 I think it's it's been a very rich set of discussions that have been happening over the last two days and one of the things that has struck me is there are some concepts or rather some issues that keep coming up repeatedly but one gets the impression that we're not at a stage where we have a collective understanding of what those issues mean like the time transformation has has come up quite quite often but one wonders if we turn packet and we were to talk about what it means the context of least development countries what would that really entail particularly if we consider what was said yesterday about the rate at which less developed countries have been able to graduate from that category into developing countries or middle income countries and I think that even though we're beginning to talk about the triggers that will be required that discussion is not happening adequately enough and just sitting in the in the audience and I almost felt as if I would have loved to hear a bit more of the voices from these developed countries so that we could get a better understanding of what they consider to be critical shifts that are required I think we we've had snippets of voices from the LTCs I would have loved to hear a lot more from the LTCs than we have so far but I must say that we we've also benefited from hearing from actors who are actually at the forefront of where these negotiations are taking place so that we get a sense of what the limitations are in terms of you know pushing for a really radical or transformative agenda what one of the speakers said about needing to come up with the manageable mechanisms for delivering on the development aid is a reality check in terms of the trade-offs that take place with regards to what needs to happen but also the politics of negotiation and what gets to the table often when you're on the ground you don't get a sense of or it often doesn't make sense why transformative issues don't get traction in those spaces so I think it has been a good reality check in a sense and to be able to bounce off ideas from people who actually are sitting at the table in terms of negotiating for me it was important that that point is thrown in because the the sense one gets is each time we talk about the different realities that various populations are faced with and then once we start talking about the need for universal agenda I get the sense that we actually forget that in that universality we actually do need to be talking about differentiated pathways that your list developed countries need to be taking as well as your developed countries need to be taking so for me it was it was it was good to actually hear somebody at the end of the day say you know we will not achieve this without putting social justice on the agenda because they there's more and more voices that I actually say the post 2015 development agenda is not just about poverty but a universal and global and global agenda and there's a danger that the voices and the needs of your least developed countries and vulnerable groups get drowned in this call for a more global global global agenda we did learn yesterday that the least developed countries don't have the political clout the political voice that actually not that the dominant voice and the same can be said about different pockets of communities that are faced with the poverty and inequality that face with the greatest brunt of poverty and inequality throughout I am encouraged and I feel confident and I was actually quite pleased as well this afternoon when in the discussion around employment and job creation somebody called for very radical measures and called for an alternative to a new year in your liberal agenda even though we did not unpack that it was encouraging to see that that kind of discourse is actually happening in a space like this where you have UN negotiators you've got ambassadors you know you have largely mainstream economists and very little civil society so for me it was actually encouraging that that was an issue that was being raised by somebody who was representing a multi-government agency and not civil society so I think the the the the vision for a much more radical and ambitious agenda is one that is slowly becoming widely widely shared so yeah