Millennium Development Goals
Literature Review on Millennium Development Goals
In the Encyclopedia of Public Administration and Public Policy, [1] Maria Ivanova and Natalia Escobar-Pemberthy provide the following summary about the topic of Millennium Development Goals: Millennium Development Goals—widely known as MDGs—are a set of international goals that member states of the United Nations established at the 2000 Millennium Summit as policy instruments to achieve human development for communities worldwide. At their core, the eight MDGs and 21 associated targets are mechanisms of international cooperation for addressing global concerns such as poverty reduction, health, education, and sustainability. Created with a sunset clause set for 2015, the MDGs have laid the foundation for systematic global efforts at tackling development challenges. As governments negotiate a Post-2015 Development Agenda and a new set of goals—Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)—this entry seeks to synthesize the story of the MDGs with an eye toward key lessons from their design, function, and impact.
Millennium Development Goals
Embracing mainstream international law, this section on millennium development goals explores the context, history and effect of the area of the law covered here.
Resources
Further Reading
- The entry “millennium development goals” in the Parry and Grant Encyclopaedic Dictionary of International Law (currently, the Encyclopaedic Dictionary of International Law, 2009), Oxford University Press
Resources
Notes and References
- Entry about Millennium Development Goals in the Encyclopedia of Public Administration and Public Policy (2015, Routledge, Oxford, United Kingdom)
See Also
Further Reading
- Global Encyclopedia of Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governance (2018, Springer International Publishing, Germany)