A global partnership for development and other unfulfilled promises of the millennium project |
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Authors: | Meredeth Turshen |
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Affiliation: | 1. E.J. Bloustein School of Planning &2. Public Policy, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, USAturshen@rutgers.edu |
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Abstract: | This article revisits the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (mdgs) set in 2000, timely now because policy makers are currently making plans for the period after 2015. After laying out a critical analysis of the mdgs, the article focuses on Millennium Goal 8, the global partnership for development. The argument made is that the absence of any goal to reset the asymmetrical power relations between the North and the South reveals the limitations of the endeavour. The pharmaceutical industry is discussed in detail because mdg8/Target 6 deals with access to affordable, essential drugs in developing countries. This target seems emblematic of a problem found throughout the millennium project: the unaddressed need for real economic development. Target 6 exemplifies both North–South and public–private conflicts of interest, which are carefully hidden in official documents behind the euphemism of ‘partnership’, as if countries of such unequal power could be partners. |
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Keywords: | Millennium Development Goals global partnership for development access to medicines sub-Saharan Africa |
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