Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe eTrade Readiness Assessment
UNCTAD works with Governments of developing countries and key stakeholders to improve their digital economy capabilities through eTrade Readiness Assessments. These assessments analyse the digital and e-commerce ecosystems of beneficiary countries and provide policy recommendations based on the challenges and opportunities for e-commerce development identified across the seven policy areas. To operationalize those recommendations, UNCTAD established an eTrade Implementation Support Mechanism in 2020 to increase in-country coordination support and build national capacities needed to ensure efficient and effective implementation of e-commerce policies and initiatives. The eTrade Readiness Assessment of Zimbabwe is the fortieth such assessment conducted by UNCTAD and the twenty-first in Africa. It helps identify the challenges and measures to be taken to support the development of e-commerce and digital trade in line with Zimbabwe’s vision for digital transformation and its development aspirations. The eT Ready development process has laid the foundation for strengthening policy dialogue and engagement with a broad range of national stakeholders.
Road Safety Performance Review - Zimbabwe
On 20 February 2018, the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure Development of Zimbabwe requested support from the Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Road Safety to prepare a Road Safety Performance Review (RSPR) for Zimbabwe. This review is part of a global initiative aimed at assisting governments in identifying the most fundamental road safety priority needs and offer recommendations. It assesses the progress made by Zimbabwe in managing its road safety performance action in terms of the United Nations Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011–2020 and the interventions in place to promote road safety.
Community Stabilization – An Approach for Facilitating Progress Towards Durable Solutions and Operationalizing the Humanitarian–Development–Peace Nexus: Lessons from Zimbabwe, Ethiopia and Somalia
Authored by Sam Grundy and Sarah Zingg, this Migration Research Series paper discusses the role of the community stabilization approach to transition away from humanitarian crises in order to lay the ground for attaining durable solutions for displaced persons and, ultimately, operationalize the humanitarian–development–peace nexus. The paper focuses on the multidimensional destabilizing impacts of displacement crises and the factors limiting opportunities for communities to transition away from acute vulnerability and aid dependence, and defines the community stabilization approach as a means to overcome these challenges. It then presents the community stabilization core programming principles framed through a community-based planning methodology – a practical community-driven, local government-led process intended to support the transition of impacted communities from displacement crises through improved stability – drawing on examples from Zimbabwe, Somalia and Ethiopia.
No. 32361. International atomic energy agency and zimbabwe
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY AND ZIMBABWE FOR THE APPLICATION OF SAFEGUARDS IN CONNECTION WITH THE TREATY ON THE NON-PROLIFERATION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS. VIENNA, 26 JUNE 1995 [United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1897, I-32361.]
