World Bank's Free Online Trainings, to Enhance Your Career Path: Undergraduate, Fresh Graduates, NGOs and Non-NGO
Financially, so many people are not capable of getting internationally certified higher education and degrees. Even when the money is available, there are some basic short courses we wish to enroll in but can't get it on a platter.
I have extensively built my knowledge and career from free online courses and they offer certificates at the end.
I always looked out for authentic, certified and accredited learning portals. The contents of the course syllable is also very important.
Today I am sharing very relevant short, upcoming courses, provided by World Bank's e-Institute.
Courses ranging from Governance, Budget and Finance, Health Management, Agriculture, Climate change, Gender Equality, Policy, Health Economics and many more.
Undergraduates in Health Sciences, Public Health, Agriculture Economics, Finance and Accounting, Social Work and other Social Sciences, these courses will help give you a better understanding of what areas you wish to go for and why you want to be there.
UPCOMING COURSES
LOW CARBON, RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT
Investment Planning toward Low Emissions DevelopmentThis course compiles knowledge and lessons learned during the design and implementation of investment plans funded through the Climate Investment Funds (CIF) Clean Technology Fund (CTF) and the Scaling Up Renewable Energy Program in Low Income Countries (SREP). The objective of this course is to teach policymakers, planners and climate change practitioners how to design and finance strategic plans and programs for low emissions development that go beyond a project-by-project approach.
Results Based Financing approaches can help to strengthen core health systems, making them more accountable and delivering greater value for money, by shifting the focus from inputs to results. However, countries and development agencies are faced with insufficient RBF-implementation capacity. This course will help to bridge that capacity gap.
From Detroit to Lahore, most cities around the world are facing financing challenges. Bankruptcy, budget deficits, unmaintained infrastructure, declining quality of services and increasing urban poverty are unfortunately too common headlines. At the same time, the world is becoming more complex and municipal officials are not only dealing with the day to day business which comes with running a city but, they also have to increasingly address issues of social inclusion, local economic development, job creation, crime and violence, climate change, floods, natural and man-made disasters as well as an increasing number of urban dwellers. Against this backdrop, there is both a sense of urgency and a huge opportunity for change.
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