Representatives from more than 20 countries in Asia, South America and Africa, and hundreds of thousands of citizen volunteers came together with one single aim – to make learning a focal concern for the communities, the government and civil society.
The session focused on one of the key issues pertaining SDGs, i.e. how the whole process of SDGs will be monitored. While international communities are trying to figure out some indicators and methodologies to measure the progress of SDGs, the government is ideally responsible for the monitoring its nation’s progress. Amidst this, civil society has found itself in the back seat for SDGs’ monitoring process. The session, therefore, discussed how the PAL Network members can play an active role in monitoring the progress of SDG 4, particularly SDG 4.1.
Additionally, IID also proposed that the civil society can ensure whether the government is following a transparent and effective monitoring process. The civil society can do their own citizen-led survey and track the monitoring process, and report it regularly to keep the donor community, development partners and the government accountable. The civil society can also play a complementary role and help assist the government in the procedure. For the latter, PAL Network members would require to find some common grounds and establish some common standard about the tests they develop.
The CEO of IID, Syeed Ahamed, was elected as the Chair of the Communication and Advocacy Working Group. IID will work with other organisations/member countries to lead them further to promote research, communication and advocacy.
Blog originally posted on the IID website
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