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The Africa Progress Panel (APP) consists of a group of distinguished individuals, chaired by Kofi Annan, whose objective is to track and encourage progress in Africa and to underscore shared responsibility between African leaders and their international partners for sustaining it.
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The APP was originally formed as a vehicle to maintain a focus on the commitments to Africa made by the international community in the wake of the Gleneagles G8 Summit and of the Commission for Africa Report in 2007. Under the chairmanship of Kofi Annan, it is paying equal attention to the implementation of Africa's commitments as set out in the Constitutive Act of the African Union and landmark international agreements. In 2008, a secretariat was established in Geneva.
Panel members are Kofi Annan, Michel Camdessus, Peter Eigen, Bob Geldof, General Olusegun Obasanjo, Graça Machel, Linah Mohohlo, Robert Rubin, Tidjane Thiam and Muhammad Yunus. A Geneva-based Secretariat supports the Panel in three main areas: research and policy; advocacy and communication; and preparation of APP core products, including the annual Africa Progress Report; a fortnightly news bulletin; and policy briefs on timely issues. The Secretariat is headed by Caroline Kende-Robb.
The Panel continually assesses opportunities and threats to Africa’s development, including how far commitments to and from Africa are being met. They use their judgment and experience to highlight pressing concerns, inspire honest debate amongst leaders and civil society, help mobilise resources and prompt effective action.
The APP’s work is aimed to contribute to shape policy priorities and high-level decisions. This includes:
sustained development across the region.
continent’s progress.
brought about by African leaders, institutions or international partners.
and entrepreneurship.
human development, such as climate change and maternal health. More concretely, the APP: Supports the activities of the Chair and Panel members in their interactions with African, G8, G20 and other leaders to encourage action on priority issues
received insufficient attention or are lacking a clear champion.
and G20 meetings.
synergies between key actors - political leaders, institutions, experts, civil society, and private sector.
an update of the latest development among Africa’s partners, the G8/G20 and multilateral and UN organizations.
The Panel is composed of the following members:
The Africa Progress Panel publishes a number of reports, briefs and newsletters. The purpose of all of these is to draw attention to specific blockages to the continent's development, propose ways to overcome them and catalyze actions on them. Publications can be found here: http://africaprogresspanel.org/en/our-work/publications/
These are succinct and rigorous policy briefs that highlight a pressing concern (e.g. the impact of climate change on Africa, the prevalence of maternal mortality or the need for domestic accountability). They are intended to inspire debate on the basis of success stories, blockages and recommendations for action and aimed at specific constituencies.
The bulletin is intended to provide Panel members, their staff and key stake holders with a snapshot of the issues and events of central concern to the APP.
The Africa Progress Panel publishes an annual report that takes stock of the continent's development and provides key policy recommendations to African leaders and their partners.
This year, the Africa Progress Report is dedicated to the transformative power of partnerships. While the idea of pooling a range of actors and their energy, creativity and resources around specific development challenges is hardly new, too few success stories are replicated or brought to scale to effect lasting structural change. Against this backdrop, this year’s report identifies partnership models that have already proven their transformative potential and assesses how to create the policy framework and incentive structure needed to spur further collaboration for progress. The report argues that all actors, including governments, international organizations, the private sector and civil society, can do more to facilitate the spread of successful models across sectors and countries, and that doing so is in their self-interest. It also argues that much work remains to be done to convince all sides of the inherent benefits of partnering for progress. This is the main purpose of this report.
Africa Progress Panel members Kofi Annan, Peter Eigen, Linah Mohohlo and Olusegun Obasanjo launched the Africa Progress Report 2010 on 25 May 2010 in Johannesburg. The landmark publication analyses the continent’s progress and issues key recommendations to African leaders and its international partners. The report was launched in coordination with the launch of ONE's 2010 DATA Report
An Agenda for Progress at a Time of Global Crisis: A Call for African Leadership The APP Annual Report was launched on June 10th at the World Economic Forum in Cape Town, South Africa by Kofi Annan, Linah Mohohlo and Graça Machel.
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