The Business for SDGs Infrastructure Roundtable

Since the global adoption of the U.N. Agenda for 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the international community has turned its attention to implementation, and the resources from governments and business required to set the SDGs into motion. In this regard, a pressing priority across all 17 SDGs is upgrading and building infrastructure for sustainability.

USCIB will host a roundtable on infrastructure for sustainability on Friday, April 21, 8:15 am – 1:30 pm at Covington in Washington D.C. The Roundtable participants will discuss:

  • where and how business is already planning for and investing in infrastructure for sustainability, what are the enabling frameworks, policies and partnerships that can be scaled for impact; 
  • what new sources and approaches exist to mobilize resources and advance bankable projects for sustainability infrastructure; and
  • which indicators to use to measure and report impacts of infrastructure investments by the private sector.

Both “hard” and “soft” forms of infrastructure have also figured prominently in the U.N. Financing for Development (FfD) process. The USCIB Roundtable will immediately precede the FfD Infrastructure Forum, and inform recommendations by USCIB to the U.N. High Level Political Forum meetings in July when they review SDG actions by governments, business and others.

Speakers include:

  • Amb. Lisa Kubiske, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Economics and Business Affairs, US Department of State
  • Albena Melin, Principal Operations Officer, Thought Leadership & Global Engagement, Economics and Private Sector Development, International Finance Corporation
  • Krishan Sharma, Senior Economist, Financing for Development Office, UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs
  • Alan P. Larson, Senior International Policy Advisor, Covington

If you would like to receive an official invitation to the Roundtable, please contact Mia Lauter, mlauter@uscib.org

Business Empowering Women to Support Learning for Girls

In Zimbabwe and Tanzania, Pearson and NGO Camfed are working together to offer new opportunities and equal access to education to empower girls in the poorest communities

Study circles and wellbeing sessions delivered by learner guides build strong relationships, trust and empathy, and are critical to keeping girls engaged in their education. Photograph: Camfed

Study circles and wellbeing sessions delivered by learner guides build strong relationships, trust and empathy, and are critical to keeping girls engaged in their education. Photograph: Camfed

 

Over the past three decades there has been enormous progress towards achieving gender parity in education, yet according to the UNESCO Institute of Statistics, around the world there are still 62 million girls out of school. Gender inequality in education access and completion stays with girls for the rest of their lives and translates to diminished health, social and economic outcomes into adulthood.

 

The Benefits of Girls’ Education

Each additional year of secondary school education increases a girl’s income by 15-25 percent, unlocking not just her economic potential but that of her family and community. An educated girl in Africa is three times less likely to get HIV/AIDS, earns 25 percent more income and will re-invest 90% of her income into her family. She has a smaller, healthier family, and challenges gender based violence and discrimination.

 

Seizing the Opportunity

To help seize the opportunity, in 2013 Pearson joined international NGO Camfed, with support from the UK Department of International Development and relevant national Ministries of Education, to transform educational opportunities for girls from low-income communities in Zimbabwe and Tanzania. The partnership aims at improving the learning experience and outcomes for girls from rural and often marginalized areas through sustained collaboration between not-for-profit, private and government players.

 

Building on Camfed’s 20 years’ experience in getting girls into school across Africa, and harnessing Pearson’s global expertise in delivering innovative learning solutions, the outcomes of the partnership have been to:

 

1.   Enable 60,744 vulnerable girls in Zimbabwe and Tanzania to enroll in secondary school.

2.   Empower over 400,000 girls and boys in 970 rural secondary schools to improve their educational experience and learning outcomes.

3.  Create new opportunities for young women graduates of Camfed’s programs in the poorest rural communities by training them to become Learner Guides.

 

Learner Guides are young female role models for girls still in school, who are uniquely qualified through their own experiences of overcoming the barriers to education imposed by poverty and marginalization. Working closely with both students and school leaders, Learner Guides identify and address particular problems that girls face which impede their school attendance and learning, and deliver an innovative complementary curriculum focusing on building individual qualities, health and wellbeing, the “My Better World” program.

 

Developing Deeply Relevant Learning Resources with all Stakeholders

Pearson’s specific role has been to support Camfed in developing learning resources for the “My Better World” program that are relevant to young people’s experience, as well as future employability and success. In order to do this successfully, Pearson and Camfed engaged with young people and their communities, ensuring that the educational resources developed are deeply relevant to girls and boys, as well as gender sensitive. The “My Better World” curriculum and workbook help students to build self-knowledge, discover their talents, build resilience, select role models, set goals and learn how to achieve them.

 

Working Towards Recognized Qualifications for Young Women Mentors

Pearson has also committed to developing a BTEC qualification framework to formally recognize the work of 5,000 Learner Guides. BTEC is one of the world’s most sought-after applied learning qualifications, providing students with a clear line of sight into work and further education. The BTEC developed will be tailored to the unique needs of the Learner Guides, support their training and assessment, and certify them, which will provide a stepping stone into formal higher education, teacher training and employment. These 5,000 Learner Guides will teach and mentor over 150,000 girls to help improve their attendance, retention and learning at secondary school -- creating a virtuous cycle of learning and empowerment.

 

The Impact of the Learner Guide Program

In return for the Learner Guides’ commitment, they gain access to interest-free loans via Kiva to start their own businesses, providing employment opportunities to youth in their communities. Respected for their expertise at every level, these young women are multiplying the returns of their own education for the benefit of their communities.

 

In this video, Nasikiwa Duke, Program Manager, Young Women’s Empowerment, at Camfed Tanzania explains why Learner Guides are important role models and confidantes, and how they work with schools, teachers, and communities to keep poor and vulnerable children in school.

Content from this blog post provided by Pearson.  

Business must invest in Syria’s refugees

Guest Post by John Fallon, CEO of Pearson

At the UN General Assembly this week, Syria and the plight of its refugee citizens have been top of the agenda. In the face of challenges that will be felt for years to come, what kind of future should the rest of the world aspire to help them achieve?

Three weeks ago, I visited the Za’atari refugee camp in the north of Jordan with Save the Children, where 80,000 Syrians live, work and learn. As ever, it was talking to the young people themselves — and their parents and teachers — that made the biggest impression.

Inside Za’atari I spent time at an activity centre, where teachers were helping children learn to read, and the walls were filled with paintings and drawings. Teenage boys wanted to talk about Manchester City’s prospects in the English Premier League this season. It all seemed a very normal school scene — until I remembered I was inside the second largest refugee camp in the world.

I met the mothers of younger children, refugees from a poorer, more rural part of Syria. They were all able to read — but the mood in the room became markedly less buoyant when we asked whether their children were learning to read, too. I also watched a group of girls, some as young as 12, dance to a wonderful mix of traditional Syrian folk and very modern Arab rap. However, the story they told was about the perils of marrying very young and how a college degree was the passport to a better life.

Despite the circumstances, what struck me most in Za’atari was the community’s efforts to maintain a sense of normality. I saw well-maintained streets, tailors and even a shop selling bridal dresses. The entrepreneurial spirit of the residents is thriving. They are not looking for handouts, they just want to make their own way in the world and provide for their families.

One young Za’atari resident showed me around the house of his extended family; three shipping containers connected by corrugated iron to make a basic but welcoming home. Families like his receive UN rations of bread and 20 dina (£21) a month. Their diet is mainly bread, rice, lentils and perhaps chicken once or twice a week.

Right now, Za’atari is a basic but relatively safe space where people can live and children can learn, just 18 miles from the Syrian border and the conflict that continues to rage. But we must not think for one minute that refugee camps are a permanent solution. Only one third of the 30,000 children in Za’atari are actually in school. Many have family support networks, but others have lost their relatives in the war.

The term ‘refugees’ conjures up a homogeneous mass of people — but the Syrians displaced by the conflict are just as diverse as the members of any nation. Each individual I met has their own skills, challenges and ambitions. 80% of Syrians in Jordan are not actually in camps, but living side by side with Jordanians.

In Jordan’s capital, Amman, I visited two Children and Family Centres that Pearson is funding with Save the Children, to increase access to quality education for Syrian refugees and local children. There I watched a group of bright, lively teenagers having a math lesson.

They want to be engineers, doctors, teachers, dancers, tech entrepreneurs — and they’re plenty smart enough to achieve their dreams. But it is going to be hard when that was the only math lesson most of them get each week.They spend far more of their time working to earn money — not much more than a dollar an hour — to support their families.

There will come a time when the brutal conflict will end — but the debilitating effects of a missed education will stay with a child for the rest of his or her life. Investment into Syria itself may be nearly impossible whilst the civil war continues but the education of millions of innocent Syrians does not need to stop. Whether in camps like Za’atari or in the countries where they have found refuge, we have the choice to invest now or lose an entire generation.

The world’s largest companies have a responsibility. Businesses have the reach, expertise and resources to make a real difference for people affected by conflict. This doesn’t just mean charity, it means real investment.

The Syrians I met wanted to gain the knowledge and skills so they would thrive in companies like Pearson. Many also wanted to build their own businesses and drive the growth of their country once the fighting has ended. It’s in everyone’s interests for business to invest in these people as much as they’re investing in themselves.

Right now the world’s leaders are meeting at the UN and discussing the plight of young Syrians. I have been sharing the stories of the people I met with other business-leaders to see how, with partners like Save the Children and others, we can do more to provide support and investment.

Working together, we can ensure that the horrors of this conflict do not leave a permanent scar on this generation of Syrians.

***

An original version of this article was published on 22.09.16 in City A.M. It can be viewed here.

You can learn more about Pearson and Save the Children’s ‘Every Child Learning’ partnership here.