The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), an unprecedented set of global commitments to reduce various forms of human deprivation and promote human development, are set to expire in 2015. Despite their promise, the MDGs are flawed in a variety of ways. The development community is already discussing what improved development framework should replace the MDGs. I argue that global justice advocates should focus first on the procedure for developing the post-2015 development framework. Specifically, they should create spaces for citizens, especially the most marginalized and oppressed, to actively deliberate about the form and content of a future global development framework, and ensure that this deliberation receives political uptake in formal intergovernmental processes for deciding the post-2015 framework.
To read or purchase the full text of this article, click here.
More in this issue
Spring 2012 (26.1) • Essay
Almost Saving Whales: The Ambiguity of Success at the International Whaling Commission [Full Text]
BY IAN HURD. The international regulation of whaling has been a tremendous success. Yet the international organization responsible for this success is in crisis.
Spring 2012 (26.1) • Essay
Reimagining a Global Ethic
BY MICHAEL IGNATIEFF. What status do we give a global ethic in a pluralistic world that, as a matter of fact, is composed, ethically speaking, ...
Spring 2012 (26.1) • Essay
Introduction
The ICC is the product of gradual normative changes in world politics since World War II. Since the founding of the United Nations, traditional practices ...