Development and Human Rights in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) : Challenges and Opportunities
Keywords
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENTRIGHT
JUSTICE
FREEDOM
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
TREATIES
POLITICAL RIGHTS
HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS
RIGHTS APPROACHES
MIGRATION
CONVENTIONS
CAPACITY BUILDING
SECURITY
WOMEN
DISCRIMINATION
HUMAN RIGHTS MONITORING
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE
INFORMATION
HUMAN RIGHTS STANDARDS
HUMAN RIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
CITIZENS
THREATS
POLITICAL CHANGE
POLICIES
COUNSEL
RELIGION
HUMAN RIGHTS INSTRUMENTS
POLICY MAKERS
EQUALITY
CULTURAL RIGHTS
RIGHTS APPROACH
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10888Abstract
Many parts of Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have experienced volatility and fragility due to conflict over the course of the region's long and complex history. These conflicts have had significant impact on economic and human development indicators. Also, and more recently, massive protests and unrest have flared across several parts of the region. In Egypt and Tunisia these protests have led to historic political changes, even as the situation is still unfolding in others. These changes are likely to have significant consequences, especially for citizens' participation and involvement in the development process, which are increasingly articulated through the prism of human rights. This fast brief aims at assisting staff to form a better understanding of these issues. Conflict, as currently witnessed in the MENA region, is not only a tool for destruction and suffering, but also a vehicle for social and political change. Violent conflict, however, prevents the kind of stability necessary for human and economic development and for reaching the overall Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of human security for all. With more than 1,5 billion people living in countries affected by conflict, the World Development Report 2011 (WDR) underlines the negative impact of persistent conflict on a country's or a region's development prospects and notes that no low-income conflict affected state has yet achieved a single MDG.Date
2012-08-13Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/10888http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10888
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Collections
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 Development : An IntroductionMcInerney-Lankford, Siobhan; Sano, Hans-Otto (World Bank, 2010)Human rights indicators are central to
 the application of human rights standards in context and
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 both qualitatively and quantitatively. They offer an
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 and evidence and, in this way, relate to human rights
 accountability and the enforcement of human rights
 obligations. Human rights indicators are important for both
 assessment and diagnostic purposes: the assessment function
 of human rights indicators relates to their use in
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 human rights implementation and enjoyment in a given
 context, whether regional, country-specific, or local. This
 paper offers a preliminary review of the foregoing in the
 development context and a general perspective on the
 significance of human rights indicators for development
 processes and outcomes. It is not intended to be
 prescriptive and does not provide specific operational
 recommendations on the use of human rights indicators in
 development projects. Nor does it advocate a particular
 approach or mode of integrating human rights in development
 or argue for a rights-based approach to development. This
 paper is designed to provide development practitioners with
 a preliminary view on the possible relevance, design, and
 use of human rights indicators in development policy and
 practice. It also introduces a basic conceptual framework
 about the relationship between rights and development,
 including in the World Bank context. It then moves to
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 indicators and their potential implications for development
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 therefore offers a theoretical introduction to a complex
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