1 / 23

Business UNusual: Facilitating United Nations Reform through Partnerships

Business UNusual: Facilitating United Nations Reform through Partnerships. ILO Presentation 25 October 2005. Jan Martin Witte Associate Director. Agenda. Mandate, Objectives and Empirical Base The UN and Partnerships: Trends & Challenges From Output to Impact: An Action Agenda for the UN.

senwe
Télécharger la présentation

Business UNusual: Facilitating United Nations Reform through Partnerships

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Business UNusual:Facilitating United NationsReform through Partnerships ILO Presentation 25 October 2005 Jan Martin Witte Associate Director

  2. Agenda • Mandate, Objectives and Empirical Base • The UN and Partnerships: Trends & Challenges • From Output to Impact: An Action Agenda for the UN

  3. Mandate, objectives and empirical base • Mandate • Commissioned by the United Nations Global Compact Office • Two outputs: • Draft report of the UN SG to the General Assembly (mandatory 2-year report on partnerships • Joint publication GPPi/UN Global Compact • Timeframe: Five months

  4. Mandate, goals and empirical base • Objectives • Provide overview over political debate on partnerships • Review partnership case material; develop categorization • Review institutional developments in the United Nations in the context of partnership work • Offer practical recommendations for the United Nations to increase its capacity to get engaged in partnerships

  5. Mandate, goals and empirical base • Empirical base • Review of 112 partnerships • 15 short case studies • Survey with 164 Global Compact participants • In-depth interviews with more than 60 practitioners from business, the United Nations, governments and civil society organizations

  6. Agenda • Mandate, Objectives and Empirical Base • The UN and Partnerships: Trends & Challenges • From Output to Impact: An Action Agenda for the UN

  7. One possible way of categorizing partnerships is along their functional role • Function • Advocacy • Developing rules, norms and standards • Sharing and coordinating resources • Harnessing markets for development • GRI • Who cares wins • Training Judges in Venezuela • Stop TB • Shea Butter in Burkina Faso • Microinsurance • Examples • Health in your hands • Mondialogo • Contribution • Place issues on global agenda • Prepare the ground for action • Fill gover-nance gaps • Increase in-clusiveness and accoun-tability • Exploit economies of scale in knowledge generation • Build capacity • Provide access to markets • Bridge or deepen markets

  8. Success Stories • HEALTH IN YOUR HANDS: • The Global Public Private Partnership • for Handwashing with Soap • Purpose: Issue advocacy • Objective: Persuade people in developing countries to wash their hands with soap • Means: Industrial marketing practices coupled with public health expertise • Actors: The World Bank, WHO, Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Colgate Palmolive

  9. Success Stories • ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES FOR ALL • Purpose: Setting norms and standards for partnerships in health provision • Objective: Clarify what is expected of each stakeholder; create stable investment climate • Means: Multi-stakeholder negotiation process. • Actors: Water companies, local authorities, regulators, NGOs

  10. Success Stories • MOVING THE WORLD: • Cooperation between TNT and WFP • Purpose: Sharing resources and capabilities • Objective: To provide emergency relief faster and more efficient • Means: Integration of planning systems; joint training; technology transfer • Actors: WFP and TNT

  11. Success Stories • MICROINSURANCE: • Purpose: Fostering markets • Objective: Providing basic life insurance to the poor in India and Indonesia • Means: Annual fee of 80 cents; provision through local civil society organizations. • Actors: Allianz AG, Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ), UNDP • Impact: provision of life insurance to 40,000 poor people in India

  12. Research highlights importance of local ownership and strong partnership managements as key • Sustainable and impact-oriented partnerships • Local ownership • Substantial influence of beneficiaries • Implementation through local partners • Strong management • Clear goals and objectives • Efficient and transparent partner selection process • Clear roles and responsibilities • Impact assessment • ...

  13. 8 • >5 • 4 or 5 • 2 or 3 • None • 1 The length of a company's membership in the Global Compact has an important influence on the number of partnerships it is involved in • Years of membership in the Global Compact and number of partnerships (n=147) • Years of member-ship in the Global Compact • Number of partnerships • Less than 1 year • 1 • 2 • 1 to 3 years • 2 • 2 • More than 3 years

  14. 4 Almost 80 percent of participating companies see partnerships as important for their future business success • "Partnerships with the UN will become more and more important for my company´s future business success." (answers in percent, n=145) • Strongly Disagree • Strongly Agree • 2 • Disagree • 17 • 19 • 62 • Agree

  15. 0 Good corporate citizenship and reputation are the most important drivers behind business engagement in partnerships • Rating of factors for decision to join partnerships (in percent) • Not • important • Neutral • Fairlyimportant • Very important • Important • Showing good • corporate citizenship • 49 • 44 • 7 • 1 • Increasing reputation • 37 • 48 • 10 • 3 • 2 • Individual leadership • 34 • 36 • 22 • 4 • 5 • Improving the investmentenvironment • 13 • 48 • 24 • 8 • 8 • Meeting governmentrequirements • 17 • 35 • 30 • 2 • 15 • 100%

  16. Almost half respondents do not think it easy to build partnerships with the UN; less than a third sees the UN as effective • "It is easy to build partnerships with the UN" (n=129) • "How effective is the UN in responding to partnership requests by business?" (n=125) • Strongly disagree • Very effective • Not at all effective • Strongly Agree • 2 • 2 • 6 • 7 • Effective • 26 • Disagree • 40 • 54 • Agree • 65 • Fairly • effective

  17. 5 Bureaucracy and lack of understanding of corporate culture seen as most significant impediments for the UN to be an effective partner • Rating of factors (in percent) • Fairlyimportant • Not im-portant • Very important • Important • Neutral • Bureaucracy • 23 • 43 • 28 • 5 • 2 • Lack of understanding • 23 • 40 • 21 • 11 • 5 • Lack of coordination • 16 • 41 • 28 • 8 • 6 • Lack of resources • 17 • 30 • 39 • 6 • 8 • Lack of skills • 7 • 28 • 40 • 11 • 15 • Lack of Leadership • 11 • 24 • 44 • 14 • 8 • 100%

  18. Agenda • Mandate, Objectives and Empirical Base • The UN and Partnerships: Trends & Challenges • From Output to Impact: An Action Agenda for the UN

  19. Action agenda • Build capacity in country offices • Promote training, at all levels • Streamline guidelines for partnerships • Improve coherence and practicality of partner selection process • Build the foundation for smart selectivity through systematic impact assessment • Foster system-wide learning

  20. Additional material

  21. 181 Most participating firms have more than 500 employees • Number of employees of participating firms (in percent, n=149) • Between 250 and 500 • 3 • Less than 250 • 26 • 71 • More than 500

  22. 3 Survey respondents come from all industry sectors • Sectoral affiliation of participating companies (number of companies, n=221*) • Industrials • 46 • Retail • 24 • Natural Resources • 22 • Engineering • 21 • Banking and Finance • 19 • Technology • 19 • Health and Medicine • 13 • Telecoms • 13 • Building and Construction • 11 • Transport • 11 • Agriculture and Fisheries • 8 • Professional Services • 8 • Media • 6 • * Multiple answers possible

  23. 181 Length of participation in Global Compact is evenly distributed • Years of involvement in partnerships (in percent, n=147) • One to three years • Less than a year • 33 • 35 • 32 • More than three years

More Related