The Financing for Development conference let us down: now the fight for feminist economic justice continues

Rachel NobleGender, In the news, Influencing

The lack of consistent attention to gender was concerning, as was the failure to tackle the Global South debt crisis – and the blinkered expansion of private finance, despite evidence of its harms. But, says Rachel Noble, as the world turns to implementation of the Financing for Development commitments, there are valuable opportunities to seize and build on, including for the women who do most of the world’s care work.

Water security is not just an engineering problem: it’s about power

Jo TrevorParticipation and Leadership, Power Shifts, Water

How to finance real water justice around the globe? Jo Trevor on four insights from a thought-provoking workshop at the recent Marmalade Festival in Oxford.

The UK’s Chancellor is driving disabled people deeper into poverty: she must think again

Samuel ThomasDisability, In the news, Poverty in the UK

Planned cuts to disability benefits will be devastating for people already struggling to pay their bills, with stroke survivors, amputees and people with serious mental health conditions among the groups targeted, says Samuel Thomas of anti-poverty charity Z2K.

What the iPhone has got to do with inequality

Franziska MagerBook Banter, Inequality

What is the role of the state in fostering innovation and economic growth? Mariana Mazzucato’s book, The Entrepreneurial State, reveals the role of the public sector in risk taking and the development of new technology, and argues that the state should receive more of the rewards. Research Assistant Franziska Mager reviews the book for Oxfam. Why I read it This …