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ADB Annual Meeting 2026

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. 

Seven Reflections – A Curated Digital Series

Seven recurring failures, unfolding across safeguards and energy policies, quietly challenge the Asian Development Bank’s promise to “Do No Harm.” From what remains unseen to who remains unheard, these “Seven Cardinal Sins” reveal patterns that shape how development is experienced on the ground. Step into these stories and read the short reflections of members and allies of the NGO Forum on ADB—voices that bring clarity, urgency, and a human face to what is too often left unspoken.

Message from the IC Chair

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Message from the Executive Director

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. 

In the lead-up to ADB's 2026 Annual Meeting in Samarkand, Fridays from the Field set out to bring something often missing from official narratives into clear view: the lived realities of communities affected by ADB-funded projects. Now captured in a series of publications, these stories speak of delayed disclosures, rushed consultations, fear in raising concerns, and grievance systems that fall short when they are needed most.

 

More than documentation, these pieces trace the deeper patterns behind these experiences—revealing how gaps in safeguards, accountability, and oversight continue to shape outcomes on the ground. Together, the publications stand as both record and reminder: that development is not measured by commitments alone, but by the lives it touches and the harms it must prevent.

Fridays from the Field

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Check the Forum Led Sessions

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Read the Forum Statement to ADB

This statement from the NGO Forum on ADB invites readers to look beyond the surface of development—beyond policy language, projections, and financial commitments—and into the realities shaped on the ground. Across Asia and the Pacific, communities navigate the weight of rising debt, energy insecurity, environmental risk, and the uneven costs of progress. Drawing from years of community-led monitoring and lived experience, the statement traces how these pressures intersect with gaps in safeguards, accountability, and oversight. It calls attention to a persistent imbalance: where the promises of development remain distant, while its consequences are immediate and deeply felt. In doing so, it urges a re-centering of priorities—toward systems that uphold dignity, protect rights, and ensure that development is not only delivered, but justly experienced.

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Publication

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ADB's Seven Cardinal Sins

Safeguards and Accountability Mechanism
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Non-Disclosure

Nazareth Del Pilar | NGO Forum on ADB

 

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Development, at its best, promises progress without harm—a careful balance between growth and responsibility. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has long embraced this vision, grounding its work in safeguards meant to protect people, communities, and the environment. Yet across projects and policies, a different story often emerges—one shaped by silences, gaps, and missed accountabilities.

This page traces two parallel narratives through what we call the “Seven Cardinal Sins.” One set reflects the fractures within ADB’s safeguards and accountability systems—where transparency falters, consultations exclude, and remedies remain out of reach. The other turns to ADB’s energy and climate agenda, where commitments to a just and sustainable transition are tested by practices that risk leaving communities behind.

Together, these “sins” are not merely a list of failures, but a pattern—one that reveals how structural weaknesses in governance and oversight can erode even the strongest principles, including the promise to “Do No Harm.” They invite us to look closer, to question deeper, and to imagine what accountability could truly mean.

As you explore this page, we invite you to read the short reflections of members and allies of the NGO Forum on ADB—voices grounded in lived experience, bearing witness to the impacts of development, and calling for change that is not only promised, but realized.

Because when accountability fails, it is not policies that bear the cost—but people, communities, and futures that cannot be undone.

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