Bolstering accountability must be our new year’s resolution for 2019: 9 tools to help
15th January 2019
15th January 2019
"Who set that date? 7 years from now? What on earth were they thinking while people are dying? …If you or your child were dying of this, you might think about it differently." - Michael R. Bloomberg.
Bloomberg’s sharp condemnation following the announcement that the next UN High-Level Meeting on NCDs would not be held until 2025 echoed the shock, exasperation and dismay of the international NCD community. This scheduling risks prolonged procrastination, at a time when political leaders must urgently realign the trajectory towards meeting the targets that they have committed to for 2025 and 2030.
The role of developing, strengthening and leveraging robust accountability mechanisms to sustain and accelerate the NCD response for the coming seven years is therefore crucial, and we must place it at the heart of what we hope to achieve in 2019.
A discussion paper for the forthcoming Global Action Plan for healthy lives and wellbeing for all notes how ‘CSOs can serve as watchdogs and independent monitors to promote transparency and enhance accountability’and in ‘strengthening civic trust in public institutions and official data, shining a spotlight on corruption and initiating processes of healing in communities mistreated or failed by the health system’. The paper goes as far as to highlight the acute importance of this role in an era dominated by ‘fake news’. If we neglect accountability, our years of advocacy for NCD prevention and control is meaningless – without accountability, the international commitments we have worked so hard to secure are no more than a set of empty promises.
Accountability goes beyond numbers and data and pretty graphs - there are people behind these figures. It also allows us to identify patterns and trends which reveal ever more information on about the underlying factors which shape enabling or challenging environments for NCD prevention and control. And crucially, it makes governments sit up and listen. Speaking at the launch of the World Bank Human Capital index, Jim Yong Kim shared that ranking countries is 'a tough decision...because governments do not like to be ranked', but that it was evident that 'ranking is really what captivates attention.' The index is important to encourage countries to move up the rankings and invest in people. This same framing can be applied to accountability for the NCD response.
“There is something in a human being which makes us innately competitive people. When you see yourself lagging in an index, it gives you an impetus to do what you should have been doing anyway.” Asad Umar, Pakistan’s Federal Minister for Finance, Revenue, and Economic Affairs
In the past 18 months, invaluable tools have been released which reveal progress and gaps in the NCD response. Armed with this information, the NCD community can ensure that a resolution to hold governments accountable in 2019 becomes a reality, and that the momentum created in the lead up to the UN HLM continues.
The resources below build on a previous NCD Alliance blog post, which goes into more detail on exactly how these tools can be put to work to accelerate the global NCD response.
“Like physical tools, advocacy and accountability tools are no use left in a box to rust.”
Advocates have a wealth of tools at their fingertips. But, just like physical tools, they are no use left in a box to rust. We must learn how to use them, and to build an NCD response which is rooted in evaluation and accountability. If we need progress to have been made by the time of the next UN HLM in 2025, and for lives to be saved, then we must use those seven years to leverage the sophisticated data available and use it to hold governments accountable year in year out. The NCD community is far from a seven year slumber – we’re just getting started.
In the coming months, we will be sharing further resources on accountability to fuel the NCD response, and support our resolution to translate of data into action through accountabilty. Stay tuned! Do you have a handy accountability tool relevant to NCDs that you can recommend? Drop us a line or share on social media tagging @ncdalliance.
About the Author
Jess Beagley (@JessicaBeagley) is Policy Research Manager with NCD Alliance, and coordinates policy research and collates evidence to inform NCD Alliance’s advocacy priorities. She manages commissioned policy research, overseeing NCDA policy briefs and reports, as well as accountability work such as the NCD Countdown initiative. Jess also leads NCDA’s work on environmental health, in particular relating to urbanisation and climate change.