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دعم برنامج الأمم المتحدة الإنمائي لتنفيذ الهدف 6 من أهداف التنمية المستدامة: الإدارة المستدامة للمياه وخدمات الصرف الصحي Année de publication: 2016 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) يقدم المستند تقرير ملخصا عن دعم برنامج الأمم المتحدة الإنمائي لتنفيذ الهدف 6 من أهداف التنمية المستدامة. ويركز التقرير بالتحديد على الإدارة المستدامة للمياه وخدمات الصرف الصحي. يعتبر هذا التقرير مرجع مصغر لهذه الجهود في مجال خدمة المياه والصرف الصحي.  SDG4 High-Level Steering Committee Input Paper for the 2024 High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development Année de publication: 2024 Auteur institutionnel: SDG4 High-Level Steering Committee In alignment with theHigh-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF)’s focus for 2024, this SDG4 High-Level Steering Committee paper provides specific inputs as they relate to the following Sustainable Development Goals: Goal 1. End poverty in all its forms everywhere; Goal 2. End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture; Goal 13. Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts; Goal 16. Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels; and Goal 17. Strengthen the means of implementation and revitalize the Global Partnership for Sustainable Development. SDG4 High-Level Steering Committee’s Key Messages for the Pact for the Future Année de publication: 2024 Auteur institutionnel: SDG4 High-Level Steering Committee Education is a fundamental human right and a public good. Quality education and lifelong learning provides individuals with knowledge, skills, and values to lead a meaningful and productive life, and thus it is essential for personal development, empowerment and wellbeing. Education has a transformative power and drives progress across all Sustainable Development Goals. Investing more, more equitably and more efficiently in education transforms the future of humanity and the planet. The Pact for the Future must put education at its center. How Can We Accelerate Transformations to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)? Insights from the 2023 Global Sustainable Development Report (Policy Brief, No. 158) Année de publication: 2024 Auteur: Stephanie Rambler | Shivani Nayyar | Astra Bonini Auteur institutionnel: UN. Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN. DESA) Key Messages » Progress on the SDGs requires integrated approaches operating at a systemic level that address multiple goals simultaneously. Interventions toward progress on a given target must also generate positive synergies with other targets, while resolving tradeoffs. » Transformative change does not follow a linear path, and policy needs will vary across contexts and phases of transformation. Policies should respond to impediments unique to each phase– emergence, acceleration, or stabilization. » New capacities are needed in all countries for cohesive, forwardlooking, and science-based SDG action. This includes capacity in foresight analysis, innovation and strategy development, risk management, negotiation, mediation, and building resilience. » Investments need to be scaled up in science that can drive necessary transformations, especially in the Global South, including “socially robust” science that speaks to contemporary social challenges and that engages diverse stakeholders. Humanitarian Action for Children in the Middle East and North Africa for 2023: Fast Facts Année de publication: 2022 Auteur institutionnel: UNICEF Middle East and North Africa Total number of children in the region: over 191.2 million Total refugee children: 6.4 million Children in need: around 52.7 million Total internally displaced children: over 6.9 million UNICEF MENA is appealing for US$ 2.6 billion to respond to the ongoing humanitarian crises and children’s humanitarian needs around the region. العمـل الإنسـاني مـن أجـل الأطفـال في الشـرق الأوسـط وشـمال أفريقيا للعام ٢٠٢٣; حقائـق سـريعة Année de publication: 2022 Auteur institutionnel: UNICEF Middle East and North Africa إجمالي عدد الأطفال في المنطقة: أكثر من 191.2 مليون طفلالأطفال المحتاجون: 52.7 مليون طفلمجموع النازحين من الأطفال: أكثر من 6.4 ملايين طفلمجموع اللاجئين من الأطفال: 6.4 مليون طفلتطلق اليونيسف نداءً للحصول على 2,6 مليار دولار أمريكي للاستجابة للأزمات الإنسانية المستمرة واحتياجات الأطفال الإنسانية في المنطقة. Developing Global Guidance for Child Rights Impact Assessments in Relation to the Digital Environment: Summary of Initial Project Findings Année de publication: 2024 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) | German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS) The age of technology and the Internet have brought tremendous benefits, including for children. However, the spread of digital technologies also comes with a broad spectrum of risks and harms to which children can be particularly vulnerable. Under the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and the Children’s Rights and Business Principles, businesses have a responsibility to identify, assess, and address relevant human rights risks, including risks to children’s rights. With respect to the digital environment, a rapidly evolving landscape and the emergence of new technologies has changed the nature and severity of actual and potential child rights risks relating to business activities. In response, UNICEF has initiated a project to assess the current child rights impact assessment (CRIA) landscape in relation to digital business activities and develop new guidance to support robust implementation going forward. A summary of initial project findings is now available here. Further project outputs including the updated guidance (currently under development) are anticipated in late 2024. When Someone Hurts You: Information Booklet on Child Abuse and the Impact of Trauma Année de publication: 2022 Auteur: Muriel Salmona | Sokhna Fall Auteur institutionnel: UNICEF France | French Association for Traumatic Memory and Victimology This educational booklet is designed to help young children from kindergarten to Third grade to identify their feelings of unease following a situation of violence or threat of violence (physical, moral or sexual), understand the causes and consequences, and give advice on how to protect themselves and seek help.  Quand on te fait du mal: Information sur les violences et leurs conséquences Année de publication: 2022 Auteur: Muriel Salmona | Sokhna Fall Auteur institutionnel: UNICEF France | French Association for Traumatic Memory and Victimology Ce livret pédagogique permet d’aider les plus petits de la maternelle au CE2, à identifier leur mal-être suite à une situation de violence ou menaces de violences (physiques, morales, sexuelles…), en comprendre les causes et les conséquences et donne des conseils pour apprendre à se protéger et demander de l’aide. Global Kids Online: Comparative Report Année de publication: 2019 Auteur: Sonia Livingstone | Daniel Kardefelt-Winther | Marium Saeed Auteur institutionnel: UNICEF Innocenti The internet is often celebrated for its ability to aid children’s development. But it is simultaneously criticized for reducing children’s quality of life and exposing them to unknown and unprecedented dangers. There is considerable debate about when or how children’s rights – including the rights to expression, to privacy, to information, to play and to protection from harm, as set out in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child – may be realized or infringed in the digital age.With more children around the world going online every day, it is more important than ever to clarify how the internet can advance children’s opportunities in life while safeguarding them from harm or abuse. This requires evidence, from children themselves, that represents the diversity of children’s experiences at the national and global levels. By talking to children, we are better able to understand not only the barriers they face in accessing the internet, but also the opportunities they enjoy and the skills and competences they acquire by engaging in these activities.This allows us to enquire about children’s exposure to online risks and possible harms, and about the role of their parents as mediators and sources of support. In bringing children’s own voices and experiences to the centre of policy development, legislative reform and programme and service delivery, we hope the decisions made in these spheres will serve children’s best interests.