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Comment répondre à nos besoins actuels sans nuire à la capacité des générations futures à satisfaire les leurs ? C'est là le problème crucial que pose le "développement durable". En 1992, lors de la Conférence de Rio des Nations Unies sur l'environnement et le développement, les pays Membres de l'OCDE se sont engagés à réunir les conditions nécessaires au développement durable. Néanmoins, presque dix ans plus tard, les progrès accomplis restent insuffisants et inégaux. A partir d'analyses réalisées à la suite d'une demande formulée par les ministres de l'OCDE en 1998, ce rapport souligne la nécessité de surmonter très rapidement certains des obstacles les plus importants qui se dressent sur la voie du développement durable. Il fait le point sur les fondements théoriques du développement durable, sur son évaluation et sur les réformes institutionnelles qui s'imposent pour en faire une réalité. Il examine ensuite la contribution que le commerce et les investissements internationaux, de même que la coopération pour le développement, peuvent apporter au développement durable à l'échelle mondiale. Et il dresse le bilan des politiques fondées sur les règles du marché, qu'elles soient réglementaires ou technologiques, mises en oeuvre par les pays de l'OCDE à ce jour dans le but d'atteindre certains objectifs tout en optimisant le rapport coût-efficacité. Cet ouvrage présente en outre une analyse approfondie des politiques conçues pour répondre aux principales menaces qui pèsent sur la durabilité dans les domaines du changement climatique et de la gestion des ressources naturelles. De même, on y trouvera un examen détaillé des politiques répondant aux problèmes qui se posent au niveau sectoriel ou infranational. Il en ressort globalement qu'il existe de nombreuses solutions qui permettraient de faire en sorte que la croissance économique, la protection de l'environnement et le développement social se renforcent mutuellement.
Social planning. --- Social policy. --- Sustainable development.
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public policy --- social development --- Political planning --- Social planning --- Social development planning --- Planning --- Planning in politics --- Public policy --- Policy sciences --- Politics, Practical --- Public administration --- Political planning. --- Social planning.
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Le présent rapport porte sur des approches novatrices de la prestation des services publics fondées sur des partenariats que les pouvoirs publics forment avec les citoyens, les usagers et les organisations de la société civile. Ces approches – dénommées co-production – peuvent apporter des réponses créatives qui permettent aux pouvoirs publics de fournir des services publics de meilleure qualité en période de restrictions budgétaires. Le rapport s’appuie sur les résultats d’une étude préliminaire des pratiques nationales dans 22 pays membres de l’OCDE, au Brésil, en Égypte, en Russie et en Ukraine. "La co-production suscite un intérêt croissant parmi les spécialistes et les praticiens. Ce rapport, qui propose une étude approfondie des pratiques existantes dans les pays de l'OCDE,est une contribution précieuse à notre compréhension de l'état d'avancement au niveau international." -Professeur John Alford, École d’Administration de l’Australie et de la Nouvelle Zélandeauteur, auteur, Engaging Public Sector Clients : From Service-Delivery to Co-Production
Community development. --- Community development --- Regional development --- Economic assistance, Domestic --- Social planning --- Citizen participation --- Government policy
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Journal focuses on problems dealing with the community services.
Community development --- Regional development --- Economic assistance, Domestic --- Social planning --- Citizen participation --- Government policy
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Community development. --- Community development --- Regional development --- Economic assistance, Domestic --- Social planning --- Citizen participation --- Government policy
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Non-governmental organizations --- Social planning --- Technical assistance --- International relief --- Directories --- Directories --- Directories --- Directories
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OECD's Territorial Review of Canada. It finds that Canada is composed of three macroregions: a southern ribbon with all the important metropolitan areas, a zone of rural and non-metropolitan adjacent regions and a sub-continent of remote northern territories. Disparities between these macroregions persist and may even be growing. Opportunities for growth are lost because of these imbalances and also because specific regional advantages are not fully tapped. In many regions, weak local governance is hindering the emergence of local grass-roots projects, diffusion of R&D results to SMEs is slow and dialogue between higher education institutions and firms is poor. This report underlines the need for federal agencies and sectoral departments to continuously assess the consistency of their policies with regard to the three macroregions in order to enhance territorial cohesion and better tailor programmes to local conditions. More federal involvement in metropolitan issues notably through negotiated planning could help to institutionalise and strengthen urban policies. This report also emphasises the significant overhauling of rural policies that took place recently. It underlines that in certain areas such as amenities a strategic approach is still to be defined. Resolving governance issues is a priority in the north.
Canada -- Economic conditions -- 1991-. --- ocial planning --Canada. --- Social planning --Canada. --- Sustainable development -- Canada. --- Sustainable development --- Social planning --- Business & Economics --- Economic History --- Social development planning --- Planning --- Economic history. --- Canada --- Economic conditions --- Economic policy. --- History, Economic --- Economics
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Community capacity building (CCB) is a fairly new term for an age-old good: enabling people to define their own destinies. This book presents and analyses some of the most interesting recent developments in the field of community capacity building, in a variety of OECD and non-OECD countries. The focus is on how CCB has effected change in three major areas: social policy (health, housing, community regeneration); local economic policy; and environmental policy. The book also outlines the common conditions required for CCB to take hold and thrive, allowing for the political voice of local communities to be clearly heard.
Community development --- Economic aspects --- Environmental aspects --- Social aspects --- Regional development --- Economic assistance, Domestic --- Social planning --- Citizen participation --- Government policy
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In Asia today, the grand ideologies of the past have lost their power over the popular imagination. Even in many of the region’s democracies, popular engagement in the political process faces profound challenges. Yet amidst this landscape of political disenchantment, groups of ordinary people across Asia are finding new ways to take control of their own lives, respond to threats to their physical and cultural survival, and build better futures. This collection of essays by prominent scholars and activists traces the rise of a quiet politics of survival from the villages of China to Japan’s Minamata and Fukushima, and from the street art of Seoul and Hong Kong to the illegal markets of North Korea. Introducing an innovative conceptual framework, New Worlds from Below shows how informal grassroots politics in Northeast Asia is generating new ideas and practices that have region-wide and global relevance.
Community development. --- Community development --- Regional development --- Citizen participation --- Government policy --- Economic assistance, Domestic --- Social planning --- politics --- northeast asia --- Japan --- Social innovation
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