WHO Priorities: Achieve universal coverage, Address health emergencies, Promote healthier populations, Work of the WHO: Provides leadership and creates partnerships, Conducts research, Sets norms and standards, Develop policies, Provides technical support, Monitor health and wellbeing trends, Features of Australia's aid program: Contributes to sustainable economic growth, Involves poverty reduction, Strengthens private sector development, Enables human development, Works in the Indo-Pacific region, Partnerships in Australia's aid program: Non-government organisations, Other government departments, Private sector, Bilateral, Multilateral, Priority areas in Australia's aid program: Infrastructure, trade facilitation and international competitiveness, Agriculture, fisheries and water, Gender equality and empowering women and girls, Building resilience: humanitarian assistance, disaster risk reduction and social protection, Education and health, Effective governance: policies, institutions and functioning economies, Objectives of the SDGs: End extreme poverty, Fight injustice and inequalities, Tackle climate change, Rationale of the SDGs: A new set of goals and targets were needed when the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) finished in 2015, Progress in all areas was uneven across regions and countries, New global challenges had emerged that needed to be considered, The SDGs: No poverty, Zero Hunger, Good health and wellbeing, Quality education, Gender equality, Clean water and sanitation, Climate action,

HHD - Unit 4 AOS 2 (Key ideas)

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