This year saw a continuation and expansion of many of the positive trends in last year’s list: civil society consultation, gender mainstreaming, transparency, small farmer empowerment. And it saw new initiatives to fill gaps in achieving the MDGs. Yet we also witnessed push back: organized threats to women’s human rights and civil society that remind us we can never take progress for granted. Let’s take a look at the top 5 trends in ending hunger and poverty this year:
1. Post-2015 Agenda: Far and away the most far-reaching trend in 2012 was the launch of a broad, global, inclusive process to identify the set of development goals that will supplant the MDGs. The UN Secretary General appointed a high-level panel, and public consultations are being held in more than 100 countries. It appears that the goals will integrate issues left out of the MDGs, including human rights and sustainable development.
2. Better Data: The push, since 2005, for better monitoring and evaluation is beginning to yield better data and more lessons learned. The 2012 book “Poor Economics” by Banerjee and Duflo reports numerous surprises revealed through randomized evaluations that should lead to smarter policies. The 2012 FAO State of Food and Agriculture reported that progress to end hunger has been better than previously thought.
3. Family Planning Summit: In the face of rising political forces that threatened to roll-back long-won gains in women’s rights such as access to contraception, Melinda Gates stepped forward with personal leadership and, with UK Prime Minister David Cameron, organized a global summit to put family planning back high on the global agenda.
4. Global Partnership for Social Accountability: Similarly, as numerous governments took steps to suppress civil society, the World Bank established its first-ever funding program for civil society, providing core funding to enable civil society to mobilize social accountability for more effective development outcomes.
5. Renewing the Child Survival Promise: On the 30th anniversary of one of the world’s most successful global health initiatives of the 1980s, the Child Survival Revolution, Unicef, governments, the private sector and civil society stepped forward to revitalize the revolution, bringing in new science and a “continuum of care” philosophy to improve maternal health and dramatically reduce preventable child deaths. A post-2015 goal is likely to be reducing under-five mortality.