News Release

After the Millennium Development Goals: Lessons learned and future goal setting examined in the Lancet-London International Development Centre Commission

Peer-Reviewed Publication

The Lancet_DELETED

A new blueprint for international development is to be published in The Lancet, a week ahead of the UN's major summit about the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The recommendations will be discussed at a public launch event at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine on Monday 13 September from 4.30pm.

The unique interdisciplinary study suggests principles for goal development, including equity and sustainability, after 2015 – the target date for the MDGs. Its conclusions are based on a cross-cutting analysis of the challenges facing the implementation of the MDGs —a set of eight goals to reduce global poverty which emerged from the UN Millennium Declaration in 2000.

The Commission is a collaboration between The Lancet—the world's leading general medical journal—and the London International Development Centre (LIDC)—a consortium of six University of London colleges dedicated to interdisciplinary approaches to international development.

Professor Jeff Waage, Director of LIDC, is the lead author of the Commission. He says*: "The MDGs have made a significant contribution to development, but more could have been achieved if they were better integrated. From our cross-sectoral analysis, we conclude that future goals should be built on a shared vision of development, and not on the bundling together of a set of independent development targets."

Nineteen academic authors representing numerous sectors (including agriculture, health, education, and gender) and based in seven countries (including India, South Africa, Thailand, and the UK) were involved in producing the study entitled The Millennium Development Goals: a cross-sectoral analysis and principles for goal setting after 2015. The joint Commission illustrates the fragmentation and lack of synergy between the MDGs, particularly the division of the health MDGs concerning reducing child mortality (MDG4), maternal health (MDG5), and combating HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases (MDG6). The lost opportunities created by limited goals are also explored, especially with reference to universal primary education (MDG2). The focus on primary education means secondary and tertiary education, which is essential for improving future incomes and training health-care professionals to help achieve certain other MDGs, remains underdeveloped.

The authors continue by adopting a definition of development as "a dynamic process involving sustainable and equitable access to improved wellbeing." Working with this definition and the cross-sectoral analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of the MDGs, the authors suggest five principles to create synergies between sectors. These are:

  • Holism – avoiding gaps in a development agenda and exploiting the inter-connected nature of different elements of wellbeing, such as health and learning
  • Equity – developing targets that do not increase inequity but take a pro-poor approach to improve equity of opportunity and outcome
  • Sustainability – ensuring development is sustainable, not only in terms of use of resources, but continuity of supporting institutions and appropriate productivity growth
  • Ownership – a need for greater ownership of the process of goal development both nationally and internationally
  • Global obligation – the need for the development agenda to be a global framework, such that all countries, rich and poor, have obligations and subscribe to targets for which they are accountable.

The implications of each of these principles is then explored, particularly in relation to its impact upon health, where it is suggested that future health development goals focus on sustainable health systems built around delivering health objectives across the lifecourse.

The UN summit to discuss how to accelerate progress towards the MDGs is taking place in New York from 20-22 September.

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For more information and to request an interview with Professor Jeff Waage – the lead author of the Commission – contact Guy Collender T) +44 (0) 20 7958 8260 / +44 (0) 7813 708 283 E) guy.collender@lidc.bloomsbury.ac.uk

For full Commission see: http://press.thelancet.com/mdgcommission.pdf

NOTE: THE ABOVE LINK IS FOR JOURNALISTS ONLY; IF YOU WISH TO PROVIDE A LINK TO THIS PAPER AND THE WEB APPENDIX WHICH ARE FREE TO ALL READERS, PLEASE DIRECT THEM TO www.thelancet.com (HOMEPAGE), WHERE THEY WILL BE ABLE TO ACCESS THE PAPERS THROUGH A SPECIAL FEATURE ONCE THE EMBARGO LIFTS

Notes to editors

*quote direct from Professor Waage and cannot be found in the Commission

The launch of The Millennium Development Goals: a cross-sectoral analysis and principles for goal setting after 2015 will take place at the John Snow Lecture Theatre, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT from 4.30pm-6.30pm (followed by a reception until 7.30pm). Authors of the Commission and expert panellists will speak about the Commission and the MDGs in general. To reserve your place email admin@lidc.bloomsbury.ac.uk

The London International Development Centre (LIDC) facilitates interdisciplinary research and training to tackle complex problems in international development by bringing together social and natural scientists from across the University of London's six Bloomsbury Colleges: Birkbeck, Institute of Education, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Royal Veterinary College, School of Oriental and African Studies, and The School of Pharmacy.


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