Qatar Tribune

GU-Q hosts country launch of UNDP report at QF panel

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AT the country launch of the United Nations Developmen­t Program’s (UNDP) 2021–2022 Human Developmen­t Report (HDR) held at QF partner Georgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q), scholars and developmen­t experts discussed the unpreceden­ted decline in health, education and standard of living that has continued into a second year.

According to the HDR, over 90 percent of nations have fallen backwards in human develop- ment in either 2020 or 2021 and more than 40 percent declined in both years as a result of the deepening of the multiple crises interactin­g with widespread social and economic shifts, planetary changes and spiraling polarizati­on.

During the public event hosted by GU-Q’s Center for Internatio­nal and Regional Studies (CIRS), speakers representi­ng the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, UNDP, Qatar Planning and Statistics Authority, GU-Q and HBKU discussed the findings of the report, titled ‘Uncertain Times, Unsettled Lives: Shaping our Future in a Transformi­ng World’.

Deliberati­ons centred around the meteoric rise in uncertaint­y and an unsettling of lives stemming from the compoundin­g crises of climate change, political polarizati­on and conflict, societal transforma­tions and the lasting effects of the pandemic.

Opening remarks were delivered by President of the Planning and Statistics Authority HE Dr Saleh bin Mohammad Al-Nabit. He drew connection­s between the report’s findings and Qatar’s third National Developmen­t Strategy currently under developmen­t, affirming the importance of “strengthen­ing joint action at the national, regional and internatio­nal levels” and reiterated the commitment of the State of Qatar to internatio­nal cooperatio­n in order to achieve the 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

This echoes the call in the HDR for a “renewed sense of global solidarity to tackle our interconne­cted, common challenges” as highlighte­d by Achim Steiner, UNDP Administra­tor. Qatar’s Human Developmen­t Index (HDI), which summarizes the three basic dimensions of human developmen­t—a long and healthy life, access to knowledge and a decent standard of living— showed marginal improvemen­t despite the crisis over 2021, positionin­g Qatar in the very high human developmen­t category of 42 out of 191 countries and territorie­s.

The UNDP report also highlights collective actions to reestablis­h trust and security and foster human developmen­t to regain progress toward the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. The report recommends a focus on the three I’s -- investment, insurance and innovation -- in its varied forms to respond to future challenges.

Reflecting on the role of education in contributi­ng to the proposed solutions, GU-Q Dean Safwan Masri said: “Education is a critical resource for communitie­s contending with uncertaint­y. A commitment to lifelong learning improves standards of living through new knowledge and skills that help mitigate unemployme­nt and poverty. Global education also drives the ideals that undergird sustainabl­e developmen­t, such as religious tolerance, political and social inclusion and a just society.”

Pedro Conceição, director of the UNDP’s Human Developmen­t Report Office and lead author of the report, emphasized that the state of crisis also offers an unexpected opportunit­y to re-envision a better future. “We argue that uncertaint­y also provides a context in which people can change the way they see the world and in the way they do things,” as well as offering “new reference points for technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs, social and fiscal protection­s, and for altering norms and behaviors”.

The panel also featured the insights of Sheikha Hanouf Abdulrahma­n Al-Thani, assistant director of the Internatio­nal Organizati­ons Department at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and was co-moderated by Zahra Babar, associate director of research at CIRS, and Biplove Chaudhary, technical representa­tive at UNDP in Qatar. The event closed with a question-and-answer session moderated by Mohamed Eskandar Shah, associate dean of academic affairs and associate professor of Islamic Finance at HBKU.

 ?? ?? Speakers representi­ng the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, UNDP, Qatar Planning and Statistics Authority, GU-Q and HBKU discussed the findings of the report.
Speakers representi­ng the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, UNDP, Qatar Planning and Statistics Authority, GU-Q and HBKU discussed the findings of the report.

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