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Articles

The Power of Numbers: A Critical Review of Millennium Development Goal Targets for Human Development and Human Rights

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Abstract

The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were heralded as opening a new chapter in international development, and have led to the use of global goals and target-setting as a central instrument defining the international development agenda. Despite this increased importance, little is understood about how they influence policy priorities of key stakeholders, and their broader consequences. While quantification is the key strength of global goals, it also involves simplification, reification and abstraction, which have far-reaching implications for redefining priorities. This paper highlights the key findings and conclusions of the Power of Numbers Project, which undertook 11 case studies of the effects of selected MDG goals/targets, including both the empirical effects on policy priorities and normative effects on development discourses, and drew specifically on human rights principles and human development priorities. While the Project found that the effects varied considerably from one goal/target to another, all led to unintended consequences in diverting attention from other important objectives and reshaping development thinking. Many of the indicators were poorly selected and contributed to distorting effects. The Project concludes that target-setting is a valuable but a limited and blunt tool, and that the methodology for target-setting should be refined to include policy responsiveness in addition to data availability criteria.

Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge the collaboration and financial support of several organizations to the Power of Numbers research project that made this special issue possible: Dag Hammarsjkold Foundation; Friedrich Ebert Stiftung; FXB Centre for Health and Human Rights, Harvard School of Public Health; The Rockefeller Foundation; Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights; United Nations Development Programme; and The New School. The Power of Numbers project is co-coordinated by Sakiko Fukuda-Parr and Alicia Ely Yamin and supported by Vanessa Boulanger, Becky Cantor, Joshua Greenstein and Amy Orr.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

About the Authors

Sakiko Fukuda-Parr is Professor of International Affairs at the New School. She is a development economist who has published widely on a broad range of development policy-related issues and is best known for her work as director and lead author of the UNDP Human Development Reports 1995–2004 and is a founding co-editor of the Journal of Human Development and Capabilities. Her recent publications include: Human Rights and the Capabilities Approach, an Interdisciplinary Dialogue (co-edited with Diane Elson and Polly Vizard; Routledge, London, 2012); A Handbook on Human Development (with A.K. Shivakumar, 3rd edition; Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2010); and The Gene Revolution: GM Crops and Unequal Development (Earthscan, 2006).

Notes on contributors

Alicia Ely Yamin is a Lecturer on Global Health and Director of the Health Rights of Women and Children Program at the Harvard School of Public Health. Her work focuses on the intersections of health, human rights and development.

Notes on contributors

Joshua Greenstein is currently pursuing a PhD in Economics at the New School for Social Research in New York. He holds an MA in International Affairs, also from the New School.

 

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