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List of UNDP publicationsrelevant for Tajikistan Records found: 6
Regional Human Development Report on Social Inclusion 2010Date of issue: Forthcoming in 2010 The Regional Human Development Report on Social Inclusion for the Europe and CIS countries will examine social exclusion, both as processes and outcomes, in the region around four different types of exclusions that people in the region can experience: Exclusion from economic, social, cultural and political life of the society where they live. In the new HDR, we envisage developing a conceptual and methodological framework for better linking poverty and exclusion, which will be applied in Kazakhstan, FYROM Macedonia, Moldova, Serbia, Tajikistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan. The report should be an original effort to expand, or bridge, the measurement of poverty and social inclusion with our capabilities based human development paradigm.
Stakeholder consultation process
The overall objective of the project "Regional Human Development Report on Social Inclusion" in Europe and CIS (hereinafter "RHDR") is to operationalise the powerfull social exclusion concept into a practical policy-making tool for addressing social exclusion that can be applied throughout the region. The RHDR will consist of a regional report and 7 individual country studies that are being drafted by regional and country teams. The country studies cover Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Ukraine, Moldova, Serbia and FYROM Macedonia. A quantitative survey will be designed to provide necessary input data for the proposed social exclusion indicators (outcomes and drivers). These will complement existing data as evidence for formulating answers to the regional report’s key research questions:
More information about the project can be found in the Project document.
The RHDR will provide countries with an analytical and monitoring indicators framework that will illustrate typologies of exclusion patterns and practices (the status/outcome and magnitude of social exclusion) and related drivers (multi-dimensional factors contributing to the status of being excluded). This framework will help understand the specific patterns of exclusion in countries with transition experience, will shed light on their pre-transitional roots and will offer a basis for future evidence-based inclusive policy design and monitoring. The report sets the ambitious goal of building an indicators framework that can help identify causal links and, on this basis, provide policy-makers with specific policy recommendations and priorities in the area of social inclusion. This makes the role of data crucial in the research. The data component is designed to provide inputs for (1) estimating the magnitude of exclusion in individual dimensions, (2) identifying the important correlations between determinants and outcomes taking into account also the broader historical context, (3) estimating the risks of exclusion, as well as (4) suggesting tools and mechanisms for assessing the effectiveness and efficiency of inclusion policies. For the purpose of the report, a special sample survey will be conducted. The survey's objective is to fill current data gaps and provide quantitative and comparable data on social exclusion in the participating countries. It will address social exclusion as a phenomenon resulting from inequalities in terms of access to economic resources, education and employment opportunities, access to and quality of social services, social networks, and political, cultural and civic participation. Instead of defining “excluded groups” and sampling them individually during the survey, larger representative samples will be interviewed (2,700 individuals per country) to identify various types and magnitude of exclusion drivers. A polling agency carries out the survey in all participating countries using a common questionnaire and the same sampling methodology. More details about the methodology can be found in the Outline and methodological note.
Stakeholder consultation process These consultations have five aims: (a) hear stakeholders’ perspectives and experiences relating to the theme, (b) consider the broad contours identified, sharpen and guide the direction and scope on specific issues, (c) provide validation for the particular position that the RHDR is to take, (d) promote buy-in and capacity building among the stakeholders, and, (e) initiate early advocacy. Consultation with stakeholders takes place at various levels:
Participants include government officials, researchers, academicians, CSOs, the media and UN country offices. These will be organised by the national research teams in the participating countries.
All countries of the Europe and CIS region are regularly informed and consulted on the progress of the report elaboration. The RHDR progress will be presented at regional meetings, such as RRs/DRRs meetings. Substantive consultations will be carried out via the regional Human Development Community of Practice (HD CoP) in a facilitated way.
Regional stakeholder consultations help in sharpening the focus of the regional report. Participants include regional think tanks, universities, regional CSOs, regional agencies and organisations. Substantive regional stakeholder consultations will be carried out in a facilitated way by sub-themes at various stages of the report elaboration.
PAST EVENTS
Brief summary of the key results RHDR powerpoint presentation (prepared by the Team leader Ms. Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh)
Brief summary of the key results
Susanne Milcher, Project Manager and Social Inclusion Specialist Jaroslav Kling, Project Coordinator Andrey Ivanov, Human Development Advisor Michaela Matichova, Project Assistant Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh, Writing Team Leader Matthijs N. Spoor, Chapter author Paul Stubbs, Chapter author Tatjana Peric, Chapter author Branka Andjelkovic, Chapter author Dotcho Mihailov, Survey expert Sevinc Rende, Indicator expert Kazakhstan Janar Jandosova Macedonia Miroslav Shukarov Maja Gerovska- Mitev Petar Atanasov Jovan Ananiev Moldova Viorica Craievschi Maria Vremis Dorin Vaculovschi Varvara Buzilă Petru Bogatu Serbia Slobodan Cvejic Marija Babovic Gazela Pudar Tajikistan Rustam Bobojonov Ukraine Ella Libanova Olena Makarova Yuriy Levenets Victor Kotygorenko Uzbekistan Kakhramon Yusupov
Gordon Alexander, UNICEF Petra Hoelscher, UNICEF Marie Laberge, Oslo Governance Center Joachim Nahem, Oslo Governance Center Anuradha Rajivan, RBAP Tim Scott, HDRO Paola Pagliani, HDRO Martina Lubyova, ILO Esther Forgan, DFID Teresa Durand, DFID Simon Narbeth, DFID Kori Udovicki, RBEC Cihan Sultanoglu, RBEC Moises Venancio, RBEC Louisa Vinton, RBEC Parviz Fartash, RBEC Mahmood Ayub, RBEC Ben Slay, BRC Dafina Gercheva, BRC Adriana Dinu, BRC Andrey Ivanov, BRC Annie Demirjian, BRC Koh Miyaoi, BRC Luis Francisco Thais, BRC Shombi Sharp, BRC Lovita Ramguttee, UNDP Moldova Kibriyo Jumaeva, UNDP Tajikistan Bakhyt Abdildina, UNDP Kazakhstan Ainur Baimyrza, UNDP Kazakhstan Aferdita Haxhijaha Imeri, UNDP Macedonia Katerina Rybalchenko, UNDP Ukraine Danilo Vukovic, UNDP Serbia Daniel Varga, UNDP Serbia Elena Danilova, UNDP Uzbekistan Ziyodullo Parpiev, UNDP Uzbekistan Nicolas Jarraud, UNDP Cyprus
Jens Wandel, Deputy Regional Director & Bratislava Regional Centre Director Balazs Horvath, Poverty Reduction Practice Leader, BRC Matilda Dimovska, DRR Moldova Sukhrob Khoshmukhamedov, ARR Tajikistan Steliana Nedera, DRR Kazakhstan Ilaria Carnevali, ARR Ukraine Ann-Marie Ali, DRR Macedonia Rini Reza, DRR Serbia Kyoko Postill, DRR Uzbekistan
Macedonia,
Serbia,
Kazakhstan,
Tajikistan,
Uzbekistan,
Moldova,
Ukraine
MDG and Poverty Reduction » Human Development, MDG country reporting and poverty monitoring
Central Asia Human Development Report: Bringing Down BarriersRegional cooperation for human development and human security. "Central Asia is a pivotal region that stands at a critical crossroads. This report shows how governments, business, civil society and communities can come together in many different areas - in trade, investment, water, energy, and environment, in natural disaster preparedness and drug control, in education, health and culture - to create greater opportunities for human development and human security in the region." — Johannes Linn, lead author, CA HDR
Central Asia »
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan,
Russian Federation
MDG and Poverty Reduction, Decentralization, local governance and urban/rural development » Globalization benefiting the poor, Human Development, MDG country reporting and poverty monitoring
How to Build Open Information SocietiesA collection of best practices and know-how. This publication contains knowledge-based best practices accumulated by UNDP in Europe and the CIS and shows how ICT can promote socio-economic development and good governance. The articles collected here give readers a glimpse of the powerful transformative force ICT can be when deployed wisely. ICT offers the leapfrogging development potential that less developed countries can use to build modern, competitive, mobile, versatile, and ultimately democratic societies – open information societies for all their citizens.The report can be downloaded in its entirety, or by country article.
Europe & CIS,
Armenia,
Azerbaijan,
Georgia,
Albania,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Croatia,
Kosovo,
Macedonia,
Serbia,
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan,
Bulgaria,
Latvia,
Lithuania,
Poland,
Romania,
Turkey,
Belarus,
Moldova,
Russian Federation,
Ukraine
Democratic Governance » e-Governance and Access to Information
Environmental Governance SourcebookThis publication, which seeks to provide basic substantive knowledge fundamental to improving environmental governance, has been prepared primarily for countries with economies in transition. It describes the linkages between the environment and other fields of the development process (economy, health, human development and standard of living, as well as security), and to bring the reader up to date on global, regional, and sub-regional environmental problems. It further explains international environmental policy framework and standard instruments for implementing environmental policy at the national and sub-national levels. Last but not least, the publication provides a review of various sources of international assistance in addressing environmental issues.
Europe & CIS »
Caucasus,
Central Asia,
EU member countries and Turkey,
Russian Federation and Western CIS countries,
Western Balkans »
Armenia,
Azerbaijan,
Georgia,
Albania,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Croatia,
Kosovo,
Macedonia,
Montenegro,
Serbia,
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan,
Bulgaria,
Cyprus,
Czech Republic,
Estonia,
Hungary,
Latvia,
Lithuania,
Malta,
Poland,
Romania,
Slovak Republic,
Slovenia,
St. Helena,
Turkey,
Belarus,
Moldova,
Russian Federation,
Ukraine
Energy & Environment
Policy Process ReformInstitutionalization of consultations between government institutions and non-government organizations in the CIS countries: conditions, form, practice. This publication has been prepared in the framework of the Regional Good Governance Programme of the UNDP Bratislava Regional Centre to promote the institutionalization of dialogue between NGOs and the authorities.
Europe & CIS,
Armenia,
Azerbaijan,
Georgia,
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan,
Belarus,
Moldova,
Russian Federation,
Ukraine
Democratic Governance, Civil society empowerment
Civil Service Reform - Experience of TransitionThis publication is based on round-table proceedings on civil service and state administration reform in the Central Asia region that was held in November 2000 in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The main contributors to the discussions include experts from OECD, Latvia, Poland and Slovakia as well as representatives of governments from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. In Russian only.
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan
Democratic Governance » Decentralization, local governance and urban/rural development |
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United Nations Development Programme |