenishment conference of the Global Fund, and a look at Australia's approach to integrating Syrian refugees.
World leaders pivoted from "watered-down" principles to "concrete" commitments at the United Nations General Assembly in New York this week — but this is just a beginning. See also: The private sector imperative for the refugee crisis.
Collective action was at the center of every CGI session. But because this is the final meeting, questions linger about who or what can continue to bring unlikely allies together to tackle some of the toughest global challenges. Devex also sat down with Chelsea Clinton for her views on the future of the Clinton Foundation.
Businesses that don't positively contribute to society will find themselves more and more isolated. Unilever CEO Paul Polman explains why we need new, dynamic models for growth through the sharing economy, using big data to unlock new insights and adopting closed-loop cycles.
Despite reaching its funding goal at the replenishment conference in Montreal, Canada, the Global Fund's resources may still not be enough to reach those most in need. Read more analysis on the surprises and questions for the Global Fund replenishment.
Australia focuses its support services on individual refugee needs, a unique approach that could provide insights into how to make long-term integration a success.
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