Clinton Global Initiative

Obama’s Development Policy: One Year Later


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Sep 23rd, 2011 11:04 AM UTC
By Sara Messer

With all the excitement going on this week at the UN Meetings, the launch of the Open Government Partnership, the Clinton Global Initiative, and the World Bank–IMF Annual Meetings, you may have missed that this week is the one year anniversary since President Obama released the first ever Presidential Policy Directive (PPD) on Global Development!

Just as a refresher for those who haven’t heard much about it since then, we first reported last year that the PPD was an exciting move by the administration to elevate development as a key pillar of America’s foreign policy (along with diplomacy and defense), and that laid out clear goals and objectives for US foreign assistance. These goals were meant to direct all agencies across the US government that implement foreign assistance funding to orient around a common purpose and better coordinate to achieve sustainable development impact.

So what’s changed in the past year?? (more…)

ONE’s commitment to the Horn of Africa at the Clinton Global Initiative


Sep 22nd, 2011 4:39 PM UTC
By Michael Elliott

Please welcome ONE President and CEO Michael Elliott to the ONE Blog. In his first piece, he writes about ONE’s commitment to the famine at the 2011 Clinton Global Initiative.

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As a consequence of the famine in Somalia and the wider crisis in the Horn of Africa, more than 30,000 children have died in just three months — and the lives of more than 13 million men, women and children are at risk. None of us can simply stand on the sidelines and watch, and it is for that reason that at ONE we made a commitment today at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) — an annual meeting in New York that brings together global leaders to implement solutions to the world’s most pressing issues — to launch a multi-year campaign called “Drought is Inevitable, Famine is Not.”

(more…)

Crisis Response


Sep 24th, 2009 6:30 PM UTC
By Chris Scott

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Today George Stephanopoulos moderated a great panel on “Leadership and Jobs to Overcome Humanitarian Crisis.” The panel featured President René Préval of the Republic of Haiti, Hany El Banna; President of Islamic Relief; Dr. Helen Gayle, President & CEO of CARE USA; George Rupp, President of the International Rescue Committee; and Rhonda Zygochi, VP of Health, Environment and Safety, ChevronTexaco.

While I was unfortunately unable to stay for the entire discussion, what I heard was really fascinating. The discussion primarily focused on shifting from a primary focus on immediate relief efforts, to building long-term infrastructure and capacity in the wake of natural disasters.

President René Préval spoke at length about models of dealing with disaster relief in Haiti. George Rupp talked about some of IRC’s work in Afghanistan and elsewhere and repeatedly made the point that community-driven reconstruction is the key to long-term rehabilitation efforts in traumatized regions. By empowering citizens to reconstruct through their own volition, communities will often feel a sense of “fierce pride and ownership” as Rupp put it, to sustain these efforts. Decentralizing reconstruction work can also reinforce stability over the long-term.

Dr. Helene Gayle reiterated these points, stressing the need to think beyond immediate relief work, which often gets the most press and attention. She also noted that, through her experience, paying equal attention to pre- and post-disaster phases is sometimes the best way to “build back better” after a crisis.

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George Stephanopoulos and President René Préval

-Chris Scott

Bono Joins 1GOAL at CGI


Sep 24th, 2009 4:02 PM UTC
By Chris Scott

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Bono, ONE co-founder, just joined Queen Rania Al-Abdullah of Jordan and others in a commitment to 1GOAL: Education for All at the Clinton Global Initiative Meeting. Together with FIFA, 1GOAL is committed to ensuring that the legacy of the 2010 World Cup will be universal access to education for all children. As President Clinton said, “this is a staggering opportunity” to make a big difference for girls and boys around the world.

Read more about 1GOAL Education for All here.

After the announcement, Queen Rania immediately joined a panel moderated by Nicholas Kristof and went on to further make a passionate case for universal education. According to Queen Rania, an educated child is 50% less likely to contract HIV, just one of many ways education affects every other sector. She also pointed out another statistic so incredible that Nicholas Kristof made her repeat it: the developing world needs approximately $11 billion dollars to put every child into primary school– the same amount the US spends every 3 months on their pets. However, because education isn’t particularly “dramatic” it rarely gets the attention it deserves.

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Nicholas Kristof, Queen Rania, and Hilda Solis join in a panel on Creating Good Jobs and Strong Communities

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US Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis addresses the CGI Meeting

-Chris Scott

The Next Big Idea


Sep 23rd, 2009 4:33 PM UTC
By Chris Scott

The CGI meeting this year can roughly be broken into two parts: discussion and celebration of past achievements, and attempting to anticipate where we’ll go from here in solving the world’s biggest problems.

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Two sessions I just attended focused on technology and innovation and in both cases the discussion inevitably led to a question on everybody’s mind here: What’s the next big idea?

Opinions vary, obviously, but there were some common themes I picked up on. The importance of public-private partnerships was one. The UK’s Secretary of State for International Development stressed a need for greater communication between the public and private sectors in tackling a host of issues. He also contended that the 2015 deadline for the Millennium Development Goals will be nearly impossible to meet without continued innovation, while identifying three areas where the private sector can play an important role: product development, program delivery, and financing development.

On another panel, Former Vice President Al Gore spoke of sustainable capitalism as they key to addressing the threats of global warming and climate change. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Managing Director of the World Bank Group spoke about the need for developing countries to be able to manage crises on their own without waiting for the assistance of other countries.

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In two separate panels, the revolutionizing power of cell phones was discussed. Muhammad Yunus, Founder and Managing Director of Grameen Bank said that giving people the power to use cell phones to deal with everything from healthcare to financial concerns will be a potential game-changer. In another discussion, Angela F. Braly, President and CEO of WellPoint, Inc. specifically named “telemedicine”‘s potential to bring increased healthcare information to rural communities. Even though we’ve written before here on the ONE Blog about the opportunities provided by cell phones, it still never ceases to amaze me that something we in the US take for granted still has the potential to facilitate so much good for so many people.

I’ll have more soon.

-Chris Scott

UPDATE: Here’s one of the panels on innovation.

CGI: Investing in Girls and Women


Sep 23rd, 2009 11:10 AM UTC
By Chris Scott

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President Clinton shares the stage with Dr. Helene Gayle during plenary session on “Investing in Girls and Women”

Diane Sawyer just wrapped up moderating a really engaging panel with Lloyd C. Blankfein, Chairman and CEO of the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.; Zainab Salbi, Founder and CEO of Women for Women International; Rex W. Tillerson, CEO of ExxonMobil Corporation; Melanne Verveer, Ambassador-at-Large for Women’s Issues in the State Department, and Robert Zoellick, President of the World Bank Group; and Edna Adan, Director and Founder, Edna Adan Maternity and Teaching Hospital.

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Sawyer framed the discussion as “the river of what is right converging with the river of what is needed” which I think really captures the spirit of what I’ve seen so far at the Clinton Global Initiative meeting. President Clinton, while introducing the panel claimed that in many places in the world, no matter how hard and long women work they rarely get as many opportunities and choices as men do. The panel echoed this sentiment with most, if not all, of the participants agreeing that education is the key to achieving equality for all women. According to Ambassador Verveer– the first such Ambassador-at-Large for Women’s Issues (something that drew a big round of applause from the audience)– framed education as key to confronting extremism.

A lot of the discussion centered around the fact that women account for such a large percentage of the workforce in developing countries yet are rarely compensated to the degree that men are. This, according to Zoellick emphasizes the need to train greater focus specifically on girls and women. As he put it, it’s not an issue of giving special advantages to women, but just helping them achieve a level playing field. Indeed, as was echoed at numerous points in the panel, saving one woman often means saving an entire family. This opportunity has drawn the attention of businesses such as Godman Sachs and ExxonMobil to invest in women and children. At one point, when discussing ExxonMobil’s efforts in developing countries, Tillerson suggested and funding in and of itself is not the whole solution. Salbi quickly retorted that while this may be true in part, girls and women still continue to receive an incredibly small percentage of development funding.

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Also touched on during the panel was the role of technology and innovation in empowering women. Ambassador Verveer listed both mobile banking and cell phones as being on the front lines in creating positive change. Zoellick also emphasized the need for basic technology– such as electricity– in many developing countries.

-Chris Scott

UPDATE: Here’s the video of the panel on girls and women.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn: G20 needs greater representation


Sep 22nd, 2009 7:37 PM UTC
By Chris Scott

As I write this Former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo is moderating a panel on the G20 and its impact on global challenges. Partaking in the discussion is Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende of the Netherlands, President Cristina Kirchner of Argentina, Director of the National Economic Council Lawrence Summers, and Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

All members emphasized the importance and necessity for the G20 in the wake of the global financial crisis, with President Kirchner and IMF Director Strauss-Kahn underscoring the need for further support of emerging countries and economies. Strauss-Kahn went so far as to suggest that more countries be brought into the G20 citing a larger problem of “global imbalance.”

According to the Director, “for the G20 to be effective, we need more countries to feel represented” so people around the world can accept the decisions that are made at G20 Summits. As you know, the next G20 Summit in Pittsburgh is just days away.

-Chris Scott

UPDATE: Here’s a video of the panel.

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