Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

3 agosto, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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The aid crisis (Focus 2030)

 

Exterior plaza of the Seville Conference and Exhibition Centre (FIBES) at dusk, featuring its illuminated dome, a symmetrical colonnade, and a glass façade. In the foreground, a mosaic with maps and the dates 1492–1992 commemorates the fifth centenary of the discovery of America. Aid

  • This paper analyses the current aid crisis and its causes. It suggests that the multiplication over decades of objectives assigned to aid has prompted its fall. Expectations are not met, and the resulting trust crisis has caused criticism of aid both in donor and recipient countries. In the current state of confusion, two urgent actions are required:
    • First, restoring trust by regaining the truth about aid: this will require greater transparency about what aid is and is not, its objectives and modalities (from solidarity to investment promotion), and a stronger monitoring and accountability framework with key performance indicators aligned with assigned objectives.
    • Secondly, putting developing countries in the driver’s seat, with country development and financing strategies at the heart of the system: this will require a change of perspective on measurement and effectiveness, and impose a market approach to financing sustainable development with new mechanisms to improve market functioning and remedy its failures.
  • The paper suggests adjustments to existing measurements, practices and standards, including a new role for incumbent platforms like the OECD Development Assistance Committee to take those actions forward.
  • It also sheds a positive light on the future of aid that will remain a key component of any policy, even self-centric and self-interested, at the same time as it stresses the costs of delays in action and the need to get over the current aid existential crisis as soon as possible.

…MORE

 

3 agosto, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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Global Aids 2025

 

The AIDS response may be in crisis, but we have the power to transform

This report shows that at the end of 2024, just before a sudden collapse in funding triggered a crisis in the global AIDS response, the remarkable efforts of communities and governments had brought down the numbers of new HIV infections by 40% and of AIDS-related deaths by 56% since 2010. But it also shows that huge gaps in HIV prevention remained, with 1.3 million new infections in 2024—almost unchanged from the year before. 

We started 2025 excited about a transformative opportunity to tackle HIV with lenacapavir, a new long-acting medicine that can prevent HIV infection with twice-a-year injections. This is just one of a suite of new long-acting medicines. Within the next few years, annual injections and monthly tablets to prevent HIV could be a reality. We could be on the verge of an HIV prevention revolution that reduces new infections towards epidemic control—if the world comes together again to overcome monopolies, drive down prices, and ensure everyone who could benefit has access to these new, highly effective prevention tools.

But the sudden withdrawal of the single biggest contributor to the global HIV response disrupted treatment and prevention programmes around the world in early 2025. International assistance accounts for 80% of prevention programmes in low- and middle-income countries. UNAIDS modelling shows that if the funding permanently disappears, there could be an additional 6 million HIV infections and an additional 4 million AIDS-related deaths by 2029. At the same time, the number of countries criminalizing the populations most at risk of HIV has risen for the first time since UNAIDS began reporting. 

Communities, however, have been resilient. When formal systems broke down in Ethiopia, young volunteers formed WhatsApp groups to check on their peers, mothers banded together to support children’s treatment, and youth collectives used community radio to share health information. 

The consensus behind the old model of financing the HIV response may be coming to an end, but the international community is forging a new, more sustainable path. At the fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, Spain, nations embraced calls for debt relief, international tax cooperation and reform of international financial institutions—the first steps towards a new economic settlement that can give countries the fiscal space needed to invest in the global HIV response. 

Twenty-five of the 60 low- and middle-income countries included in this report have found ways to increase HIV spending from domestic resources into 2026. This is the future of the HIV response—nationally owned and led, sustainable, inclusive and multisectoral. 

This transformation cannot happen overnight, however. Global solidarity and renewed commitment from funding partners will be needed as countries plan and lead sustainable transitions towards self-financing. 

The prize, if we get there, could be remarkable. The HIV response has already saved 26.9 million lives. With an HIV prevention revolution, we could end AIDS as a public health threat, saving many more lives. And it could be better value for money too: UNAIDS estimates that if the world embraces new technologies, efficiencies and approaches, the annual cost of the HIV response could fall by around US$ 7 billion. 

The AIDS response may be in crisis, but we have the power to transform. Communities, governments, and the United Nations are rising to the challenge. Now, we must get to work.

Winnie Byanyima,
UNAIDS Executive Director

Download the executive summary

 
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3 agosto, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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Food security and nutrition in the world 2025

The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2025

Overview

This report is the annual global monitoring report for Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2 targets 2.1 and 2.2 – to end hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms. It presents the latest updated numbers on hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition, as well as new estimates on the affordability of a healthy diet. Previous editions have highlighted several major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition including economic shocks, extreme weather events, the COVID-19 pandemic and conflict. While there have been signs of recovery in recent years, recent food price inflation affecting countries globally, has slowed this progress.

This year’s report examines the impact of food price inflation on food security and nutrition.  It includes analyses on the effects of food price inflation on different food groups and on the affordability of healthy diets. Analysis of country policy responses to food price inflation reveal patterns of successful policy interventions that have helped countries mitigate the impacts of inflation on food security and nutrition. While global efforts have become more effective, disparities across regions persist. The report reaffirms that food price inflation, though persistent, is not insurmountable. Building resilience will require sustained investments, stronger policy coordination, increased transparency, prioritization of nutritious diets, and ongoing institutional innovation.

Download

Full report

Joint news release

Global hunger declines, but rises in Africa and western Asia: UN report

 

1 agosto, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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Internet governance resembles a dip clown car…

8

Internet governance is no longer a neutral process—it’s a power play. In this spotlight, Resident Senior Fellow Konstantinos Komaitis unpacks the slow unraveling of a once borderless web, exposing how states, tech giants, and international institutions are redrawing the digital map in their image, often sidelining the very principles that built the internet. Continue leyendo →

23 julio, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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Are Xi Jinping’s days numbered? (Geopolitical Futures)

For this episode of Talking Geopolitics, we turn our attention to China, where President Xi Jinping has been busy intensifying a crackdown on high-ranking officials. But although China’s president may seem like a permanent feature on the global stage, a shaky Chinese economy and circling rivals means that his rule is far from secure. Geopolitical Futures analyst and China expert, Victoria Herczegh, has been writing about this issue for GPF subscribers on our website, and now she joins host Christian Smith to discuss what lies behind Xi’s purges, what keeps him up at night, and what might happen when Xi leaves office.

 
 
 

23 julio, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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Trump contre la presse libre (RsF)

Chères amies, chers amis,

Le 20 juillet 2025 marquera les six mois du retour de Donald Trump au Bureau ovale. Après une avalanche de déclarations plus extravagantes les unes que les autres, l’effet de sidération s’estompe. Mais ses attaques contre la presse libre ne faiblissent pas. Pire : elles s’organisent, s’intensifient, et s’institutionnalisent. Son administration affiche des comportements de plus en plus hostiles à l’égard des médias, qui rappellent certains régimes autoritaires ou semi-autoritaires à travers le monde.

Le président Trump n’a jamais caché son mépris pour les médias. Mais depuis son retour au pouvoir, il ne se contente plus de les dénigrer, il agit contre eux. Continue leyendo →