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Category: SDGs

May 4, 2018 ETTG / Blogs / SDGs / EU MFF / Partnerships

The Neighbourhood and the World? Assessing the EU’s proposal for financing development cooperation from 2021-2027

Simon Maxwell, Niels Keijzer, Mariella Di Ciommo and Clare Castillejo underline three main elements of the EC proposal for the 2021-2027 budget.

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April 27, 2018 ETTG / Blogs / SDGs / EU MFF / Partnerships

Mind the gap between EU development policies and local authorities

Waiting for the first local elections in Tunisia after the revolution, Dalil Djinnit and Giulia Maci reflects on the role of local authorities in sustainable development.

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April 23, 2018 ETTG / Publication / SDGs

Steering the EU towards a sustainability transformation

Tancrède Voituriez, Elisabeth Hege, Giulia Maci and Christine Hackenesch suggest some practical ways of translating the EU’s overall support for the SDGs into concrete action.

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April 17, 2018 ETTG / Blogs / SDGs

Mediterranean cities as laboratories for sustainable development

Giulia Maci and Daniele Fattibene write about the role of local authorities in improving the liveability of Mediterranean urban areas, focusing on youth as a key driver for stability in the region.

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February 21, 2018 ECDPM / Blogs / SDGs

The Sustainable Development Goals, the EU and member states: Getting their act together and acting together

The EU was a driving force in the run-up to the 2030 Agenda, but is still reflecting on how to

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February 1, 2018 IAI / Blogs / SDGs / EU MFF

The security-development-migration nexus: avoiding the traps of a holistic policy

The Sustainable Development Goals, the EU Global Strategy and the Consensus on Development present an unprecedented opportunity for a holistic

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January 18, 2018 IDDRI / Blogs / SDGs

Delivering on domestic inequality reduction: why and how SDG 10 can help

Income and wealth inequality are rising in most countries around the world today. Recognizing that this challenge has become a

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January 1, 2018 ETTG / Blogs / SDGs / EU MFF / Partnerships

Looking ahead: challenges and ambitions for EU development policy in 2018

Simon Maxwell scans the horizons of EU development policy in 2018.

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December 22, 2017 DIE / Blogs / SDGs

Europe? Sustainability? Time to think about 2019 now!

Christine Hackenesch , Adolf Kloke-Lesch and Janina Sturm look at how the EU can anchor the 2030 Agenda in its policy

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December 18, 2017 IDDRI / Blogs / SDGs

A project for Europe

Teresa Ribera advocates for a sustainable development scenario for Europe.

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Topics

2030 Agenda Access & benefits ACP Africa Africa-EU partnership African Institutions African jobs Agenda 2030 Basic services Biodiversity Brexit Budget Childhood and Youth Cities Citizenship Civil rights Climate Climate Change Climate negotiations Conference Conflicts Cooperation Coronavirus COVID-19 Crisis Democracy Demography Development Development and Finance Development cooperation Digitalisation Economic Transformation Economy Energy Energy Transition Enviroment EU MFF Europe European European Union Finance Food Food security Gender Geopolitics Global Progress Governance Green Deal Green Growth Health HLPF Households Humanitarian Humanitarian aid Human rights Inequality Innovation Integrated International relations Investment Jobs and Livelihoods Land MFF Migration Multilateralism New Urban Agenda Partnerships Philanthropy Policies Poverty Private Private sector Public services Refugees Religions Research Resilience Rural SDG (Sustainable Development Goals) SDGs Security Sharing Sharing Economy Transition Society Sustainability Sustainable Cities Technology Trade Transparency United Nations Urban Urbanisation Urbanism Value Chains Violence war Youth

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Recent Publications

  • Mind the Gap? Sketching the relevance of the 2030 Agenda for the Green Deal and other key EU policies in the context of the COVID-19 crisis

    The consequences of COVID-19 will shape European policies and politics for years to come. Europe is lacking behind particularly on the SDGs related to agriculture, climate change and biodiversity and in strengthening convergence of living standards across EU member states. The pandemic has made these SDGs even more difficult to achieve by 2030, and could derail progress on other SDGs as well.

    Mind the Gap? Sketching the relevance of the 2030 Agenda for the Green Deal and other key EU policies in the context of the COVID-19 crisis
  • Strengthening the digital partnership between Africa and Europe

    Digitalisation is the use of digital technologies and digitised data in enterprises and organisations, with far-reaching implications for how work gets done and how customers engage and interact with operations. There can be no doubt that digitalisation is transforming business models, revolutionising societies and creating new revenue streams around the globe. Now, more than ever, we need to understand and harness the power of digitalisation, to further the global common good.

    Strengthening the digital partnership between Africa and Europe
  • Advancing EU-Africa cooperation in light of the African Continental Free Trade Area

    The current policy brief lays out the obstacles to both AfCFTA implementation and realisation of its full economic potential. It also explores how the EU can engage in providing targeted support and how to strengthen AfCFTA-related cooperation between Africa and the EU. The analysis and recommendations draw on a review of the literature and policy documents by the German Development Institute (DIE), the African Center for Economic Transformation (ACET) and the European Centre for Development Policy Management (ECDPM), as well as two online expert seminars on 17 and 24 June 2020.

    Advancing EU-Africa cooperation in light of the African Continental Free Trade Area
  • European fear of ‘missing out’ and narratives on China in Africa

    The ETTG note debunks some of the dominant myths surrounding Chinese engagement in Africa and unpacks the evolving relationship between China and the African continent. It starts by looking closer at common European perceptions about China-Africa relations. It then provides a brief sketch of the historical underpinnings of China’s engagement in Africa. Afterwards, it looks at how the notion of competition with rising global powers like China has influenced the EU’s relations with African partners.

    European fear of ‘missing out’ and narratives on China in Africa
  • EU humanitarian aid: Caught between nexus and independence

    This brief analyses current issues in the EU’s humanitarian aid and makes recommendations for responding to the challenges ahead. Specifically, it addresses the tensions between the Commission’s ambition to be a geopolitical actor and to better respond to multidimensional crises through a ‘nexus approach’ and the strong needs-based humanitarian assistance the EU provides. The analysis is based on a structured review of academic and policy sources, complemented by interviews with Brussels-based humanitarian aid policymakers.

    EU humanitarian aid: Caught between nexus and independence
  • How can the European Union help developing countries address the socioeconomic impacts of the coronavirus crisis?

    With the global economy going into a steep recession, developing countries are facing considerable financing shortfalls. Confronted with its most severe crisis since WWII, Europe needs to adopt a global perspective, as it cannot successfully address it in isolation. There is a moral imperative to help vulnerable people in distress and foster global solidarity to prevent catastrophic outcomes.

    How can the European Union help developing countries address the socioeconomic impacts of the coronavirus crisis?
  • Harnessing EU external cooperation to boost ambitious and coherent climate action

    In this paper, researchers from the European Think Tanks Group propose a set of actions the EU should consider to raise its climate ambition and exert credible climate leadership in a challenging global context.

    Harnessing EU external cooperation to boost ambitious and coherent climate action
  • An Agenda for Europe in the World

    In this ‘Agenda for Europe in the World’, we share concrete proposals for the new EU leadership, focusing on nine key domains where the EU can make a difference.

  • Financing human development and the ending of extreme poverty in Africa

    This briefing note from Marcus Manuel (ODI) and Stephanie Manea (ODI) draws on previous ODI research to examine how the EU could play a more effective role in ending extreme poverty in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) by better targeting support for human development in the poorest countries.

  • The EU Budget for the future: views from Italy

    After the recent European elections in Italy, a populist leadership is set to be the driver of the Italian European agenda for the next months. These populist forces are destined to play a marginal role in the negotiations over the new Commission as well as the new Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) 2021-2017. The growing role of Lega within the Government is expected to have a deep impact on the MFF, with agriculture, cohesion funds, migration and border management likely to become the real priorities for Italy at the expense of the development cooperation and humanitarian assistance. Key messages  • During the negotiations on the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) 2021-2027, the Italian anti-establishment and populist parties will prioritise funding for agriculture, social cohesion, migration, and border management at the expense of genuine development cooperation and humanitarian assistance.• The Italian government has a weak, trivial and isolated position in Europe. The recent elections to the European Parliament have produced a more fragmented political spectrum with the Lega becoming the leading party in the country. This will have an important impact, not only internally, but also at the European level. It seems likely that Lega will propose the new Commissioner from Italy, with a smaller role to be played by the Five Stars Movement. However, the two leading parties appear already isolated in the next European Parliament.• The proposal of the new MFF significantly increases the resources allocated for migration and border management. Italy vocally supports this view and advocates for an even stronger commitment, by doubling the budget for long-term focus on ‘root causes’ within the neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument (NDICI) component of Heading VI.• Italy would like to see Africa getting a greater proportion of NDICI funds. This is due not only to historical relations with the Mediterranean region and North Africa, but also as a result of the assumption than more development aid to Africa will reduce the migration fluxes, despite the literature showing otherwise.• The Italian and European NGO community criticise the so called “Junckerizarion of MFF”, or using the MFF as the catalyst to attract private investments. The community says it risks subsidising international companies that do not comply with clear and binding accountability and transparency rules. Read the full paper here. Authors: Daniele Fattibene (IAI) and Bernardo Venturi (IAI).Photo courtesy of Lukasz Radziejewski via Flickr.