Demands for public participation and social trust. The demand for public participation at all levels of society is growing and the availability -or lack - of mechanisms to harness this contribution can greatly influence the development itself. Indeed, an important aspect of inclusiveness is that people should not only benefit from development but should also have a voice in deciding the forms and nature of development to pursue.
Effective implementation. While effective engagement and communication plays a role in building social trust, implementation on the ground level speaks the loudest. Ensuring that plans, policies and programmes achieve the intended outcomes will need sustained and focussed effort, requiring increased local capacities of people and institutions. Resilience and sustainability.
Malaysia has been very successful in delivering the physical aspects of development, but in the future, the challenge is to ensure resilience and sustainability. Global partnerships. Malaysia has taken important steps to share its development experience through the MTCP and has shown that it is a global partner for development. This foreign policy element is very much in line with the inclusive nature of sustainable development goals, and providing opportunities for those in need.
Monitoring and Evaluation. There was no institution assigned to monitor and evaluate the MDGs. Past reviews have been adhoc. In the post period, a coordinated institutional effort should be put in place to facilitate and be accountable for monitoring the goals, targets and indicators. Lastly, in furthering the inclusive approach to development, there are the challenges with regard to refugees, undocumented and stateless persons.
These people pose a very real challenge especially for a nation that already hosts a substantial population of documented migrants. Malaysia has achieved good human development outcomes over time through systematic, dedicated and sustained efforts of numerous stakeholders. Malaysia has become an important and active contributor to global development as the nation graduates from being a recipient country to sharing its development experience with other countries. Organizational complexity is an unavoidable aspect Global Perspectives on Achieving Success in Competing in both high and low-cost operating envi Servant Leadership: Research and Practice.
Leaders represent a necessary part of any organiza Integrated Operations in the Oil and Gas Ind Today, new skills are required to compete in a glo Payment System Technologies and Functions: I Payment systems are the indispensable infrastructu Electronic Enterprise: Strategy and Architec He also said the new rules were unfair as they would be tantamount to taking equity from non-bumiputeras and giving them to bumiputeras.
It's like we prioritise foreigners compared to Malaysians just because they are not born as Malays and Muslims," Mr Syed Saddiq said. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim was similarly critical, saying such rules would benefit only select elites.
He pointed out that such policies had been pursued since , and while the social mobility of bumiputeras increased, equity benefited only "crony companies". Economist Jomo Kwame Sundaram - a former key economic adviser to the Pakatan Harapan administration from to - said that Mr Ismail's new rule could lower share values and worsen ethnic segregation in Malaysia. Composed of Malay-Muslims and aboriginal communities, bumiputeras make up 70 per cent of Malaysia's population.
Malay-Muslims account for 54 per cent of the group. Many bumiputeras are poor, with the Department of Statistics saying that they make up Join ST's Telegram channel here and get the latest breaking news delivered to you. We have been experiencing some problems with subscriber log-ins and apologise for the inconvenience caused.
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