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Young Lives research features in Save the Children flagship report on inequality
Gender and Intersecting Inequalities

Young Lives findings featured in the Save the Children flagship report Born Equal: How Reducing Inequality Could Give Our Children a Better Future which was presented to the High Level Panel when they met in London at the end of October.

The panel is tasked with advising on the global development agenda beyond 2015, the target date for achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Prime Minister David Cameron of the United Kingdom is one of the three co-chairs of the High Level Panel of Eminent Persons on the Post-2015 Development Agenda after the panel's second meeting in London. The other chairs are President Yudhoyono of Indonesia and President Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia.

Discussion among the Panel members at the three-day meeting covered human development, jobs and livelihoods, and how to reach the marginalized and excluded.

The High Level Panel is part of Secretary-General Ban's post-2015 initiative, mandated by the 2010 MDG Summit, at which UN Member States took stock of the progress made in achieving the MDGs. Member States have called for open, inclusive consultations - involving civil society, the private sector, academia and research institutions from all regions, in addition to the UN system - to advance the development agenda beyond 2015.
 

Young Lives research features in Save the Children flagship report on inequality
Gender and Intersecting Inequalities

Young Lives findings featured in the Save the Children flagship report Born Equal: How Reducing Inequality Could Give Our Children a Better Future which was presented to the High Level Panel when they met in London at the end of October.

The panel is tasked with advising on the global development agenda beyond 2015, the target date for achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Prime Minister David Cameron of the United Kingdom is one of the three co-chairs of the High Level Panel of Eminent Persons on the Post-2015 Development Agenda after the panel's second meeting in London. The other chairs are President Yudhoyono of Indonesia and President Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia.

Discussion among the Panel members at the three-day meeting covered human development, jobs and livelihoods, and how to reach the marginalized and excluded.

The High Level Panel is part of Secretary-General Ban's post-2015 initiative, mandated by the 2010 MDG Summit, at which UN Member States took stock of the progress made in achieving the MDGs. Member States have called for open, inclusive consultations - involving civil society, the private sector, academia and research institutions from all regions, in addition to the UN system - to advance the development agenda beyond 2015.