Can the millennium development goals be attained?: Fig 1
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Open Access
- 12 August 2004
- Vol. 329 (7462) , 394-397
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.329.7462.394
Abstract
Introduction In September 2000 the largest ever gathering of heads of state ushered in the new millennium by adopting the UN Millennium Declaration.1 The declaration, endorsed by 189 countries, was then translated into a roadmap setting out goals to be reached by 2015.2 The eight goals in the section on development and poverty eradication are known as the millennium development goals. They build on agreements made at major United Nations' conferences of the 1990s and represent commitments to reduce poverty and hunger, to tackle ill health, gender inequality, lack of education, lack of access to clean water, and environmental degradation (box). The big difference from their predecessors is that rather than just set targets for what developing countries aspire to achieve, the goals are framed as a compact that recognises the contribution that developed countries can make through fair trade, development assistance, debt relief, access to essential medicines, and technology transfer. Without progress in these areas (summarised in the final goal) the poorest countries will face an uphill struggle to achieve the other goals. The notion of the goals as a compact between North and South was reaffirmed at the international conference on financing development in Monterrey, Mexico, in 2002.3 Achieving the millennium development goals requires steep declines in maternal and child mortality Credit: DIETER TELEMANS/PANOSKeywords
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- Responding to the global human resources crisisThe Lancet, 2004