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Saturday, January 22, 2022
Risk Management January 2022
IMF Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST) January 2022
Resilience and Sustainability
(Image:
Rose Kouwenhoven/IMF)
A New IMF Trust Fund
The IMF's Ceyla
Pazarbasioglu and Uma
Ramakrishnan laid out in a new blog this week how a proposed IMF Resilience and
Sustainability Trust (RST) will help low-income and vulnerable middle-income
countries build resilience to balance of payment shocks and ensure a
sustainable recovery.
The $50-billion trust fund would also be a place where countries
could channel their Special Drawing Rights to more vulnerable nations.
--Key design features: About
three quarters of the IMF's membership would be eligible for RST financing.
This would include all low-income countries, all developing and vulnerable
small states, and all middle-income countries with gross national per-capita
income of less than roughly $12,000 per year.
The RST aims to address macro-critical longer-term
structural challenges that entail significant macroeconomic risks to member
countries’ resilience and sustainability, including climate change, pandemic
preparedness, and digitalization. Access to RST financing would be
determined case by case, based on the strength of reforms and debt
sustainability considerations, and is expected to be capped at 150 percent of IMF quota or
SDR 1 billion, whichever is smaller.
Medical Reserve Corps. NACCO Publications and courses
NACCHO has published a number of
new resources for MRC units in recent months. These include:
The NACCHO team shared details
about each of these new resources during the January MRC Well Check Webinar.
Watch the Listserv for a link to the recording. |
Thursday, January 20, 2022
The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase its Profits. Milton Friedman. The New York Times Magazine. September 13, 1970
http://websites.umich.edu/~thecore/doc/Friedman.pdf
Still in the Early 1900's of the 20th Century in 2022 of the 21st Century. Voting Rights. January 19, 2022
Missing the facts:
".......49 states in the 2021 legislative session alone, and at least 19 states enacted 34 laws that restrict access to the ballot,...."
That statement notes that 49 of 50 States in the U.S. are advocating for some form of voter restrictions and suppression.
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For Immediate Release Congressman Kweisi
Mfume’s Statement on the Senate's Failure to Pass the Freedom
to Vote: John R. Lewis Act January 19, 2022 | Press
Release WASHINGTON – Congressman Kweisi Mfume
(MD-07) issued the following statement on the Senate's failure to pass
critical voting rights legislation today. “A record number of Americans voted in the 2020 elections
because of expanded Election Day, vote-by-mail, and early voting
opportunities. Less than one year later, state lawmakers in at least 19
states enacted 34 laws that restrict access to the ballot with many more on
the way. Unfortunately, the U.S. Senate has proven it is more committed to
protecting the filibuster than it is the right to vote,” said Congressman
Kweisi Mfume. ### More on the Congressional Effort for the Freedom to Vote
Last week, the House passed the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act which
will do the following.
The
current landscape of state electoral systems:
This evening, the Senate failed to overcome procedural hurdles,
thereby leaving the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis
Act to languish indefinitely in its Chamber. |
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
Webinar: Aligning Stakeholder Priorities in Urban Resilience Thursday, 20 January 2022 - 09.00 AM EST
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Call for papers: UCL Open: Environment Special Series: Water and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Extended deadline for
submissions: April 2022 For more information or to enquire about submission:
***********************
UCL Open: Environment invites submissions for a special series focusing on Water and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This Special Series will remain open until April 2022. The series will focus on SDGs 6 (clean water and sanitation), 13 (climate action), 14 (life below water) and 15 (life on land), but submissions on other SDGs are also welcome if they address topics regarding water.
Papers should be strongly inter- or multi-disciplinary either in terms of the author’s skill sets or subject matter. Discussion and research papers are equally welcome. Submissions covering an examination of progress on SDGs viewed from the perspective of the global water cycle, whether the indicators, targets and evidence available to us all /deliver a more balanced view of water and how it might be best managed in future, are also welcomed for submission.
Articles will be judged on the merit and scientific validity (sound scholarship) of the work and the Editorial Board are inviting submissions from people at any research or knowledge-based organisations (including NGOs, Think Tanks, IGOs/UN) and at all career stages, including early career researchers, mid-career professionals, and senior scholars.
The journal offers waivers and discounts for Article-Processing Charges including for articles whose corresponding authors are based in low-income countries (see here for more information). Authors are requested to contact the Editorial office (uclopen.environment@ucl.ac.uk) prior to submission to enquire and request these discounts. Please note that authors ability to pay any charges regarding to publication are kept separate to editorial review and Editors are not responsible for determining these waivers and discounts.
For more information or to enquire about submission:
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