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Teachers Guide on the SDGs Année de publication: 2022 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) This teaching guide, aimed at grade level K-12, gives an introduction and historical background to the SDGs. Key questions along with primary resources are provided to facilitate comprehension and engage students critically. Through analysis of the Preamble to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the connection will be made to the Millenium Development Goals and Human Rights, to demonstrate continuity and evolution of certain principle values held by the international community. Focus then shifts to SDG 4, quality education, so that students can ore clearly analyze the progress that has been made regarding this topic on a micro level. تقرير أهداف التنمية المستدامة 2018 Année de publication: 2018 Auteur: United Nations Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) يستعرض التقرير التقدم المحرز في تحقيق أهداف التنمية 2030 المستدامة في عامها الثالث من التطبيق. وهذا التقرير يمثل نظرة عامة على التقدم المحرز والفجوات التي تواجه الدول في الاهداف السبعة عشر، وهذا التحليل المعروض في التقرير مبني استنادا على أحدث البيانات المتاحة من إدارة الشؤون الاجتماعية والاقتصادية بالأمانة العامة للأمم المتحدة، وشارك ايضا في توفير البيانات خبراء إجصائيون من دول كثيرة. عموما يعتبر هذا التقرير مرجعا للمهتمين بمتابعة تحقيق العالم لأهداف التنمية المستدامة. The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2018 Année de publication: 2018 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development provides a global blueprint for dignity, peace and prosperity for people and the planet, now and in the future. Three years into the implementation of the Agenda, countries are translating this shared vision into national development plans and strategies. The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2019 Année de publication: 2019 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) Four years after signing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, countries have taken action to integrate the Goals and targets into their national development plans and to align policies and institutions behind them. The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2019 uses the latest available data to track global progress on the SDGs and to take stock of how far we have come in realizing our commitments. The report shows that, while advances have been made in some areas, monumental challenges remain. The evidence and data spotlight areas that require urgent attention and more rapid progress to realize the 2030 Agenda’s far-reaching vision. Member States agree that these challenges and commitments are interrelated and call for integrated solutions. It is therefore imperative to take a holistic view of the 2030 Agenda and to identify the highest impact areas in order to target interventions. The most urgent area for action is climate change. If we do not cut record-high greenhouse gas emissions now, global warming is projected to reach 1.5°C in the coming decades. As we are already seeing, the compounded effects will be catastrophic and irreversible: increasing ocean acidification, coastal erosion, extreme weather conditions, the frequency and severity of natural disasters, continuing land degradation, loss of vital species and the collapse of ecosystems. These effects, which will render many parts of the globe uninhabitable, will affect the poor the most. They will put food production at risk, leading to widespread food shortages and hunger, and potentially displace up to 140 million people by 2050. The clock for taking decisive actions on climate change is ticking. The other defining issue of our time is increasing inequality among and within countries. Poverty, hunger and disease continue to be concentrated in the poorest and most vulnerable groups of people and countries. Over 90 per cent of maternal deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. Three quarters of all stunted children live in Southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. People living in fragile States are twice as likely to lack basic sanitation, and about four times as likely to lack basic drinking water services as people in non-fragile situations. Youth are three times more likely to be unemployed than adults. Women and girls perform a disproportionate share of unpaid domestic work and lack autonomy in decision-making. Just as problems are interrelated, the solutions to poverty, inequality, climate change and other global challenges are also interlinked. Valuable opportunities exist to accelerate progress by examining interlinkages across Goals. For example, tackling climate change requires a shift to clean energy, reversing the trend in forest loss, and changing our production and consumption patterns. Promoting sustainable agriculture can help reduce both hunger and poverty, since close to 80 per cent of those who are extremely poor live in rural areas. Increasing access to safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene can save millions of lives per year and improve school attendance. Improving proficiency in reading and mathematics of some 200 million children who are falling behind in sub-Saharan Africa will help them climb out of poverty and ultimately enable the region to better compete in the global marketplace. This report also highlights the importance of investing in data for the full implementation of the 2030 Agenda. Most countries do not regularly collect data for more than half of the global indicators. The lack of accurate and timely data on many marginalized groups and individuals makes them “invisible” and exacerbates their vulnerability. While considerable effort has been made to address these data gaps over the past four years, progress has been limited. Increased investment is urgently needed to ensure that adequate data are available to inform decision-making on all aspects of the 2030 Agenda. Towards that end, the Dubai Declaration, launched at the second World Data Forum in October 2018, outlines a demand-driven funding mechanism under Member States’ oversight that will respond quickly and efficiently to the priorities of national statistical systems.  تحويل عالمنا: خطة التنمية المستدامة لعام ٢٠٣٠ - الجمعية العامة للامم المتحدة Année de publication: 2015 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) تمثل هذه الخطة برنـامج عمـل لأجـل النـاس والأرض ولأجـل الازدهـار. وهـي ـدف أيضا إلى تعزيز السـلام العـالمي في جـو مـن الحريـة أفسـح. ونحـن نـدرك أن القضـاء علـى الفقـر بجميع صوره وأبعاده، بما في ذلك الفقر المدقع، هو أكبر تحد يواجه العالم، وهـو شـرط لا غـنى عنه لتحقيق التنمية المستدامة. وستعمل جميع البلدان والجهات صاحبة المصلحة على تنفيـذ هـذه الخطـة في إطـار مـن الشراكة التعاونية. ونحن عاقدون العـزم علـى تحريـر الجـنس الب شـري مـن طغيـان الفقـر والعـوز وعلى تضميد جـراح كوكبنـا وحفظـه. ومصـممون علـى اتخـاذ الخطـوات الجريئـة المفضـية إلى التحـول الـتي تلـزم بصـورة ملحـة للانتقـال بالعـالم نحـو مسـار قوامـه الاسـتدامة والقـدرة علـى الصمود. ونتعهد، ونحن مقبلون على هذه الرحلة الجماعية، بألا يخلف الركب أحد ا وراءه. وتبرهن أهداف التنمية المستدامة، البالغ عددها ١٧ هدفا، وغاياا، البالغ عددها ١٦٩ غاية، التي سنعلن عنها اليوم على اتساع نطاق هذه الخطة العالمية ومدى طموحها. فالمنشود من هذه الأهداف والغايـات هـو مواصـلة مسـيرة الأهـداف الإنمائيـة للألفيـة وإنجـاز مـا يت لم حقـق في إطارها. كذلك يقصد ا إعمال حقوق الإنسان الواجبة للجميع وتحقيق المسـاواة بـين الجنسـين وتمكين النساء والفتيات كافة. وهي أهداف وغايات متكاملـة غـير قابلـة للتجزئـة تحقـق التـوازن بين الأبعاد الثلاثة للتنمية المستدامة: البعد الاقتصادي والبعد الاجتماعي والب عد البيئي.   Financing for Sustainable Development Report 2019: Report of the Inter-agency Task Force on Financing for Development Année de publication: 2019 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) This report provides a comprehensive assessment of the state of sustainable finance. Prepared by more than 60 UN agencies, programmes and offices and other relevant international organizations, the report puts forward a set of policy recommendations for achieving tangible progress on financing for sustainable development in 2019 and beyond.The report warns that creating favorable conditions is becoming more challenging. Rapid changes in technology, geopolitics, and climate are remaking our economies and societies, and existing national and multilateral institutions -- which had helped lift billions out of poverty -- are now struggling to adapt. Confidence in the multilateral system has been undermined, in part because it has failed to deliver returns equitably, with most people in the world living in countries with increasing inequality. تقرير المنتدى العربيللتنمية المستدامة لعام 2019تمكين الناس وضمان الشمول والمساواة في المنطقة العربية" بيت الأمم المتحدة،بيروت، Année de publication: 2019 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) نظمت اللجنة الاقتصادية والاجتماعية لغربي آسيا (الإسكوا)، وبالشراكة مع جامعة الدول العربية ومنظومة الأمم المتحدة العاملة في المنطقة العربية، المنتدى العربي للتنمية المستدامة لعام 2019 تحت عنوان "تمكين الناس وضمان الشمول والمساواة في المنطقة العربية"، في بيروت، في الفترة من 9 إلى 11 نيسان/أبريل 2019 برئاسة جمهورية العراق.   Report of the 2019 Arab Forum for Sustainable Development "Empowering people and ensuring inclusion and equality in the Arab region" Année de publication: 2019 Auteur: United Nations Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) The Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA), in partnership with the League of Arab States and the United Nations system working in the Arab region, organized the 2019 Arab Forum on Sustainable Development under the theme 'Empowering People and Ensuring Inclusion and Equality in the Arab Region', in Beirut, from 9 to 11 April 2019.  Asia and the Pacific SDG Progress Report 2019 Année de publication: 2019 Auteur: Arman Bidarbakht Nia | Eric Hermouet | Dayyan Shayani | Phuong Tran Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) This report analyses Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) trends as well as data availability for monitoring progress in Asia and the Pacific and its five subregions. It assesses progress towards the SDGs and the gaps which must be closed for these to be achieved by 2030. This assessment is designed to ensure the region’s actions remain on target, shortcomings are addressed as they arise, and all interested parties remain engaged. It is an invaluable resource for all stakeholders involved in prioritisation, planning, implementation and follow-up of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development in Asia and the Pacific.   [Video] Global Sustainable Development Report 2019 Année de publication: 2019 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations (UN) The Global Sustainable Development Report (GSDR ) originated in the Rio + 20 outcome, when Member States were laying the groundwork for the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The negotiators knew that the Agenda would be complex, and unprecedented in ambition, and that the traditional siloed approach to development would not be adequate.They recognised the power of science to understand and navigate relationships among social, environmental and economic development objectives, and so they called for a report to strengthen the science-policy interface.In 2016, Member States decided that the report should be produced once every four years, to inform the quadrennial SDG review deliberations at the General Assembly, and that it should be written by an Independent Group of Scientists appointed by the Secretary-General. They mandated that the Group would consist of 15 experts representing a variety of backgrounds, scientific disciplines and institutions, ensuring geographical and gender balance.