Title: Equity- Equality- Inclusion: Normative principles in development
1Equity- Equality- Inclusion Normative
principles in development
- Gabriele Köhler
- Development economist, Munich
- Visiting Fellow, IDS, Sussex
- office_at_gabrielekoehler.net
- G.Koehler_at_ids.ac.uk
- www.gabrielekoehler.net
- Ludwig Maximilians University
- PhD-Program International Health
- Module I
- Munich, 14 December 2011
2Overview of presentation
- Normative framework
- Developmental role of human development, human
rights, equity income poverty, human development
concept, social exclusion - Policies for human development, human rights,
equity
3I.) Normative frameworks
- From physical investment to social capital from
the UN development decades to human development - From the UNs social summits of the 1990s to the
Millennium Declaration in 2000 - From the Millenium Declaration to a new
development constellation with multi-polar views
and trends
4I.) Normative frameworks
- ?Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948
- comprehensive normative framework
- The 2 Covenants 1966
- on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
- on Civil and Political Rights
- The Right to Development 1986
- economic, social, cultural and political
development - International Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Racial Discrimination 1969 (CERD) - Convention on the Eradication of all Forms of
Discrimination against Women 1979 (CEDAW) - Convention on the Rights of the Child 1990 (CRC)
5I.) Normative frameworks
- Recent developments Emergence of rights
oriented conventions and instruments in the UN
context - FAO 2004, Voluntary Guidelines to Support the
Progressive Realization of the Right to Adequate
Food in the Context of National Food Security -
includes livelihoods and land reform - World Health Assembly 2008 - return to Alma Ata
primary health care for all - Global Social Floor Initiative since 2009
striving for an ILO Recommendation on Social
Protection for all 2012 - MDGs 2010 more emphasis on equity, inclusion,
human rights - Special rapporteurs - experts of OHCHR combining
the humanist with the intellectual
6I.) Normative frameworks
- The Office of the High Commissioner on Human
Rights and the roles of the Special Rapporteurs -
- on poverty
- the right to food
- education
- adequate housing
- safe drinking water and sanitation
- violence against women
- right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest
attainable standard of physical and mental
health) - and other substantive areas.
7II.) The developmental role of human development,
human rights, and equity
- Income poverty
- The concept of human development and some
reflections - The concept of social exclusion
8(1) Income poverty
- Poverty is often defined as living below a
defined poverty line, and halving poverty is one
of the MDGs.
9(1) Global income poverty
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11Income poverty
- But number of extremely poor in Sub-Saharan
Africa and South Asia increased - using 1.25 per personday income poverty measure
- Number of poor and vulnerable people
- 2.5 billion persons
- using 2 per personday income poverty measure
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13(2) The concept of human development
- A systematic examination of how human beings in
each society live and what substantive freedoms
they enjoy - A notion of the broadening of choices
- Based on the idea that economic and social
development matter
14(2) The concept of human development
- The Human Development Reports (HDRs) of UNDP in
1990 introduced a 3-pronged definition of human
development - Distinctive human development discourse
- Longevity
- Educational attainment
- incomes
- Concept adjusted for gender, for equity, and for
multidimensional aspects of poverty - (UNDP Human Development Report 2010)
15Worldwide trends in the Human Development Index,
1970-2010
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18Weak relationship between economic growth and
changes in health and education
19Wellbeing
- Different discourses
- Wellbeing as objective, subjective and relational
- Multidimensional poverty
- Missing domains
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21Absolute poverty in Asia, Europe and Latin
America
Sources World Bank (2009), Gallup (2010)
22Absolute poverty in Africa
23A success story?
- A lower-middle income country
- Average 5 annual growth rate since 1990
- 60 of budget dedicated to social sectors
- Nearly 100 primary enrollment in 2008
- 80 health care coverage
- Prudent public debt management (42.8 of GDP in
2009) - 3 fiscal deficit
- Inflation at approx. 3 in the 2000s
24Tunisia
Source OECD/AfDB/UNECA (2010), African Economic
Outlook
25Higher average incomes, better health and
improved education do not automatically mean
higher life satisfaction
263. The impact of social exclusion
- Systematic social exclusions are the result of
the intersecting inequalities - Cultural inequalities
- Spatial inequalities
- Economic inequalities
- Political inequalities
- The interaction of the exclusions explains the
persistence of social exclusion over time. (
Naila Kabeer) -
27Vectors of social exclusion
- Income/economic class/ access to productive
assets - Caste/clan
- Ethnicity
- Faith
- Language
- Health condition/communicable/visible diseases
- Ability/disability
- Geographic location/distance/urban vs rural
- Citizenship and migration status
- Condition of menstruation
- Sexual orientation
- Recurrent emergency situations
- Conflict situation
- Age
28(3) Impact of Social Exclusion
- MDG outcomes perform worse among socially
excluded groups they need special measures to
enable them to claim their rights to social
services and public goods - Disparities based on social exclusion must be
made more visible - Policies to address the inequities resulting from
exclusion are needed
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32Intergenerational education impact on child
situations
33Religious affiliation and deprivations, Bhutan
34Literacy rate of population aged 15 years and
above by yearly HH income (Rural Myanmar)
- Data Source Ohnmar, Than-Tun-Sein, Ko-Ko-Zaw,
Saw-Saw and Soe-Win. Household Income, Health and
Education in Rural Myanmar. SOUTHEAST ASIAN J
TROP MED PUBLIC HEALTH Volume 36 No 2 March 2005
, p532
35Ethnic identity and school enrolment, Myanmar
- Data Source IDMC (2003). Conflict, poverty and
language difference behind low school attendance
in the ethnic states. Access to Education. Found
on http//www.internal-displacement.org/idmc/websi
te/countries.nsf/(httpEnvelopes)/17362FE0A66DDFA38
02570B8005AAA68?OpenDocument
36III. Policies for human development, human
rights, and equity
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38Promoting equity, equality and inclusion
- Equality is the principle that all human beings
are equal and have equal rights - Equity is a principle that refers to fairness of
treatment according to needs and specific
requirements.
39Approaches to address income poverty
- Employment and decent work as the key response
- Agricultural development, land reform, and rural
off-farm employment opportunities, access to
agricultural inputs and to (micro-) credit - Social protection as a core mechanism social
protection floors - Systematic income redistribution
40New approaches to socio-economic policy decent
work agenda
- Global jobs pact policies
- Retain employed in employment/rapid
reentry/sustain enterprises/maintain wage levels - Support job creation/investment in
employment-intensive sectors/green jobs - Protect persons/families affected social
protection - Enhance support to women, men, youth
- Act simultaneously on labour demand and supply
- Equip workers with skills for today and
tomorrow - Use public employment guarantees, include
informal economy - Increase investment in infrastructure, RD,
public services and green production - Respect international labour standards
41Social Protection Floor
42Global social protection floor
- Movement to adopt a social floor
recommendation at 2012 ILO Conference - http//www.gopetition.com/petitions/signature-camp
aign-social-protection-floor.html
43Policy approaches to create equitable access to
social services
- Ensure universal free social services delivery
- underpinned by health insurance in the case of
health services - Equitable access to services, geographically and
socially - Ensure equal quality of services staffing,
people skills and material resources - Ensure cultural sensitivity
- Ensure transparent information
- Enable inclusive participatory programming and
participation - Valorise community-based services
44Policy approaches to address exclusion
- Include compensatory/reparatory measures to
overcome generational exclusion redress
mechanisms - Address on-going exclusion and discrimination-affi
rmative action (reservation, representation,
protective legislations, budget allocations,
social protection cash transfers) - Protect against violence
- Address impunity
- Support public education to address
discrimination and exclusion - Ensure inclusive health services
- Change disparaging language and designations
- Enable inclusive programming-empowerment
45Policy approachesUniversalism and targeting
- Universalism is an approach in social policy that
is rights based,and hence strives to cover all
citizens with a social policy service or
transfer, usually using taxes or other public
resources to fund the intervention. - Targeting is a needs-based approach, covering
those most vulnerable or the poorest as a
priority, because funds are limited.
46Emerging innovations in policy discourse
- Multidimensional understanding of poverty
- Attention to employment and decent work
- Push for social protection social protection
floors - Stronger emphasis on maternal and child health
- Recognition social exclusion with much more focus
on equity policies - A discussion of tax reform incl progressive
taxation - Recognition of the role of agriculture, rural
development and the need for some kind of land
reform - Universalism, social contract, rights based
approach - Acknowledgement of the role of the state
47Emerging innovations in policy discourse
- G20 Cannes final declaration (2011)
- Global strategy for growth and jobs
- Employment and social protection
- More stable resilient international monetary
system - Deepening financial sector reforms
- Addressing food price volatility, increasing
agricultural productivity - Improving functioning of energy markets
- Pursuing fight against climate change
- Reinforcing multilateral trading system
- Development investing for global growth
- Fight against corruption
- Intensifying fight against corruption
- Governance
48DiscussionHealth policies and inequities
- How to address inequities in access,
affordability and coverage - What are the issues in your country
- Advantages and disadvantages of either targeting
or universal approaches - In general
- In the health sector
49References
- Â
- Sabine Alkire 2011, Oxford Poverty Human
Development Initiative OPHI. OPHI HDCA
Summerschool 2011 Oxford Department of
International Development. Queen Elizabeth House,
University of Oxford. http//www.ophi.org.uk/teach
ing/short-courses/2011-summerschool/ - Michelle Bachelet 2011. Social protection floor
for a fair and inclusive globalization. Report of
the Advisory Group chaired by Michelle Bachelet
Convened by the ILO with the collaboration of the
WHO. ILO 2011. www.ilo.org - Johannes Jütting, Jan Rieländer, Christopher
Garroway 2011. Social cohesion - a useful
framework for assessing social progress in fast
growing countries.. Powerpoint presentation based
on Perspectives on Global Development 2012.
Social Cohesion in a Shifting World. OECD
Development Centre - Naila Kabeer, Can the MDGs provide a pathway to
social justice. The challenge of intersecting
inequalities. IDS and UN MDG Achievement Fund.
2010. www.ids.ac.uk - Gabriele Köhler, Policies towards social
inclusion. Global Social Policy. April 2009Â pp.
24-29, Sage publications (have requested
journals permission for access) - Gabriele Köhler, Des Gasper, Richard Jolly, Mara
Simane 2011. Deepening the MDGs human security.
Conference on MDGs beyond 2015. German
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http//www.die-gdi.de/CMS-Homepage/openwebcms3_e.n
sf/(ynDK_contentByKey)/MPHG-8JB9BB/FILE/2-220Koe
hler20et20al20201120Human20security.pdf - UN. Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
http//www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/ - UN 1969. International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination
http//www2.ohchr.org/english/law/cerd.htm - UN 1979 Convention on the Eradication of all
Forms of Discrimation against Women,
http//www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/text/econve
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