17 Facts About International development

1.

International development or global development is a broad concept denoting the idea that societies and countries have differing levels of economic or human development on an international scale.

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2.

Whereas the latter, at its most basic, denotes simply the idea of change through time, international development has come to refer to a distinct field of practice, industry, and research; the subject of university courses and professional categorisations.

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3.

The international community has codified development aims in, for instance, the Millennium Development Goals and the Sustainable Development Goals .

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4.

MDGs served a successful framework to guide international development efforts, having achieved progress on some of the 8 goals.

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5.

International development aims to improve general government policies of these developing countries.

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6.

International development is related to the concept of international aid, but is distinct from, disaster relief and humanitarian aid.

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7.

Under the former system, poor countries were encouraged to undergo social and economical structural transformations as part of their International development, creating industrialization and intentional industrial policy.

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8.

Concept of dignity in International development has been extensively explored by many, and related to all of the International development sectors.

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9.

Sustainable International development is an organizing principle for meeting human International development goals while sustaining the ability of natural systems to provide the natural resources and ecosystem services on which the economy and society depend.

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10.

Sustainable International development was defined in the 1987 Brundtland Report as "International development that meets the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs".

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11.

Rights-based approach to development has been adopted by many nongovernmental organizations and the United Nations as the new approach to international development.

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12.

The goal of the rights-based approach to International development is to empower the rights-holders, or the group that does not exercise full rights, and strengthen the capacity of the duty-bearers, or the institution or government obligated to fill these rights.

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13.

In International development, this is the provision of water and sanitation of sufficient quantity and quality to supply an acceptable standard of living.

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14.

Almost every International development project includes an aspect of education as International development by its very nature requires a change in the way people live.

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15.

In International development, it is concerned with providing housing of an appropriate quality and type to accommodate people in the long term.

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16.

Some of those more relevant to international development projects include rights associated with gender equality, justice, employment, social welfare and culture.

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17.

The changes in the 'developed' world's approach to international development were further necessitated by the gradual collapse of Western Europe's empires over the next decades; now independent ex-colonies no longer received support in return for their subordinate role.

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