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The Encyclopedia
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strategy

Meeting essential competency needs

Broader:
Satisfying needs
Narrower:
Using incompetence
Using due diligence
Increasing competence
Providing youth training
Standardizing competence
Reforming health systems
Reducing child mortality
Ensuring competent workers
Ensuring competent research
Ensuring military competence
Ensuring continuing competence
Regulating historical research
Demanding specialist expertise
Teaching basic literacy prowess
Developing government competence
Developing managerial competence
Extending local artisan competence
Facilitating daily work competence
Conducting social invention workshops
Strengthening analytical competence
Developing effective home management
Requiring necessary safety competence
Developing field cultivation competence
Achieving contemporary urban competence
Ensuring competent practice of agricultural sciences
Strengthening competence for intervention in the future
Developing international competence in population planning
Constrained by:
Covering up incompetence
Assuming youth incompetence
Relying on governmental incompetence
Facilitates:
Improving irrigation products and practices
Facilitated by:
Restoring potency
Procuring basic equipment
Values:
Inessential
Subjects:
Amenities → Living conditions
Perserverance → Perseverance
Type Classification:
F: Exceptional strategies
Related UN Sustainable Development Goals:
GOAL 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities

About the Encyclopedia

The Encyclopedia of World Problems and Human Potential is a unique, experimental research work of the Union of International Associations. It is currently published as a searchable online platform with profiles of world problems, action strategies, and human values that are interlinked in novel and innovative ways. These connections are based on a range of relationships such as broader and narrower scope, aggravation, relatedness and more. By concentrating on these links and relationships, the Encyclopedia is uniquely positioned to bring focus to the complex and expansive sphere of global issues and their interconnected nature.

The initial content for the Encyclopedia was seeded from UIA’s Yearbook of International Organizations. UIA’s decades of collected data on the enormous variety of association life provided a broad initial perspective on the myriad problems of humanity. Recognizing that international associations are generally confronting world problems and developing action strategies based on particular values, the initial content was based on the descriptions, aims, titles and profiles of international associations.

About UIA

The Union of International Associations (UIA) is a research institute and documentation centre, based in Brussels. It was established in 1907, by Henri la Fontaine (Nobel Peace Prize laureate of 1913), and Paul Otlet, a founding father of what is now called information science.
 

Non-profit, apolitical, independent, and non-governmental in nature, the UIA has been a pioneer in the research, monitoring and provision of information on international organizations, international associations and their global challenges since 1907.

www.uia.org