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Walking The Roads blog is structured towards educating individuals across the globe about the poverty within the continent of Africa. The project started April 2009 and will continue until the organization have met all goals.

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Friday, January 22, 2010

Special Thank You(s)!

We would like to thank the following for their support:
Crystal Pippins

Your donations are a big factor in this campaign!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

The three most important challenges and opportunities for the decade ahead

1. Jobs:
Throughout the developing world, productive-employment-intensive growth remains a challenge. In Africa, it is almost a crisis, with most of the labor force working in low-productivity, informal-sector jobs, and 7-10 million young people entering the labor force every year. That the unemployment rate in South Africa—the continent’s largest economy—has remained around 25 percent is particularly troubling.
2. Fragile states:
One group of African countries—numbering 20 at last count—are missing out on development because of conflict, war or serious governance problems. Even more disturbing is the fact that these countries have remained fragile states for a long time: The probability that a fragile state in 2000 was still fragile in 2008 is 0.96. The development community needs to rethink its approach to these countries.
3. Politics and pro-poor reforms:
After one or two decades of multi-party democracy in some countries and the increased voice of domestic civil society (thanks partly to the information revolution), the climate for pro-poor reforms in Africa is improving. Note the almost total absence of populist (and ultimately anti-poor) policies such as price and exchange rate controls in response to the food, fuel and financial crises of the past two years. As policymakers are increasingly being held accountable by the people—the majority of whom are poor—there is a better chance that they will take decisions that benefit the poor.

Starting The Year Out Right!

Special Thank You(s)!

We would like to thank the following for there support:
Micheal Lawson
Phillip Davis

Your donations are a big factor in this campaign!

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

African Campaigners Vow to Make 2010 A Year of Change

The Deputy Director of the UN Millennium Campaign for Africa has urged campaigners attending a retreat in the Malawian city of Lilongwe to make 2010 a major turning point for the continent.

“In the coming year, let us reignite the wind of change that swept across Africa during the 1960s; the change that freed African people from the bondage of colonialism, apartheid and slavery,” Charles Abugre said.

“Our focus next year is to pressure our leaders to spend within country means; every time a four wheel drive is purchased in Africa, an opportunity to construct a classroom … is missed,” he added.

The retreat was attended by representatives of faith-based, civil society and local government organizations from across the 17 countries the campaigns targets.
Speaker after speaker reflected upon the status of the campaigns in their respective countries. Western, Southern and Eastern Africa reported that the launch of the Piga Debe for Women’s Rights campaign had given new thrust to the campaign.

“Piga Debe for Women’s Rights opened doors for gender-based organizations to join our campaign,” said Deo Nyanzi of the NGO Forum, Uganda.

“We would not have managed to mobilize the numbers we did for ‘Stand Up’ [the annual mobilization in support of the Millennium Development Goals held in October] had it not been for the launch of Piga Debe,” said another campaigner from Liberia.
Under guidance from Abugre, campaigners defined their strategic direction for 2010 to 2015, which includes ensuring that government policy and practice are fulfilling the spirit of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), supporting increased monitoring of the MDGs at the grassroots level and building people’s movement for the MDGs.
Campaigners identified the African Union 2010 Summit, the World Cup in South Africa next year and the 50th anniversaries of African independence celebrations which will fall during the next five years as major events for the African campaign.

During her closing remarks, the communications coordinator of the UN Millennium Campaign in Africa, Sylvia Mwichuli, congratulated campaigners and issued certificates for their efforts during “Stand Up,” which set a new world record for the largest mobilization of human beings in history.