Our Manifesto 2026-2030

Our manifesto
2026 - 2030

Co-created by Coalition members over 18 months, our Manifesto charts how we nurture values, exchange strategies, and grow resilient movements. In our Manifesto, we set the direction we want to take for 2026-2030, building on our strengths to respond to emerging opportunities and threats.

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Finance in Common Summit 2023

Our work

With our members and partners, we work to ensure that frontline communities have the information, power and resources to determine their own development paths, and to use their own voice to hold development banks and international companies accountable for their impacts on people and the planet. Read about our collective impacts here.

  • Connect: We link local communities and Indigenous Peoples with information, skills, tools, resources and allies for peer learning, capacity-building, solidarity, and collective action.
  • Protect: We facilitate safety, protection and advocacy support for those facing threats.
  • Mobilize: we co-create strategies with local communities, Indigenous Peoples and allies at national, regional, cross-regional and global levels to increase transparency, accountability and participation by public development banks.
  • Visibilize: we amplify the stories and perspectives of local communities and Indigenous Peoples, showcase their solutions, and expose the impacts of harmful development activities.

Stories, advocacy & campaigns

Check out our stories about community-led struggles, find out about our latest advocacy efforts, and join our collective campaigns!

 

 

Safety of journalists, COVID-19, and the role of public development banks

On 16 April 2021, as part of the Defenders in Development campaign, the Coalition presented a joint submission - together with press freedom organizations Article19, Comittee to Protect Journalists and IFEX - to the UN Human Rights Council for their upcoming report on Covid-19 and journalist ...

Covid-19 response in Myanmar: civil society organizations urge IFIs not to collaborate with the junta

International Financial Institutions (IFIs) and States must work directly with civil society and other stakeholders on COVID-19: collaborating with the junta on public health would jeopardize Myanmar’s COVID-19 response, legitimize the junta, and harm public health in the long term. On 17 ...

Too little, too late: World Bank rents military land despite partial loans freeze, and MFI inaction risks legitimizing the junta

Myanmar’s nationwide civil disobedience movement (CDM), based on “no recognition, no participation,” is key to stopping the military from consolidating power after its 1 February 2021 coup d’état. Multilateral finance institutions (MFIs) must support the CDM, stating they will not deal with ...

Our work in 2020: highlights, achievements, and next steps

As the year draws to an end, we would like to take a moment to celebrate our collective struggles and to reflect on the next steps ahead. In 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic posed unprecedented challenges, hurting already vulnerable communities the most and exacerbating structural problems. Yet, ...

Global Summit of Development Banks Fails to Learn from Destructive Past

In November, 450 public development banks from around the world met for the Finance in Common Summit at the Paris Peace Forum. They gathered to discuss how they can direct their combined investments of over USD 2 trillion – 10% of total investments in the world – “to support the ...

The dirty side of development finance

The question is simple: “Development for whom?” Juan*, a community leader from the micro-region of Ixquisis, in Western Guatemala, has been raising this question for years.When the Inter-American Development bank and other financiers began talking about building three hydroelectric ...

Mongolia: ADB’s road to poverty

The video and the blog below was prepared by OT-Watch, in collaboration with other CSOs. In Mongolia, in the Ger district of Ulaanbaatar, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) is funding the construction of a road. But the local population call it “the ADB road to poverty”. ADB has been ...

Mega Sporting Events: the anatomy of a development disaster

On the opening day of the Finance in Common summit, there will be a special session on "Mobilisation of Development Finance for Sustainable Sport", that will look at the role of public development finance in mega sporting events such as the Olympics. But can these events ever be sustainable? ...

Community voices: interview with Paubert Tsimanaoraty and Elisa Razafiniarivo

Ahead of the Finance in Common summit, we speak with Paubert Mahatante Tsimanaoraty (expert on environmental issues and fisheries) and Elisa Razafiniarivo (National Platform of Civil Society Organizations in Madagascar, member of FORUS) about the situation in Madagascar, development finance ...
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Coalition’s updates

In this section, you can find updates about our Coalition’s processes and structures (e.g.: updates from the Steering Committee, our strategy-setting process, etc.).

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Members Map

The Coalition has over 100 members based in around 50 countries.
Click here to check who our members are and learn more about their work.

OUR KEY AREAS OF WORK

 

CRE Homepage

COMMUNITY RESOURCE EXCHANGE

The CRE is a system to facilitate collaborations and co-develop strategies with and among communities, who are defending their rights in the context of international investments and development projects.

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DEFENDERS IN DEVELOPMENT

A global campaign to prevent and address risks that human rights defenders face when raising their voices about projects funded by development banks.

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REGIONAL WORK

Together with our members and allies, we work at the national and regional level to strengthen capacity, coordination, and advocacy around development finance and human rights.

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A community-led energy transition

With our Coalition’s members and partners across Asia, Africa and Latin America, we are pushing for a community-led response to climate change by transforming the economic and energy system, and making it more bottom up. As part of this collective and cross-regional work, we are

  • developing joint demands and a joint narrative on a community-led approach to the just energy transition and dignified, equitable energy access;
  • amplifying stories of communities negatively affected by extractivist energy projects and showcasing their resistance, perspectives, and ideas for a different economic model;
  • coordinating advocacy efforts and engaging in spaces such as the COP or the G20;
  • producing collaborative research on the negative impacts of the current approach to the energy transition and advocating for community-led alternatives.
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Toolkits & Guides

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About Development Finance & the Early Warning System

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Calendar