23. november 2008
Kort afrapportering:
8. årlige konference i det Parlamentariske Netværk for Verdensbanken (PNoWB) i Paris.
“Delivering development in the midst of food, fuel and financial crisis, and the climate change challenge.â€
Fakta om verdensbanken:
Videre arbejde:
Yderligere information om Parliamentarian Network on the World bank - www.pnowb.org
Jeppe Kofod, MF
Den 22. november 2008
PNoWB at a Glance
“We’re not fans of the World
Bank. We’re critics when necessary, supporters when necessary. PNoWB promotes
the role of MPs in fighting poverty. We’re a hands-on implementation group,â€
Bert Koenders, MP, the Netherlands, PNoWB former Chair
• The Parliamentary Network on the World Bank was founded in May 2000 as an informal network of individual parliamentarians, to strengthen accountability and transparency in international financial institutions in general and in the Bank, in particular, as the largest donor of development programs throughout the world.
• PNoWB is an independent non-governmental organization regulated by the French Law of 1901 and is gathering more than 800 parliamentarians from 110 countries.
• PNoWB mobilizes parliamentarians to address global governance and poverty challenges, to promote transparency and accountability of international development and offers a unique platform of dialogue between parliamentarians and the World Bank.
• PNoWB closely works with the World Bank and many of its activities are undertaken in partnership with the World Bank, including the Annual Conference and the Field Visit Program.
• PNoWB also has Local and Regional Chapters in India, Japan, East Africa, West Africa and the Middle East and North Africa and the Balkans. The PNoWB
anticipates launching Latin America and Caribbean Chapter as well as a Southern Africa and South East Asia Chapters, in the coming year.
• PNoWB biggest funders are the Government of the Netherlands and the Government of Finland. PNoWB had also received funding from the UK Government, the Swiss Government, the Greek Government, the French Government, the United Nations Foundation and the World Bank and the IMF, who also contributed in kind.
PNoWB is open to parliamentarians from World Bank member states.
PNoWB members represent themselves and their constituents, and not their countries, parliaments or governments.
PNoWB History
The First World Bank conference with Parliamentarians, held in The Hague in May 2000, was organized by the European Vice Presidency of the World Bank with the intention to inform MPs (Members of Parliament) about the Bank\'s role in poverty reduction, to exchange views on the role of parliamentarians in international development and to engage MPs in reflection on future development challenges.
From this initial meeting, a core group of parliamentarians who were interested in pursuing the dialogue on a regular basis launched the initiative which has today become the Parliamentary Network on the World Bank (PNoWB).
Over the course of the following year the MPs further discussed the initiative, and during the Second Annual World Bank conference with Parliamentarians (held in London on January 28-29, 2001), the general assembly elected a steering committee of nine members who were entrusted with the task to run the initiative during the next two years.
As the network took shape, it became evident that the PNoWB needed to take steps to legally define itself as an entity independent of the World Bank. At the Third Annual Conference (held in Bern in May 2002), the assembled parliamentarians reiterated their desire to continue and formalize the initiative. The steering committee members decided to form a non-profit and non-partisan group with a view to structure the existing PNoWB network.
In February 2003, the founding Articles of Association were unanimously adopted by the steering committee, which transformed the PNoWB from a network of MPs to an independent
non-profit association under French law. Under these Articles, a new Board of Directors was elected at the Fourth Annual Conference, held in March of this year in Athens. While the PNoWB has undergone a critical change in the nature of its organization, it remains a non-partisan, member-driven network, open to parliamentarians engaged in the issues surrounding international development.