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Seville 2025: International Cooperation Test Its Contradictions

Summary by IRIS
On 3 July, the fourth international conference on financing for development was concluded, at the end of which the "Sevilla Commitment" was adopted. Approved unanimously, the document provides for a strengthening of existing funding through a "renewed global framework". Despite the ambitions it embodies, gaps are already apparent to the effectiveness of its implementation.
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Key messages Multilateralism, in Seville. Convened by the United Nations and hosted by Spain, the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development shows the persistence of the multilateral system, its needs for reform and Spain’s growing leadership in the international and global development agenda. There are advances (or positive signs) in the areas of debt, domestic resource mobilization, development banking and climate finance. Ho…

On 3 July, the fourth international conference on financing for development was concluded, at the end of which the "Sevilla Commitment" was adopted. Approved unanimously, the document provides for a strengthening of existing funding through a "renewed global framework". Despite the ambitions it embodies, gaps are already apparent to the effectiveness of its implementation.

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IRIS broke the news in on Wednesday, July 9, 2025.
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