Millennium Challenges for Development and Faith Institutions

The dialogue initiated at Lambeth -- continued at a second meeting of faith and development leaders in November 1999 and then at the third meeting in Canterbury, on which this booklet is based -- has endeavored to bridge these gaps. Organizers of the Canterbury meeting documented some case studies of partnerships between faith and development institutions, summarized in this booklet, as background for the gathering. These cases, many of which had previously been only partially documented, reveal a diversity of experience across countries, regions, and sectors on which to build. The Canterbury meeting sought to move beyond dialogue to ideas for specific joint faith-development initiatives and programs. The Millennium Development Goals -- which represent a new global determination to mobilize energy, passion, and resources to fulfill tangible, measurable imperatives for human health and well-being-served as a springboard for discussion and provide a framework for future partnerships. The goals are straightforward: eradicate extreme poverty and hunger; achieve universal primary education; promote gender equality and empower women; reduce child mortality; improve maternal health; combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases; ensure environmental sustainability; and develop a global partnership for development. Global leaders and institutions such as the World Bank are committed to judging their performance against these goals.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marshall, Katherine, Marsh, Richard
Format: Publication biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2003
Subjects:FAITH, INSTITUTIONS, DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES, CASE STUDIES, PARTNERSHIP, DIVERSITY IN APPROACH, DIALOGUE, INITIATIVES, ENERGY, HEALTH, POVERTY GOALS, HUNGER, PRIMARY EDUCATION, GENDER EQUALITY, WOMEN PARTICIPATIONS, CHILD MORTALITY, MATERNAL HEALTH PROJECTS, HIV AIDS PREVENTION, MALARIA CONTROL, ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, POLICY MAKING, SOCIAL JUSTICE FAITH, SOCIAL JUSTICE, ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER, ALLIANCES, BAPTISM, BASIC HEALTH, BASIC HEALTH CARE, BIBLE, CANCER, CANON, CHRISTIANITY, CHURCH, CHURCHES, CIVILIZATION, CLEAN WATER, DEBT, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT GOALS, DIABETES, DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY, DISEASES, DRINKING WATER, ECONOMIC EXCHANGE, ECONOMICS, ECONOMISTS, ENTITLEMENTS, ENVIRONMENTAL, ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES, ESSENTIAL DRUGS, ETHICS, EXTREME POVERTY, FAITHS, GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP, GLOBAL POVERTY, GOD, HEALTH CARE, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSING, HUMAN HEALTH, HUMAN RIGHTS, IDEOLOGIES, INCOME, ISLAM, KORAN, LIVING CONDITIONS, MALARIA, MATERNAL HEALTH, MATERNAL MORTALITY, MATERNAL MORTALITY RATIO, MORALITY, MUSLIMS, NUTRITION, POOR COMMUNITIES, POOR COUNTRIES, POOR HEALTH, POOR PEOPLE, POPULATION GROWTH, POVERTY REDUCTION, POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES, POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY, PRINCIPLES, REALITY, REDUCTION IN POVERTY, RELIGION, RELIGIONS, RELIGIOUS GROUPS, RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS, RIVER BLINDNESS, RURAL POPULATIONS, RURAL POVERTY, SAFE DRINKING WATER, SANITATION, SCHOOLING, SCRIPTURE, SOCIAL CAPITAL, SPIRITUAL VALUES, SPIRITUALITY, SUSTAINABILITY, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/01/6850986/millennium-challenges-development-faith-institutions
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14828
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!