Graduation and the SDGs
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) established a vision of a world free of poverty and inequality by 2030. Unfortunately, progress towards the SDGs is at great risk. The international community…
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) established a vision of a world free of poverty and inequality by 2030. Unfortunately, progress towards the SDGs is at great risk. The international community…
…Bangladesh, BRAC is now the largest non-governmental development organisation in the world – operating on a global scale to build a world free from exploitation, discrimination, and inequality. In 2002,…
…a combined 12.5 billion hours for free every day, which Oxfam calculates to be a value of around $10.8 trillion each year. Prevailing gender discrimination results in women and girls…
…such as the Graduation approach, and then be joined by policymakers from India, Rwanda, and Pakistan to present their unique insight on their successes, questions, and challenges in designing and…
…programs that not only combat the pervasive nature of poverty, but also meet the long-term needs of the world’s most vulnerable and marginalized communities is something we are committed to…
…scaling at the Harvard Kennedy School. With a grounding in real organizational experiences, the book offers questions and tools to guide the scaling process, examining scaling from the purview of…
…climate crisis. On the one hand, questions like this point to a positive shift – a long-delayed prioritisation of the climate crisis by the donor community. On the other hand,…
…challenges and potential of social insurance. We use our frameworks as a guide for consolidating and organizing the existing literature, and also to highlight areas and questions for future research.”…
…and its first implementation by BRAC in Bangladesh. Research shows that they can help to improve lives and that these improvements are maintained years after families completed the programme. Yet…