The World Summit for Social Development will be held
in Copenhagen from March 6 to 11, 1995. From the outset our aspirations
have been for the Social Summit to address the structural causes of
poverty, unemployment and social disintegration, rather than dealing
with their symptoms. Our contribution has been set out in various
documents, including the "Twelve Points to Save the Social Summit"
on which the current document is based.
Many UN conferences have been held in the past five
years which dealt directly or indirectly with the question of sustainable
development. In our view, the importance of the Social Summit lies
in its possibility to identify the connection between political, economic
and social factors for sustainable development and the interface of
those areas. Agenda 21 already identified the inter-relationship of
environmental sustainability and social development. The UN Vienna
Conference on Human Rights confirmed the universal right of all people
to development and civil, political, economic, social and cultural
rights. The important contribution of women to social and sustainable
development has been the core of the debate in the UN Cairo Conference
on Population and Development and the preparations for the UN Beijing
Conference on Women. We expect the Social Summit to seek a new paradigm
for social and economic relations among nations, communities and men
and women to reach peace, sustainability and justice.
Concretely the Draft Declaration for the Social Summit
should be commended. It embraces a broader vision of social development
and identifies the need to improve the economic environment to enable
social development. It also recognises the necessity to make the international
organisations more accountable to standards for social development
set by the international community. Even though the Declaration is
dealing with such key-issues, we are still looking for improvement.
The Declaration fails to note the necessary connection
between sustainable growth and social progress. This must be strengthened
in view of the relation between poverty, over consumption and unsustainable
production patterns in the North that have already been addressed
in Agenda 21.
Within the Declaration "poor" people are still seen
merely as victims. We feel it is regrettable that persons living in
poverty are viewed as people in need of aid, instead of as citizens
universally entitled to development and civil, political, economic,
social and cultural rights.
We have emphasised consistently that we believe the
commitments of our national governments for social development cannot
be implemented unless civil society is fully integrated in the implementation
of the programme. The commitments in this respect should be stronger.
A dialogue and consultation process at the national level regarding
the Social Summit is imperative, and NGOs should become part of the
national reporting. In line with the spirit of the Summit's preparations
adequate NGO involvement must be ensured during inter-sessional meetings.
The huge gap between the revised Programme of Action
and the spirit of the Declaration must be closed because the Programme
of Action as it currently stands can not be a basis for the realisation
of the Declaration. The Draft Programme of Action has, therefore,
to be brought in line with the Declaration. We need clear goals and
commitments for the Declaration. More particularly, for the Programme
of Action we need well-defined targets, clear time-tables, specified
measures for follow-up and implementation and instruments for monitoring
the implementation both at the international and the national level.
From the experience and analysis of our organisations
working in social development throughout the world the following points
are essential to the conclusions of the Summit:
1. The Social Summit should call on all governments
to ratify the six core Human Rights Treaties, the International Convention
Relating to the Protection of Migrant Workers and their Families,
and the relevant ILO conventions by the year 2000, without reservations
that are contradictory to their intention and meaning. The Programme
of Action should call on governments to recognise the legally binding
obligations of the Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
and to establish means for the further elaboration and determination
of those rights. The Social Summit should endorse the call from the
1993 World Conference on Human Rights for the creation of an optional
complaints procedure under the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights. The complaints procedure would allow individuals
and groups to bring alleged violations of economic and social rights
before an impartial international body. Governments should adopt a
National Strategy with specific actions and target dates for implementing
their obligations under the Human Rights Treaties and ILO-Conventions
related to social development. The strategy should be developed in
full consultation with NGOs and civil society, and its implementation
be monitored by an independent national commission which is drawn
mainly from civil society.
2. Structural adjustment programmes focused on export
led growth and which disregard wealth distribution and environmental
sustainability have been an obstacle for national governments to develop
such strategies. They fail to create employment, deepen social inequality
and poverty, and thereby feed social disintegration. The impact of
these policies falls most heavily on women. Trickle down economics
is not working - in the north or the south. The Summit must urge that
adjustment policies be fundamentally revised. Through its expert Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, ECOSOC should investigate
the underlying premises of World Bank and IMF policies, and measure
their impact against the criteria established for the Social Summit:
namely, do they exacerbate or alleviate the forces which exclude and
deprive people living in poverty from the enjoyment of their basic
rights. We, therefore, call for a reform of the multilateral structure,
which brings the accountability of the International Financial Institutions
- and the World Trade Organisation - into the UN system.
3. Those national and international programmes and
projects that have an impact on social development, should be monitored
through social impact studies, including those programmes implemented
by the International Financial Institutions and the World Trade Organisation.
Their programmes should be submitted to the relevant UN treaty monitoring
bodies through regular reports explaining what steps are being taken
to assist governments to comply with their economic, social and cultural
obligations under the treaties and both governments and international
organisations should provide the treaty monitoring bodies with evaluations
of the effectiveness of their poverty alleviation measures and provide
disaggregated data on the impact of their programmes on women, children
and vulnerable groups.
4. Low Income Countries should receive compensation
for losses experienced as a result of the Uruguay Round, so that resources
are made available for social development.
5. The UN expert bodies on economic, social and cultural
rights should also examine the implications of the new trade regime
and the operations of the World Trade Organisation. There is a need
for a social audit to gauge their impact on human welfare in the South.
The right of Nations to establish national food and agriculture policies
in order to eradicate hunger and ensure food security should be explicitly
recognised. There should be no patenting of life forms.
6. Governments should direct their economic policies
towards achieving sustainable economic development, not merely short-term
economic growth. They should guide and moderate the operation of market
forces, require fairness and honesty in business activities, provide
adequate public infrastructure, and invest heavily in human resources
(especially through education and health care). In particular, vigorous
action should be taken to ensure that market forces are not allowed
to degrade the community and environment in which they operate. Recognising
that the major actors of the macro-economic system are unaccountable,
the Social Summit should include as a condition for an enabling economic
environment the international monitoring and a code of conduct for
the operations of transnational corporations.
7. For a lot of countries the debt burden remains one
of the most important obstacles to social development. The Social
Summit should promote debt reduction initiatives that go beyond the
existing package of options. Most urgently, the writing off of multilateral
debt in Africa and all Low Income Countries is needed, since multilateral
debt has been identified as a major obstacle for releasing resources
for social development.
8. The UN target for Overseas Development Assistance
of 0.7% of GNP should be achieved in the year 2000 by all OECD countries,
including those who have yet to make such a commitment. To enable
social sector expenditure and to enable investment in the economy
of people living in poverty, effective spending of public resources
is required. To achieve social development that caters for a broad
range of fundamental human needs at least 50% of Official Development
Assistance should be allocated to social development areas, which
would include primary health care, reproductive health, education,
shelter, water and sanitation, credit, institutional support and work
guarantee schemes for people in poverty.
9. The Social Summit should establish effective mechanisms
to curb the arms trade as a contribution to minimising violent social
disintegration. Governments must decrease military expenditure to
make resources available for social development.
10. Recognising the central role of citizenship and
citizens' organisation in social development, the Programme of Action
should insist on governments committing themselves to provide legal
and regulatory frameworks for the contribution of different actors
so as to involve local, regional and national civil society in social
development. This requires the eradication of corrupt practices.
11. The gender specific aspects of each issue addressed
by the Social Summit should be explicitly identified in the policy
analysis and commitments taken by the Social Summit. Governments should
pay specific attention to the development, implementation and evaluation
of the impact of government policy on women, in order to create a
new social climate, and should recognise the central role that women
play in social and economic development. Governments should ensure
that effective laws and agencies prevent violence, harassment and
discrimination against women. The Social Summit should draw on the
contribution and respect of the unique cultures of people and integrate
sustainable indigenous and traditional practices which do not violate
women's rights into social development. Vigorous action should also
be taken to prevent discrimination on the grounds of disability, race,
age, religion or sexuality. Specific strategies to develop greater
respect for cultural diversity and for the needs of refugees and migrants
should be adopted by encouraging tolerance in society.
12. Data on social development and environmental sustainability,
including those related to health, education, income distribution,
disaggregated by gender, are lacking and need to be seriously gathered
and used as the basis for new indicators for sustainability and social
development. The Social Summit should vest principal responsibility
for the monitoring of the commitments undertaken in the Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The Committee's mandate and
methods of work should be adjusted accordingly to accommodate such
responsibilities.