Our 2023 Annual Report includes information about our impact and areas of activity across the year, in addition to details on our strategy, our team and our supporters.
Our work would not be possible without the generous support of our donors, to whom we are immensely grateful.
A Geneva Dialogue on the Right to Education was held on 18 and 19 June 2024 and organized by the Swiss Commission for UNESCO, UNESCO, the University of Geneva, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), and the REGARD network.
The rich sessions provided an opportunity to examine the trends, challenges, and opportunities related to equitable access to quality education. Discussions focused on the impact of privatization, digitalization, and crises on the right to education, as well as the effectiveness of human rights mechanisms in addressing these 21st-century challenges.
The results of these discussions are published in this synthesis report, highlighting the lessons learned and recommendations for strengthening the right to education.
This brief was submitted to the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights prior to the 7th Review of the United Kingdom, responding to the pre-sessional Working Group submission. It was submitted in January 2023 and focuses on UK international development cooperation in the area of education. Another report was submitted in 2024 with updates and recommendations.
This report was submitted to the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights for the 7th review of the UK. It is an update of a first report submitted in 2023. It covers:
The major concerns raised by the International Development Committee of the UK Parliament about the UK’s investments as part of Overseas Development Aid (ODA)
The UK’s non-response following findings from investigations by the International Finance Corporation (IFC)’s Compliance Advisor Ombudsman (CAO)
The absence of UK’s responses to the CESCR’s questions related to UK international development cooperation in the area of education
Update on the UK’s investments in fee-charging private education
Key recommendations
Ce rapport résulte d’une étude exhaustive sur la privatisation et la marchandisation de l’éducation au Sénégal.
- D’une part, l’ancrage de plus en plus profond de la privatisation de l’éducation dans le pays et la dérive qui en résulte, à savoir la marchandisation de celle-ci.
- D’autre part, les enjeux et défis de la lutte pour une Ecole et une Université publiques de qualité, performantes et attractives.
Las asociaciones público-privadas (APP) se presentan a menudo como una solución milagrosa a la falta de financiación de la educación. Este informe político, basado en un documento de trabajo más extenso y desarrollado, muestra que estos acuerdos generan a menudo mayores costes ocultos y amplían las desigualdades educativas.
Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) are often presented as a miracle solution to the lack of funding in education. This policy brief, based a longer and more developed working paper, shows that these arrangements often generate higher hidden costs and widen educational inequalities.
It aims to support more informed and strategic decision-making regarding public-private partnerships in education, protect public resources, improve policy implementation and enhance accountability.
Les partenariats public-privé (PPP) sont souvent présentés comme une solution miracle au manque de financement de l'éducation. Cette note politique, basée sur un document de travail plus long et plus développé, montre que ces arrangements génèrent souvent des coûts cachés plus élevés et creusent les inégalités en matière d'éducation.