2:28
UNDP Rio+20 - Sustainable Energy
Olav Kjorven, UNDP Assistant Secretary General, explain the importance of a Sustainable En...
published: 18 Jun 2012
author: undp
UNDP Rio+20 - Sustainable Energy
Olav Kjorven, UNDP Assistant Secretary General, explain the importance of a Sustainable Energy future and the agenda for the Rio+20 conference
10:26
2011 a year not like the others for UNDP Tunisia
On June 11, the United Nations Development Program Country Office in Tunisia received the ...
published: 19 Jun 2012
author: TunisiaLive
2011 a year not like the others for UNDP Tunisia
On June 11, the United Nations Development Program Country Office in Tunisia received the Julia V. Taft award in recognition of its exceptional work during 2011 in supporting the North African country's transition. This short documentary covers most of the activities and projects led by UNDP during 2011. Produced by Global Productions / www.tunisia-live.net Voice: Nazanine Moshiri Camera: Bassem Aounallah / Arbi Mahjoubi / Rabii Kalboussi Editing and Mixing: Chiraz Hsis Infographics: Aymen Ben Mansour Prdocuers: Youssef Gaigi / Bochra Zaafrani / Ramla Jaber / Zied Mhirsi Songs: "Enti Essout" "National Anthem of Tunisia" By Kesang Mastran
9:26
UNDP's One Day on Earth
On 10 October, 2010, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) staff members in more tha...
published: 13 Jun 2011
author: undp
UNDP's One Day on Earth
On 10 October, 2010, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) staff members in more than 100 countries worldwide took part in a collaborative film project to document the work of UNDP. For many, this was their first time using a video camera. The result of their collaborative efforts is an 8 minute film highlighting the breath of UNDP's impact. It offers a glimpse into the daily operations of country offices across the globe, showcasing what UNDP does and how it manages its global partnerships. The film also highlights the diversity of cultures with which UNDP works and emphasizes the particular UN priority issues and Millennium Development Goals that UNDP addresses. The finished product, entitled "UNDP's One Day on Earth," takes on the form of a collage, capturing unprecedented video snapshots from every country on earth in a 24-hour period. In total, 16000 filmmakers from over 190 countries helped to document the countless stories of triumph, tragedy, hope and fear that take place in the world each day. Currently, the "One Day on Earth" ( www.onedayonearth.org )initiative is producing a feature-length documentary that will be released later this year. The initiative has also created an unprecedented video archive, which is available to the entire community of film contributors. The archive can be accessed via a searchable Geo-tagged online map at: archive.onedayonearth.org. In order to ensure widespread participation in the filming process, the "One Day on Earth <b>...</b>
3:35
Helen Clark - Food Security in Kenya
The people of Namelok in Kenya's Amboseli region have had to learn to adapt to change....
published: 14 May 2012
author: undp
Helen Clark - Food Security in Kenya
The people of Namelok in Kenya's Amboseli region have had to learn to adapt to change. They are ethnic Maasai and traditionally keep livestock, but successive droughts have decimated many of their animals, so they broke with tradition and now cultivate tomatoes, maize and beans. To hear their story in person, UNDP Administrator Helen Clark visited the area ahead of the launch of the Africa Human Development Report on 15 May. "I think across Africa a big answer to fighting hunger and food shortages is empowering women farmers," Helen Clark said after meeting the women. "This cooperative of women working with a local non-governmental organisation has found a way to move forward, so this story needs to be told many times to inspire other communities to think that it is possible to be able to have a livelihood as things around you are changing, as the climate is changing, and things can't be done the way they used to be." 43-year-old Motialo Kiserian earned a living trading goats at the local market after her husband left her with four children to feed. But the income is unreliable and realistically she can only earn around 50 dollars a month. Now, she and the other members of her women's group have leased 2 acres of land with the help of a small local charity, and they've already had one successful harvest, which earned them around 500 dollars -- given to the women in the group who needed the money most. "We would like to farm more arable land and do this on a bigger scale <b>...</b>
1:22
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Antonio Banderas - Rio+20
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Antonio Banderas invites people to join the global conversation o...
published: 22 May 2012
author: undp
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Antonio Banderas - Rio+20
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Antonio Banderas invites people to join the global conversation on Rio+20 World renowned Spanish actor and UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Antonio Banderas today launched a public service announcement aiming at inviting people to join the global conversation alongside the 2012 UN Conference on Sustainable Development "Rio+20". "Sustainable development is about people. It is about creating jobs and improving lives while respecting the environment. Eradicating poverty, preventing conflicts, empowering women and girls, and building responsible governing institutions are critical components", says Banderas to illustrate the importance of an event which represents a historic opportunity to define pathways to a safer, more equitable, cleaner, greener and more prosperous world for all. The 2012 UN Conference on Sustainable Development, or "Rio+20" is a forum on how to make sustainable development a reality for seven billion people today, and to define the future we want for nine billion by 2050. "The development challenges we are facing now require us to steep the agenda up to a whole new level," said UNDP Administrator Helen Clark. "That is what the leaders need to focus on. How are we really going to bring together the economic, the social and the environmental strengths of development to produce something truly sustainable that will improve the life chances and possibilities for the people living in the poorest parts of the world". More than 120 heads of <b>...</b>
1:17
The Future We Want
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched today a video spot "The Future W...
published: 04 Jun 2012
author: undp
The Future We Want
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched today a video spot "The Future We Want" which uses voices of Spanish actor Antonio Banderas, French actor Lambert Wilson, Brazilian football star Marta Vieira da Silva and Italian actress Laura Morante, to explain what sustainable development is to mainstream audiences. The public service announcement will be part of the "Future We Want" campaign of the United Nations ahead of the Conference on Sustainable Development, or 'Rio+20,' to be held in Brazil on 20-22 June 2012. The video aims at explaining the foundation of sustainable development planning, ie, each policy and investment decision must take into equal consideration its economic, social and environmental impacts. It has become common practice that government and private sector decision making mainly takes into account the economic gains of any policy or investment, which often leads to the neglect of the poor and overexploitation of the environment. "For me, achieving sustainable development is not about trading economic, social, and environmental objectives off against each other," said Helen Clark, UNDP Administrator. "It is about seeing them as interconnected objectives which are best pursued together." It has been a challenge for many political leaders, activists, researchers and spokespeople to explain what sustainable development stands for. The new spot attempts to portray the topic in a way that everybody can understand. The video, using the hand <b>...</b>
2:27
UNDP Chief Helen Clark visits Agadez
On 18 February 2012 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Administrator Helen Clark ...
published: 28 Feb 2012
author: ochafilms
UNDP Chief Helen Clark visits Agadez
On 18 February 2012 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Administrator Helen Clark traveled to the ancient city of Agadez in Niger where armed rebellions in the 1990s led to a period marked by violence and instability, resulting in increased poverty and vulnerability for the population. Agadez is also a transit point for migrants returning from Libya to countries in the region following the uprising in 2011. While in Agadez, she met with people participating in community-supported UNDP projects designed to reintegrate ex-combatants, demine neighborhoods, support livelihoods, and rehabilitate a degraded environment. Helen Clark was on a joint mission with Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Valerie Amos to raise awareness of the looming food crisis in the Sahel and to build the foundations of an integrated regional approach between emergency and development. One third of Nigeriens suffer from food insecurity and 330000 children under five are at risk of severe acute malnutrition because of last year's poor harvest and high food prices. More than one million children under five are at risk in the region.
3:05
UNDP Haiti - Rebuilding Houses
For the past four months the Community Support Centres for House Self-Repair, known by the...
published: 11 Apr 2012
author: undp
UNDP Haiti - Rebuilding Houses
For the past four months the Community Support Centres for House Self-Repair, known by the French acronym CARMEN, have been empowering quake-affected communities in Port-au-Prince and the western town of Léogâne to directly take charge of house reparations, with engineering assessments and construction trainings. The UN Development Programme (UNDP)-Government of Haiti initiative has registered more than 19000 people who will be trained in disaster-resilient house building techniques. Nearly half of them are women. One thousand low-income Haitians receiving a US$500 grant to buy certified quality construction materials through the project's innovative money transfer scheme via mobile phone—the first ever for housing repair efforts. Only 10 percent of the population owns bank accounts, but mobile phone coverage in Haiti jumped from nine to 50 percent in the last six years. Such mobile money schemes also have the potential to include a large number of Haitians in an alternative financial system.
2:33
UNDP:Women key to food security
www.ntv.co.ke For Kenya to become food secure, women should be allowed to own land to driv...
published: 15 May 2012
author: NTVKenya
UNDP:Women key to food security
www.ntv.co.ke For Kenya to become food secure, women should be allowed to own land to drive the food security agenda in the country.This was one of the key messages during the launch of the Africa Human Development report 2012 authored by the United Nations Development Programme.The report further suggests that farmers should get financial support to protect them from the ever-changing weather patterns.
3:05
Monday Exchange: UNESCO and UNDP against poverty
...
published: 05 Jun 2012
author: TheJamaicaObserver
Monday Exchange: UNESCO and UNDP against poverty
18:33
UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment Initiative in Burkina Faso
...
published: 20 Mar 2012
author: HenrikePeichert
UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment Initiative in Burkina Faso
2:08
UNDP - SOMALIA Cash for Work
...
published: 14 Dec 2011
author: undp
UNDP - SOMALIA Cash for Work
2:21
UNDP - SOMALIA Women Prosecutors
...
published: 14 Dec 2011
author: undp
UNDP - SOMALIA Women Prosecutors
1:00
UNDP - Match Against Poverty Horn of Africa PSA preview
This is epicentre of the world's most critical humanitarian crisis.Drought and hunger ...
published: 09 Dec 2011
author: undp
UNDP - Match Against Poverty Horn of Africa PSA preview
This is epicentre of the world's most critical humanitarian crisis.Drought and hunger have driven millions from their homes. 250000 people are still at risk of starvation. Somalia's current government is receiving support from the international aid community to respond to the crisis, but the challenges are grave. Much of the southern part of the country is controlled by the militant group Al Shabaab, which recently banned some international relief agencies from working in the areas they control. This means getting food and essential supplies to people living in these regions is increasingly difficult -- and the gains that have been made in recent months to bring some areas out of famine could easily be undone. Adding to the danger is the issue of piracy. The threat of hijack is real for any vessel passing near the country's coastline, and the lure of ransom and loot often proves too strong a temptation to resist. Rebuilding Somalia and securing its people's future is not a job for the faint hearted.
5:41
UNDP's Caribbean Human Development Report 2012
The Caribbean Human Development Report 2012: Human Development and the Shift to Better Cit...
published: 31 Jan 2012
author: undpjamaicatv
UNDP's Caribbean Human Development Report 2012
The Caribbean Human Development Report 2012: Human Development and the Shift to Better Citizen Security offers a set of solutions to reduce crime in the English- and Dutch-speaking Caribbean countries. Commissioned by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), this important document based on a thorough consultation and research will be launched on 8 February in Port of Spain during a ceremony attended by Caribbean leaders and UNDP senior officials. Please feel free to disseminate this video through social media to your friends and colleagues. More information on the Caribbean Human Development Report 2012 is available on: hdr-caribbean.regionalcentrelac-undp.org UNDP Jamaica website: www.jm.undp.org
14:04
UNDP Serbia: Promoting anti-corruption measures at the local level (in Serbian language)
Standing Conference of Towns and Municipalities (SCTM), in cooperation with the United Nat...
published: 07 May 2012
author: UNDPSerbia
UNDP Serbia: Promoting anti-corruption measures at the local level (in Serbian language)
Standing Conference of Towns and Municipalities (SCTM), in cooperation with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and World Bank Institute presented the Responsibility, Transparency and Accountability (RTA) Index as a new measure in enhancing fight against corruption. (Author: SCTM)
2:32
UNDP's Helen Clark Meets Indian Women Who Have Broken the Glass Ceiling
UNDP Administrator Helen Clark met a group of Indian women activists, local leaders and so...
published: 20 Mar 2012
author: undp
UNDP's Helen Clark Meets Indian Women Who Have Broken the Glass Ceiling
UNDP Administrator Helen Clark met a group of Indian women activists, local leaders and social entrepreneurs here today. The main message that emerged from the discussions was that women could become a force to transform society provided they are politically and economically empowered. While women must challenge long entrenched patriarchal systems to fight for space and voice in the public sphere and in their private lives it is equally important that they are able to earn a living and feed themselves and their children. "In India many women have served at the national level in the highest offices, and there are nearly one million elected women representatives in local self government. Over the years women in government at the local level have gained a new sense of power. These gains have to be protected and used effectively to make a meaningful difference in the lives of all women and provide space for leadership among women to emerge at different levels", said Helen Clark during her interaction with women leaders. India has a rich history of women in positions of power in the economic and political spheres at all levels. Paradoxically a majority of women continue to face several barriers like food insecurity, anemia, lack of assets, and access to secondary and higher levels of education. Most women work in the informal sector which accounts for over 92% of the workforce. They face insecure work conditions, lack social protection and access to financial services. Women <b>...</b>
6:32
Kiribati - A Climate Change Reality
Boobu Tioram, a resident of the Pacific island of Kirabati, took time out from reinforcing...
published: 09 Dec 2009
author: undp
Kiribati - A Climate Change Reality
Boobu Tioram, a resident of the Pacific island of Kirabati, took time out from reinforcing a seawall in front of his newly built house to speak with UNDP about what climate change has meant to his way of life. I have moved three times, every three years I have moved, he said, standing on the beach a few metres from his home. Tioram gestured toward a point about 20 metres into the sea, and explained that his first house once stood on a spot now covered in swelling ocean waves. Each time he has moved farther inland, and each time the sea has followed. Im not sure how long Ill be [in this house], Tioram continued. That depends on how strong my seawall here can withstand high tide waves. UNDP believes that it is the developing world that stands to lose the most, and which is already losing out, as the effects of climate change edge toward the catastrophic. As climate negotiations open in Copenhagen, worlds away from this tiny Pacific nation consisting of 33 low lying atolls, it is important to keep in mind that for the people of Kirabati, and other poor island and coastal nations, funds for adaptation and not only prevention must top the international to-do list. Carbon trading will be of no special consequence to us, so there has got to be some very special provisions for the victims, said Kirabati President Anote Tong. Not the potential victims, but the victims, because we are the victims, so there has to be some very deep soul searching. Kirabati is no more than four <b>...</b>
5:33
UNDP Serbia: Gender Equality
The film by Sandra Mandic portrays women in different spheres of life in relation to gende...
published: 23 Jan 2012
author: UNDPSerbia
UNDP Serbia: Gender Equality
The film by Sandra Mandic portrays women in different spheres of life in relation to gender equality in Serbia.
2:20
ERC Valerie Amos and UNDP Administrator Helen Clark in Niger
Emergency Relief Coordinator Valerie Amos and UNDP Administrator Helen Clark are on a visi...
published: 17 Feb 2012
author: ochafilms
ERC Valerie Amos and UNDP Administrator Helen Clark in Niger
Emergency Relief Coordinator Valerie Amos and UNDP Administrator Helen Clark are on a visit to Niger from 16 to 18 February to raise awareness for the looming food and nutrition crisis in the Sahel region of West Africa.
80:20
UNDP Side Event: Grassroots Women's Solutions
Presented by the UNDP, Huairou Commission and UN HABITAT, this event focused on specific g...
published: 05 Mar 2012
author: UNDPGender
UNDP Side Event: Grassroots Women's Solutions
Presented by the UNDP, Huairou Commission and UN HABITAT, this event focused on specific grassroots-women-designed and implemented tools around: strengthening the implementation of laws and policies -- such as land acts and land regulation -- in a way that benefits women; developing financing mechanisms and participatory budgeting processes to scale-up grassroots women's access to land and property; and creating partnerships with community leaders to ensure justice for women regarding land issues.
2:33
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Marta visit to Sierra Leone
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador, Marta Vieira Da Silva, five-time FIFA world female player of the...
published: 06 Sep 2011
author: undp
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Marta visit to Sierra Leone
UNDP Goodwill Ambassador, Marta Vieira Da Silva, five-time FIFA world female player of the year, ended a two-day visit to Sierra Leone Sunday to promote women's empowerment with the message "When women succeed, we all win." During her visit, Marta met with University students, civil society groups and young female footballers and students. She also met with women's groups, advocating for a 30 percent quota for women in all decision making bodies saying "When I see the will and commitment of these women I am definitely convinced that women's empowerment is essential for peace and development." Hon. Bernadette Lahai, a female Member of Parliament in Sierra Leone, said there are only 13 percent women in parliament. "However, this must change," she said. "But in order to achieve our aim of a minimum 30 percent representation of women in all decision making bodies at local and national level, we will need the support of all women across the country and from all walks of life." UNDP is supporting the advocacy agenda led by Sierra Leonean women for a law to be passed in parliament to ensure a 30 percent quota for women before the 2012 elections. Marta also visited the Careers Advisory and Placement Service Centre at Fourah Bay College, a UNDP project within the University of Sierra Leone aimed at supporting young people in the university find jobs and gain requisite experiences. She met with a mixed group of male and female students, telling them her story of how she overcame a <b>...</b>