Inequalities Archives - CONCORD https://concordeurope.org/topic/inequalities/ The European Confederation of Development NGOs Wed, 20 Sep 2023 14:20:07 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://concordeurope.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/cropped-CONCORD-favico-32x32.png Inequalities Archives - CONCORD https://concordeurope.org/topic/inequalities/ 32 32 104951707 The human face of inequalities. What makes the difference for equality? Voices on what the EU can do https://concordeurope.org/resource/the-human-face-of-inequalities-what-makes-the-difference-for-equality-voices-on-what-the-eu-can-do/ https://concordeurope.org/resource/the-human-face-of-inequalities-what-makes-the-difference-for-equality-voices-on-what-the-eu-can-do/#respond Tue, 21 Mar 2023 08:00:44 +0000 https://concordeurope.org/?post_type=resource&p=25444 The post The human face of inequalities. What makes the difference for equality? Voices on what the EU can do appeared first on CONCORD.

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The human face of inequalities. What makes the difference for equality? Voices on what the EU can do

Inequalities are not just numbers. They take different forms and compound each other. But mainly, inequalities have a human face.

Europe can and must make a difference by funding projects that follow four key principles.

During our travels in Paraguay and South Africa we have asked to participants and leaders of projects funded by the EU and EU Member States how can EU’s international partnerships become a gateway for equality. All the testimonies and lessons learnt are collected in the report What makes the difference for equality?

Watch the video to find out more!

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What makes the difference for equality? Voices from South Africa, Paraguay and Bangladesh on what the EU can do https://concordeurope.org/resource/what-makes-the-difference-for-equality-voices-from-south-africa-paraguay-and-bangladesh-on-what-the-eu-can-do/ https://concordeurope.org/resource/what-makes-the-difference-for-equality-voices-from-south-africa-paraguay-and-bangladesh-on-what-the-eu-can-do/#respond Tue, 21 Mar 2023 08:00:33 +0000 https://concordeurope.org/?post_type=resource&p=25438 The post What makes the difference for equality? Voices from South Africa, Paraguay and Bangladesh on what the EU can do appeared first on CONCORD.

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What makes the difference for equality? Voices from South Africa, Paraguay and Bangladesh on what the EU can do

Inequalities persist at high levels throughout the world and they affect individuals in a wide range of ways. Europe has a particular responsibility with respect to inequalities, but the increasing recognition of inequalities as a key global challenge by the European Union (EU) and many EU Member States shows that different partnerships, focused on equality, are possible and feasible.

This report looks at case studies in South Africa, Paraguay and Bangladesh which show how Europe can engage constructively with communities and marginalised groups and support their struggle for equality.

The present report identifies a number of key ingredients for equality, with the hope to stimulate political debate among European policy-makers to
fully mainstream inequality reduction in policies, programmes and projects.

We have also collected the testimonies of the participants and leaders of projects funded by the EU and EU Member States in a video that  highlights the four key principles that programmes need to follow.

 

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The road to equality: How do EU Member States address inequalities through international cooperation? https://concordeurope.org/resource/the-road-to-equality/ https://concordeurope.org/resource/the-road-to-equality/#respond Tue, 29 Mar 2022 12:00:25 +0000 https://concordeurope.org/?post_type=resource&p=23131 The post The road to equality: How do EU Member States address inequalities through international cooperation? appeared first on CONCORD.

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The road to equality: How do EU Member States address inequalities through international cooperation?

EU Member States committed themselves to tackling inequalities when they adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the European Consensus on Development (2017) and the Council Conclusions on addressing inequalities in partner countries (2019), and in the common EU response to COVID-19. Some Member States (MS) have also given individual commitments.

Research has shown that inequalities are economically inefficient and hinder social development; tackling inequalities is necessary if we are to achieve all the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). CONCORD is committed to supporting the reduction of inequalities both through its members’ work and by following up on the commitments by the EU and its Member States to reduce inequalities through their international cooperation.

This report provides an EU-wide analysis based on an assessment of how Member States’ organisations and their international cooperation strategies respond to the challenge of inequalities. The research focuses on five key aspects: (1) Member States’ political commitment to reducing inequalities, (2) mainstreaming tools and practices, (3) redistributing wealth to partner countries, (4) targeted action within partner countries and (5) Policy Coherence for Sustainable Development.

Our interactive map includes dashboards for individual EU Member Countries. The dashboards show the current position of Member States on the path of tackling inequalities and provide an overall assessment of their outcomes. The goal of the dashboards is to assist Member States to monitor their progress, promote what works well, flag shortcomings and incoherencies, and hold them accountable.

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Talking Development Episode 10: Is the EU walking the talk of vaccine equity? https://concordeurope.org/resource/talking-development-episode-10-the-eu-isnt-walking-the-talk-of-vaccine-equity/ https://concordeurope.org/resource/talking-development-episode-10-the-eu-isnt-walking-the-talk-of-vaccine-equity/#respond Tue, 02 Nov 2021 13:02:02 +0000 https://concordeurope.org/?post_type=resource&p=22070 In an extraordinary race to vaccinate the world’s population, the EU talks about achieving “partnerships of equals". But its actions send a different message. Our guest speakers dive right into it by discussing the EU’s narrative and holding it accountable.

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Talking Development Episode 10: Is the EU walking the talk of vaccine equity?

The EU is facing the first very real test when it comes to achieving “equal and fair” partnerships. While the EU talks about achieving vaccine equity globally, its actions send a different message. In her State of the Union speech, President Ursula von der Leyen pledged to donate 200 million doses to low income countries. This is on top of the already existing pledge to donate 250 million doses, of which only a fraction has been delivered. In fact, only 1% of people in Least Developed Countries (LDCs) have been vaccinated.

What does this say about the EU’s narrative around partnerships? What does this mean for human rights and social justice? And where do we go from here? This episode of Talking Development dives into exactly those questions with key experts.

In a globalised world, a “me-first” approach is not only morally wrong, but it is misguided and dangerous. Ensuring that everyone, everywhere has equal access to the vaccine and without discrimination is the only way to ensure a global recovery and protect us from future outbreaks.

 

 

The project “Towards an open, fair and sustainable Europe in the world – EU Presidency Project 2020-2022” is funded by the European Union and implemented by the Association of German Development and Humanitarian Aid NGOs (VENRO), the Portuguese Non-Governmental Development Organizations Platform (Plataforma Portuguesa das ONGD), the Slovenian NGO Platform for Development, Global Education and Humanitarian Aid (SLOGA), and the European NGO confederation for relief and development (CONCORD

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#Vaccines4All https://concordeurope.org/resource/vaccines4all/ https://concordeurope.org/resource/vaccines4all/#respond Thu, 15 Jul 2021 20:43:36 +0000 https://concordeurope.org/?post_type=resource&p=21505 This campaign aims at compelling EU and UK leaders to put an end to the vaccine hegemony, support manufacturing capacity in other countries and support vaccine delivery in-country.

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Less than two percent of Africans are fully-vaccinated to date, while 30 EU citizens are vaccinated every second.

Despite overwhelming and growing calls to action, EU and UK leaders continue to do nothing.

They continue to put all our lives at risk.

We’re calling for all people to have equal access to the vaccine and to be treated without discrimination.

The people of the world should be able to expect their leaders to apply justice, equity and solidarity in the quest to vanquish the pandemic and protect all people. For that to be the case, everyone must have access to the COVID-19 vaccine, and all WHO-approved vaccines must be accepted as valid. As Antonio Gutierrez, Secretary-General of the United Nations said, ‘No one is safe until we are all safe’.

While Europe’s remarkable vaccine roll-out – apparently at the rate of approximately 30 EU citizens per second – is to be praised, this must not be a competition. This is not a glory-seeking exercise. This is about everyone’s right to life, no matter where they live or where they were born. And leaders of the EU and UK do not have the right to deny that to anyone.

While some countries begin to talk about recovery, are starting to resume normal life and are able once again to enjoy social, cultural and sports activities, many others are still struggling with new waves of the pandemic. While that remains the case, we are all at risk of virus mutations. We have already learnt that the virus knows no borders. Why, therefore, would leaders allow it to mutate freely in some parts of the world and risk those new variants resurfacing in their own countries?

What can EU and UK leaders do about it?

OVERCOME VACCINE HEGEMONY

We take exception to the continued refusal by European leaders, especially Germany and the UK, to allow the temporary relaxation of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) as requested by India and South Africa. Their refusal is preventing other countries from producing much-needed vaccines for billions of people. We have clearly seen that it is impossible to produce enough vaccines for the whole world when relying on just a few companies and production sites.

It is shameful to hear EU leaders proudly declare that “Europe is nowadays the pharmacy of the world” when cases of COVID-19 continue to climb in Africa, the COVAX mechanism is failing to deliver the required doses of vaccines and you refuse to allow South Africa and India, among others, to play a critical role in vaccine production. No one is asking or expecting Europe to be the pharmacy of the world. Africa does not want that. We call on you urgently to end your neocolonial control over other parts of the world.

Current Intellectual Property (IP) protection rules, as contained in the TRIPS Agreement, are a barrier to knowledge-sharing, technological transfer and raw material production. They are therefore a barrier to scaling up vaccine production and to ending the global pandemic. The best way to overcome this is to end monopolistic hegemony on vaccines and to protect the right to life for all people, by agreeing to a TRIPS Waiver in the WTO.

Private sector interests cannot be allowed to determine who lives and who dies. The profit of major pharmaceutical companies cannot take precedence over equity and justice! Enough is enough! “COVID-19 vaccines must be considered a global public good”, as UN Secretary-General António Guterres reiterated recently.

We therefore call on EU and UK leaders, to agree urgently to a WTO TRIPS Waiver.  We also call to withdraw the EU’s current, counter communication, which is simply a distraction. Stop delaying the process and risking all our lives!

SUPPORT MANUFACTURING CAPACITY IN OTHER COUNTRIES

We know that agreeing to a WTO TRIPS waiver will not suffice. Countries will need support to manufacture and produce at scale the vaccines. It is estimated that to date only 2% of Africans have received a vaccine. However, a number of countries in Africa are interested in supporting vaccine production, in addition to South Africa, such as Senegal, Rwanda and Egypt. The EU must therefore also share knowledge, support technology transfer and strengthen capacity so that such countries can gear up vaccine production as rapidly as possible.

In light of the proclaimed “partnership” that Europe wishes to develop with Africa, it should bear in mind that actions speak louder than words. Europe is not living up to the very first real test of partnership.

Just as the virus knows no boundaries, so the virus will continue to mutate, creating variants, against which current vaccines may no longer work. Do EU leaders, really want to have to rely on sealing borders, creating a Fortress Europe, in a vain attempt to keep the virus out, possibly for years to come? Your investment in the African continent now would serve to increase resilience in the longer term and to counter any future health pandemics more effectively.

We therefore call on EU Leaders to require pharmaceutical companies to share knowledge and technology so as to allow non-EU countries to produce vaccines and increase global production levels so that all countries can protect their people.

SUPPORT VACCINE DELIVERY IN-COUNTRY
While ‘vaccine-sharing’ is a very limited and short-term option, it will inevitably fail if commensurate efforts are not made to support vaccine delivery in-country. A number of countries, such as Malawi, DRC and South Sudan, have not been able to benefit from those few doses of vaccine that were delivered through the COVAX mechanism, owing to under-resourced and fragile domestic health systems. Once production ramps up in other parts of the world, notably in Africa, ensuring that the vaccine is delivered to individuals as quickly and efficiently as possible will require support.

The COVID-19 pandemic has clearly demonstrated the importance of robust, well-resourced health systems. Even rich countries’ health systems have struggled to deal with the high rates of infection and to address the pandemic. Previous experience from viral outbreaks such as Ebola have provided valuable lessons for Africa, but this has largely served to limit infection. Those lessons have, however, also shown the critical importance of investing in frontline health-workers and community-based care. Investment in universal access to quality health systems is thus paramount and, as part of that effort, investment in health-workers and care-workers is key.

We therefore call on EU Leaders to support all countries to make critical investments in their health systems and to ensure fair and efficient delivery of #Vaccines4All.

What can you do?

1. Sign this open letter to EU and UK leaders! The letter is also available in French, Spanish and Portuguese.

2. Use the communication kit and visuals (available in EN, FR, ES and PT) to target EU and UK leaders, Heads of State and Government.

3. Like and share our posts on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to show your support. Use #Vaccines4All to join the conversation.

Supporters

PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD HAVE CALLED FOR EVERYONE TO HAVE EQUAL ACCESS TO THE VACCINE AND TO BE TREATED WITHOUT DISCRIMINATION

 #THEHULLWEWANT
ACTION AID INTERNATIONAL
ADRA EUROPE
AFRICAN ALLIANCE
AFRICAN PHILANTHROPY NETWORK
AFRICANS RISING
CARITAS EUROPA
CNCD-11.11.11
CONCORD EUROPE
CROSOL – CROATIAN PLATFORM FOR INTERNATIONAL CITIZEN SOLIDARITY
FINGO
FUND FOR CONGOLESE WOMEN

GLOBAL FUND FOR COMMUNITY FOUNDATIONS
HOPE FOR CHILDREN
ICVA
KAWEMPE YOUTH DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION
KENYA COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION
KICK CORRUPTION OUT OF UGANDA
LIGHT FOR THE WORLD
MEDICINS DU MONDE BELGIUM
OXFAM UGANDA
PACIFIC ISLANDS ASSOCIATION (PIANGO)
PEOPLE’S VACCINE KENYA
RETHINKING POVERTY
SOUTHERN VOICE
THE EQUITY INDEX
THUBUTU AFRICA INITIATIVES

UGANDA COALITION FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
UGANDA NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY AND HEALTH
UGANDA NATIONAL NGO FORUM
WEST AFRICA CIVIL SOCIETY INSTITUTE
WIDE+
YOUTH ADVOCACY AND DEVELOPMENT NETWORK UGANDA
YOUTH FOR UNITY AND VOLUNTARY ACTION
YOUTH LINE FORUM
ZAMBIAN GOVERNANCE FOUNDATION FOR CIVIL SOCIETY

Find all signatory organisations here

Get in touch

Want to get engaged? Need more information? Get in touch.

Katarzyna Krok

Katarzyna Krok

Communications and Media Officer

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