UNITED NATIONS
WORLD SUMMIT Distr.
FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL
A/CONF.166/9
19 April 1995
Copenhagen, Denmark ENGLISH
6-12 March 1995 ORIGINAL: ENGLISH/FRENCH/SPANISH
REPORT OF THE WORLD SUMMIT FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT*
(Copenhagen, 6-12 March 1995)
* The present document is a preliminary version of the report of the
World Summit for Social Development.
CONTENTS
I. RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE SUMMIT .. 4
1. Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and Programme
of Action of the World Summit for Social Development ... 4
2. Expression of thanks to the people and Government of Denmark 92
3. Credentials of representatives to the World Summit for
Social Development ...92
II. ATTENDANCE AND ORGANIZATION OF WORK .....93
A. Date and place of the Summit ...93
B. Attendance ..93
C. Opening of the Summit and election of the President ....96
D. Messages from heads of State ...96
E. Adoption of the rules of procedure ..96
F. Adoption of the agenda ....97
G. Election of officers other than the President .97
H. Organization of work, including establishment of the Main
Committee ...98
I. Accreditation of intergovernmental organizations ..98
J. Accreditation of non-governmental organizations ...98
K. Appointment of the members of the Credentials Committee .98
III. GENERAL EXCHANGE OF VIEWS .....99
IV. REPORT OF THE MAIN COMMITTEE ..102
V. ADOPTION OF THE COPENHAGEN DECLARATION ON SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE
PROGRAMME OF ACTION OF THE WORLD SUMMIT FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT .....105
VI. REPORT OF THE CREDENTIALS COMMITTEE .....112
VII. MEETING OF HEADS OF STATE OR GOVERNMENT .113
VIII. ADOPTION OF THE REPORT OF THE SUMMIT ....121
IX. CLOSURE OF THE SUMMIT ....122
Annexes
I. LIST OF DOCUMENTS .. ..123
II. OPENING STATEMENTS ....125
III. CLOSING STATEMENT ....132
Chapter I
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE SUMMIT
Resolution 1
Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and Programme of Action of
the World Summit for Social Development*
* Adopted at the 14th plenary meeting on 12 March 1995; for the
discussion, see chap. V.
The World Summit for Social Development,
Having met in Copenhagen from 6 to 12 March 1995,
1. Adopts the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and the Programme
of Action of the World Summit for Social Development, which are annexed
to the present resolution;
2. Recommends to the General Assembly of the United Nations at its fiftieth
session that it endorses the Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme
of Action, as adopted by the Summit.
Annex I
COPENHAGEN DECLARATION ON SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
1. For the first time in history, at the invitation of the United Nations,
we gather as heads of State and Government to recognize the significance
of social development and human well-being for all and to give to these
goals the highest priority both now and into the twenty-first century.
2. We acknowledge that the people of the world have shown in different
ways an urgent need to address profound social problems, especially poverty,
unemployment and social exclusion, that affect every country. It is our
task to address both their underlying and structural causes and their
distressing consequences in order to reduce uncertainty and insecurity
in the life of people.
3. We acknowledge that our societies must respond more effectively to
the material and spiritual needs of individuals, their families and the
communities in which they live throughout our diverse countries and regions.
We must do so not only as a matter of urgency but also as a matter of
sustained and unshakeable commitment through the years ahead.
4. We are convinced that democracy and transparent and accountable governance
and administration in all sectors of society are indispensable foundations
for the realization of social and people-centred sustainable development.
5. We share the conviction that social development and social justice
are indispensable for the achievement and maintenance of peace and security
within and among our nations. In turn, social development and social justice
cannot be attained in the absence of peace and security or in the absence
of respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms. This essential
interdependence was recognized 50 years ago in the Charter of the United
Nations and has since grown ever stronger.
6. We are deeply convinced that economic development, social development
and environmental protection are interdependent and mutually reinforcing
components of sustainable development, which is the framework for our
efforts to achieve a higher quality of life for all people. Equitable
social development that recognizes empowering the poor to utilize environmental
resources sustainably is a necessary foundation for sustainable development.
We also recognize that broad-based and sustained economic growth in the
context of sustainable development is necessary to sustain social development
and social justice.
7. We recognize, therefore, that social development is central to the
needs and aspirations of people throughout the world and to the responsibilities
of Governments and all sectors of civil society. We affirm that, in both
economic and social terms, the most productive policies and investments
are those that empower people to maximize their capacities, resources
and opportunities. We acknowledge that social and economic development
cannot be secured in a sustainable way without the full participation
of women and that equality and equity between women and men is a priority
for the international community and as such must be at the centre of economic
and social development.
8. We acknowledge that people are at the centre of our concerns for sustainable
development and that they are entitled to a healthy and productive life
in harmony with the environment.
9. We gather here to commit ourselves, our Governments and our nations
to enhancing social development throughout the world so that all men and
women, especially those living in poverty, may exercise the rights, utilize
the resources and share the responsibilities that enable them to lead
satisfying lives and to contribute to the well-being of their families,
their communities and humankind. To support and promote these efforts
must be the overriding goals of the international community, especially
with respect to people suffering from poverty, unemployment and social
exclusion.
10. We make this solemn commitment on the eve of the fiftieth anniversary
of the United Nations, with a determination to capture the unique possibilities
offered by the end of the cold war to promote social development and social
justice. We reaffirm and are guided by the principles of the Charter of
the United Nations and by agreements reached at relevant international
conferences, including the World Summit for Children, held at New York
in 1990; 1/ the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development,
held at Rio de Janeiro in 1992; 2/ the World Conference on Human Rights,
held at Vienna in 1993; 3/ the Global Conference on the Sustainable Development
of Small Island Developing States, held at Bridgetown, Barbados in 1994;
4/ and the International Conference on Population and Development, held
at Cairo in 1994. 5/ By this Summit we launch a new commitment to social
development in each of our countries and a new era of international cooperation
between Governments and peoples based on a spirit of partnership that
puts the needs, rights and aspirations of people at the centre of our
decisions and joint actions.
11. We gather here in Copenhagen in a Summit of hope, commitment and
action. We gather with full awareness of the difficulty of the tasks that
lie ahead but with a conviction that major progress can be achieved, must
be achieved and will be achieved.
12. We commit ourselves to this Declaration and Programme of Action for
enhancing social development and ensuring human well-being for all throughout
the world now and into the twenty-first century. We invite all people
in all countries and in all walks of life, as well as the international
community, to join us in our common cause.
A. Current social situation and reasons for convening
the Summit
13. We are witnessing in countries throughout the world the expansion
of prosperity for some, unfortunately accompanied by an expansion of unspeakable
poverty for others. This glaring contradiction is unacceptable and needs
to be corrected through urgent actions.
14. Globalization, which is a consequence of increased human mobility,
enhanced communications, greatly increased trade and capital flows, and
technological developments, opens new opportunities for sustained economic
growth and development of the world economy, particularly in developing
countries. Globalization also permits countries to share experiences and
to learn from one another's achievements and difficulties, and promotes
a cross-fertilization of ideals, cultural values and aspirations. At the
same time, the rapid processes of change and adjustment have been accompanied
by intensified poverty, unemployment and social disintegration. Threats
to human well-being, such as environmental risks, have also been globalized.
Furthermore, the global transformations of the world economy are profoundly
changing the parameters of social development in all countries. The challenge
is how to manage these processes and threats so as to enhance their benefits
and mitigate their negative effects upon people.
15. There has been progress in some areas of social and economic development:
(a) The global wealth of nations has multiplied sevenfold in the past
50 years and international trade has grown even more dramatically;
(b) Life expectancy, literacy and primary education, and access to basic
health care, including family planning, have increased in the majority
of countries and average infant mortality has been reduced, including
in developing countries;
(c) Democratic pluralism, democratic institutions and fundamental civil
liberties have expanded. Decolonization efforts have achieved much progress,
while the elimination of apartheid is a historic achievement.
16. Yet we recognize that far too many people, particularly women and
children, are vulnerable to stress and deprivation. Poverty, unemployment
and social disintegration too often result in isolation, marginalization
and violence. The insecurity that many people, in particular vulnerable
people, face about the future - their own and their children's - is intensifying:
(a) Within many societies, both in developed and developing countries,
the gap between rich and poor has increased. Furthermore, despite the
fact that some developing countries are growing rapidly the gap between
developed and many developing countries, particularly the least developed
countries, has widened;
(b) More than one billion people in the world live in abject poverty,
most of whom go hungry every day. A large proportion, the majority of
whom are women, have very limited access to income, resources, education,
health care or nutrition, particularly in Africa and the least developed
countries;
(c) There are also serious social problems of a different nature and
magnitude in countries with economies in transition and countries experiencing
fundamental political, economic and social transformations;
(d) The major cause of the continued deterioration of the global environment
is the unsustainable pattern of consumption and production, particularly
in industrialized countries, which is a matter of grave concern, aggravating
poverty and imbalances;
(e) Continued growth in the world's population, its structure and distribution,
and its relationship with poverty and social and gender inequality challenge
the adaptive capacities of Governments, individuals, social institutions
and the natural environment;
(f) Over 120 million people world wide are officially unemployed and
many more are underemployed. Too many young people, including those with
formal education, have little hope of finding productive work;
(g) More women than men live in absolute poverty and the imbalance continues
to grow, with serious consequences for women and their children. Women
carry a disproportionate share of the problems of coping with poverty,
social disintegration, unemployment, environmental degradation and the
effects of war;
(h) One of the world's largest minorities, more than 1 in 10, are people
with disabilities, who are too often forced into poverty, unemployment
and social isolation. In addition, in all countries older persons may
be particularly vulnerable to social exclusion, poverty and marginalization;
(i) Millions of people world wide are refugees or internally displaced
persons. The tragic social consequences have a critical effect on the
social stability and development of their home countries, their host countries
and their respective regions.
17. While these problems are global in character and affect all countries,
we clearly acknowledge that the situation of most developing countries,
and particularly of Africa and the least developed countries, is critical
and requires special attention and action. We also acknowledge that these
countries, which are undergoing fundamental political, economic and social
transformation, including countries in the process of consolidating peace
and democracy, require the support of the international community.
18. Countries with economies in transition, which are also undergoing
fundamental political, economic and social transformation, require the
support of the international community as well.
19. Other countries that are undergoing fundamental political, economic
and social transformation require the support of the international community
as well.
20. The goals and objectives of social development require continuous
efforts to reduce and eliminate major sources of social distress and instability
for the family and for society. We pledge to place particular focus on
and give priority attention to the fight against the world-wide conditions
that pose severe threats to the health, safety, peace, security and well-being
of our people. Among these conditions are chronic hunger; malnutrition;
illicit drug problems; organized crime; corruption; foreign occupation;
armed conflicts; illicit arms trafficking, terrorism, intolerance and
incitement to racial, ethnic, religious and other hatreds; xenophobia;
and endemic, communicable and chronic diseases. To this end, coordination
and cooperation at the national level and especially at the regional and
international levels should be further strengthened.
21. In this context, the negative impact on development of excessive
military expenditures, the arms trade, and investment for arms production
and acquisition must be addressed.
22. Communicable diseases constitute a serious health problem in all
countries and are a major cause of death globally; in many cases, their
incidence is increasing. These diseases are a hindrance to social development
and are often the cause of poverty and social exclusion. The prevention,
treatment and control of these diseases, covering a spectrum from tuberculosis
and malaria to the human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (HIV/AIDS), must be given the highest priority.
23. We can continue to hold the trust of the people of the world only
if we make their needs our priority. We know that poverty, lack of productive
employment and social disintegration are an offence to human dignity.
We also know that they are negatively reinforcing and represent a waste
of human resources and a manifestation of ineffectiveness in the functioning
of markets and economic and social institutions and processes.
24. Our challenge is to establish a people-centred framework for social
development to guide us now and in the future, to build a culture of cooperation
and partnership, and to respond to the immediate needs of those who are
most affected by human distress. We are determined to meet this challenge
and promote social development throughout the world.
B. Principles and goals
25. We heads of State and Government are committed to a political, economic,
ethical and spiritual vision for social development that is based on human
dignity, human rights, equality, respect, peace, democracy, mutual responsibility
and cooperation, and full respect for the various religious and ethical
values and cultural backgrounds of people. Accordingly, we will give the
highest priority in national, regional and international policies and
actions to the promotion of social progress, justice and the betterment
of the human condition, based on full participation by all.
26. To this end, we will create a framework for action to:
(a) Place people at the centre of development and direct our economies
to meet human needs more effectively;
(b) Fulfil our responsibility for present and future generations by ensuring
equity among generations and protecting the integrity and sustainable
use of our environment;
(c) Recognize that, while social development is a national responsibility,
it cannot be successfully achieved without the collective commitment and
efforts of the international community;
(d) Integrate economic, cultural and social policies so that they become
mutually supportive, and acknowledge the interdependence of public and
private spheres of activity;
(e) Recognize that the achievement of sustained social development requires
sound, broadly based economic policies;
(f) Promote democracy, human dignity, social justice and solidarity at
the national, regional and international levels; ensure tolerance, non-violence,
pluralism and non-discrimination, with full respect for diversity within
and among societies;
(g) Promote the equitable distribution of income and greater access to
resources through equity and equality of opportunity for all;
(h) Recognize the family as the basic unit of society, and acknowledge
that it plays a key role in social development and as such should be strengthened,
with attention to the rights, capabilities and responsibilities of its
members. In different cultural, political and social systems various forms
of family exist. It is entitled to receive comprehensive protection and
support;
(i) Ensure that disadvantaged and vulnerable persons and groups are included
in social development, and that society acknowledges and responds to the
consequences of disability by securing the legal rights of the individual
and by making the physical and social environment accessible;
(j) Promote universal respect for, and observance and protection of,
all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, including the right
to development; promote the effective exercise of rights and the discharge
of responsibilities at all levels of society; promote equality and equity
between women and men; protect the rights of children and youth; and promote
the strengthening of social integration and civil society;
(k) Reaffirm the right of self-determination of all peoples, in particular
of peoples under colonial or other forms of alien domination or foreign
occupation, and the importance of the effective realization of this right,
as enunciated, inter alia, in the Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action 3/ adopted at the World Conference on Human Rights;
(l) Support progress and security for people and communities whereby
every member of society is enabled to satisfy his or her basic human needs
and to realize his or her personal dignity, safety and creativity;
(m) Recognize and support indigenous people in their pursuit of economic
and social development, with full respect for their identity, traditions,
forms of social organization and cultural values;
(n) Underline the importance of transparent and accountable governance
and administration in all public and private national and international
institutions;
(o) Recognize that empowering people, particularly women, to strengthen
their own capacities is a main objective of development and its principal
resource. Empowerment requires the full participation of people in the
formulation, implementation and evaluation of decisions determining the
functioning and well-being of our societies;
(p) Assert the universality of social development and outline a new and
strengthened approach to social development, with a renewed impetus for
international cooperation and partnership; (q) Improve the possibility
of older persons achieving a better life;
(r) Recognize that the new information technologies and new approaches
to access to and use of technologies by people living in poverty can help
in fulfilling social development goals; and therefore recognize the need
to facilitate access to such technologies;
(s) Strengthen policies and programmes that improve, ensure and broaden
the participation of women in all spheres of political, economic, social
and cultural life, as equal partners, and improve their access to all
resources needed for the full exercise of their fundamental rights;
(t) Create the political, legal, material and social conditions that
allow for the voluntary repatriation of refugees in safety and dignity
to their countries of origin, and the voluntary and safe return of internally
displaced persons to their places of origin and their smooth reintegration
into their societies;
(u) Emphasize the importance of the return of all prisoners of war, persons
missing in action and hostages to their families, in accordance with international
conventions, in order to reach full social development.
27. We acknowledge that it is the primary responsibility of States to
attain these goals. We also acknowledge that these goals cannot be achieved
by States alone. The international community, the United Nations, the
multilateral financial institutions, all regional organizations and local
authorities, and all actors of civil society need to positively contribute
their own share of efforts and resources in order to reduce inequalities
among people and narrow the gap between developed and developing countries
in a global effort to reduce social tensions, and to create greater social
and economic stability and security. Radical political, social and economic
changes in the countries with economies in transition have been accompanied
by a deterioration in their economic and social situation. We invite all
people to express their personal commitment to enhancing the human condition
through concrete actions in their own fields of activities and through
assuming specific civic responsibilities.
C. Commitments
28. Our global drive for social development and the recommendations for
action contained in the Programme of Action are made in a spirit of consensus
and international cooperation, in full conformity with the purposes and
principles of the Charter of the United Nations, recognizing that the
formulation and implementation of strategies, policies, programmes and
actions for social development are the responsibility of each country
and should take into account the economic, social and environmental diversity
of conditions in each country, with full respect for the various religious
and ethical values, cultural backgrounds and philosophical convictions
of its people, and in conformity with all human rights and fundamental
freedoms. In this context, international cooperation is essential for
the full implementation of social development programmes and actions.
29. On the basis of our common pursuit of social development, which aims
at social justice, solidarity, harmony and equality within and among countries,
with full respect for national sovereignty and territorial integrity,
as well as policy objectives, development priorities and religious and
cultural diversity, and full respect for all human rights and fundamental
freedoms, we launch a global drive for social progress and development
embodied in the following commitments.
Commitment 1
------------
We commit ourselves to creating an economic, political, social, cultural
and legal environment that will enable people to achieve social development.
To this end, at the national level, we will:
(a) Provide a stable legal framework, in accordance with our constitutions,
laws and procedures, and consistent with international law and obligations,
which includes and promotes equality and equity between women and men,
full respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms and the rule
of law, access to justice, the elimination of all forms of discrimination,
transparent and accountable governance and administration and the encouragement
of partnership with free and representative organizations of civil society;
(b) Create an enabling economic environment aimed at promoting more equitable
access for all to income, resources and social services;
(c) Reinforce, as appropriate, the means and capacities for people to
participate in the formulation and implementation of social and economic
policies and programmes through decentralization, open management of public
institutions and strengthening the abilities and opportunities of civil
society and local communities to develop their own organizations, resources
and activities;
(d) Reinforce peace by promoting tolerance, non-violence and respect
for diversity, and by settling disputes by peaceful means;
(e) Promote dynamic, open, free markets, while recognizing the need to
intervene in markets, to the extent necessary, to prevent or counteract
market failure, promote stability and long-term investment, ensure fair
competition and ethical conduct, and harmonize economic and social development,
including the development and implementation of appropriate programmes
that would entitle and enable people living in poverty and the disadvantaged,
especially women, to participate fully and productively in the economy
and society;
(f) Reaffirm, promote and strive to ensure the realization of the rights
set out in relevant international instruments and declarations, such as
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 6/ the Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights 7/ and the Declaration on the Right to Development,
8/ including those relating to education, food, shelter, employment, health
and information, particularly in order to assist people living in poverty;
(g) Create the comprehensive conditions to allow for the voluntary repatriation
of refugees in safety and dignity to their countries of origin, and the
voluntary and safe return of internally displaced persons to their places
of origin and their smooth reintegration into their societies.
At the international level, we will:
(h) Promote international peace and security and make and support all
efforts to settle international disputes by peaceful means in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations;
(i) Strengthen international cooperation for achieving social
development;
(j) Promote and implement policies to create a supportive external economic
environment, through, inter alia, cooperation in the formulation and implementation
of macroeconomic policies, trade liberalization, mobilization and/or provision
of new and additional financial resources that are both adequate and predictable
and mobilized in a way that maximizes the availability of such resources
for sustainable development, using all available funding sources and mechanisms,
enhanced financial stability, and more equitable access of developing
countries to global markets, productive investments and technologies and
appropriate knowledge, with due consideration to the needs of countries
with economies in transition;
(k) Strive to ensure that international agreements relating to trade,
investment, technology, debt and official development assistance are implemented
in a manner that promotes social development;
(l) Support, particularly through technical and financial cooperation,
the efforts of developing countries to achieve rapid, broadly based sustainable
development. Particular consideration should be given to the special needs
of small island and land-locked developing countries and the least developed
countries;
(m) Support, through appropriate international cooperation, the efforts
of countries with economies in transition to achieve rapid broadly based
sustainable development;
(n) Reaffirm and promote all human rights, which are universal, indivisible,
interdependent and interrelated, including the right to development as
a universal and inalienable right and an integral part of fundamental
human rights, and strive to ensure that they are respected, protected
and observed.
Commitment 2
------------
We commit ourselves to the goal of eradicating poverty in the world,
through decisive national actions and international cooperation, as an
ethical, social, political and economic imperative of humankind. To this
end, at the national level, in partnership with all actors of civil society
and in the context of a multidimensional and integrated approach, we will:
(a) Formulate or strengthen, as a matter of urgency, and preferably by
the year 1996, the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty,
9/ national policies and strategies geared to substantially reducing overall
poverty in the shortest possible time, reducing inequalities and eradicating
absolute poverty by a target date to be specified by each country in its
national context;
(b) Focus our efforts and policies to address the root causes of poverty
and to provide for the basic needs of all. These efforts should include
the elimination of hunger and malnutrition; the provision of food security,
education, employment and livelihood, primary health-care services including
reproductive health care, safe drinking water and sanitation, and adequate
shelter; and participation in social and cultural life. Special priority
will be given to the needs and rights of women and children, who often
bear the greatest burden of poverty, and to the needs of vulnerable and
disadvantaged groups and persons;
(c) Ensure that people living in poverty have access to productive resources,
including credit, land, education and training, technology, knowledge
and information, as well as to public services, and participate in decision-making
on a policy and regulatory environment that would enable them to benefit
from expanding employment and economic opportunities;
(d) Develop and implement policies to ensure that all people have adequate
economic and social protection during unemployment, ill health, maternity,
child-rearing, widowhood, disability and old age;
(e) Ensure that national budgets and policies are oriented, as necessary,
to meeting basic needs, reducing inequalities and targeting poverty, as
a strategic objective;
(f) Seek to reduce inequalities, increase opportunities and access to
resources and income, and remove any political, legal, economic and social
factors and constraints that foster and sustain inequality. At the international
level, we will:
(g) Strive to ensure that the international community and international
organizations, particularly the multilateral financial institutions, assist
developing countries and all countries in need in their efforts to achieve
our overall goal of eradicating poverty and ensuring basic social protection;
(h) Encourage all international donors and multilateral development banks
to support policies and programmes for the attainment, in a sustained
manner, of the specific efforts of the developing countries and all countries
in need relating to people-centred sustainable development and to meeting
basic needs for all; to assess their existing programmes in consultation
with the concerned developing countries to ensure the achievement of the
agreed programme objectives; and to seek to ensure that their own policies
and programmes will advance the attainment of agreed development goals
that focus on meeting basic needs for all and eradicating absolute poverty.
Efforts should be made to ensure that participation by the people concerned
is an integral part of such programmes;
(i) Focus attention on and support the special needs of countries and
regions in which there are substantial concentrations of people living
in poverty, in particular in South Asia, and which therefore face serious
difficulties in achieving social and economic development.
Commitment 3
------------
We commit ourselves to promoting the goal of full employment as a basic
priority of our economic and social policies, and to enabling all men
and women to attain secure and sustainable livelihoods through freely
chosen productive employment and work. To this end, at the national level,
we will:
(a) Put the creation of employment, the reduction of unemployment and
the promotion of appropriately and adequately remunerated employment at
the centre of strategies and policies of Governments, with full respect
for workers' rights and with the participation of employers, workers and
their respective organizations, giving special attention to the problems
of structural, long-term unemployment and underemployment of youth, women,
people with disabilities, and all other disadvantaged groups and individuals;
(b) Develop policies to expand work opportunities and productivity in
both rural and urban sectors by achieving economic growth, investing in
human resource development, promoting technologies that generate productive
employment, and encouraging self-employment, entrepreneurship, and small
and medium-sized enterprises;
(c) Improve access to land, credit, information, infrastructure and other
productive resources for small and micro-enterprises, including those
in the informal sector, with particular emphasis on the disadvantaged
sectors of society;
(d) Develop policies to ensure that workers and employers have the education,
information and training needed to adapt to changing economic conditions,
technologies and labour markets;
(e) Explore innovative options for employment creation and seek new approaches
to generating income and purchasing power;
(f) Foster policies that enable people to combine their paid work with
their family responsibilities;
(g) Pay particular attention to women's access to employment, theprotection
of their position in the labour market and the promotion of equal treatment
of women and men, in particular with respect to pay;
(h) Take due account of the importance of the informal sector in our
employment development strategies with a view to increasing its contribution
to the eradication of poverty and to social integration in developing
countries, and to strengthening its linkages with the formal economy;
(i) Pursue the goal of ensuring quality jobs, and safeguard the basic
rights and interests of workers and to this end, freely promote respect
for relevant International Labour Organization conventions, including
those on the prohibition of forced and child labour, the freedom of association,
the right to organize and bargain collectively, and the principle of non-discrimination.
At the international level, we will:
(j) Ensure that migrant workers benefit from the protections provided
by relevant national and international instruments, take concrete and
effective measures against the exploitation of migrant workers, and encourage
all countries to consider the ratification and full implementation of
the relevant international instruments on migrant workers;
(k) Foster international cooperation in macroeconomic policies, liberalization
of trade and investment so as to promote sustained economic growth and
the creation of employment, and exchange experiences on successful policies
and programmes aimed at increasing employment and reducing unemployment.
Commitment 4
------------
We commit ourselves to promoting social integration by fosteringsocieties
that are stable, safe and just and that are based on the promotion and
protection of all human rights, as well as on non-discrimination, tolerance,
respect for diversity, equality of opportunity, solidarity, security,
and participation of all people, including disadvantaged and vulnerable
groups and persons.
To this end, at the national level, we will:
(a) Promote respect for democracy, the rule of law, pluralism and diversity,
tolerance and responsibility, non-violence and solidarity by encouraging
educational systems, communication media and local communities and organizations
to raise people's understanding and awareness of all aspects of social
integration;
(b) Formulate or strengthen policies and strategies geared to the elimination
of discrimination in all its forms and the achievement of social integration
based on equality and respect for human dignity;
(c) Promote access for all to education, information, technology and
know-how as essential means for enhancing communication and participation
in civil, political, economic, social and cultural life, and ensure respect
for civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights;
(d) Ensure the protection and full integration into the economy and society
of disadvantaged and vulnerable groups and persons;
(e) Formulate or strengthen measures to ensure respect for and protection
of the human rights of migrants, migrant workers and their families, to
eliminate the increasing acts of racism and xenophobia in sectors of many
societies, and to promote greater harmony and tolerance in all societies;
(f) Recognize and respect the right of indigenous people to maintain
and develop their identity, culture and interests, support their aspirations
for social justice and provide an environment that enables them to participate
in the social, economic and political life of their country;
(g) Foster the social protection and full integration into the economy
and society of veterans, including veterans and victims of the Second
World War and other wars;
(h) Acknowledge and encourage the contribution of people of all age groups
as equally and vitally important for the building of a harmonious society,
and foster dialogue between generations in all parts of society;
(i) Recognize and respect cultural, ethnic and religious diversity, promote
and protect the rights of persons belonging to national, ethnic, religious
or linguistic minorities, and take measures to facilitate their full participation
in all aspects of the political, economic, social, religious and cultural
life of their societies and in the economic progress and social development
of their countries;
(j) Strengthen the ability of local communities and groups with common
concerns to develop their own organizations and resources and to propose
policies relating to social development, including through the activities
of non-governmental organizations;
(k) Strengthen institutions that enhance social integration, recognizing
the central role of the family and providing it with an environment that
assures its protection and support. In different cultural, political and
social systems, various forms of the family exist;
(l) Address the problems of crime, violence and illicit drugs as factors
of social disintegration.
At the international level, we will:
(m) Encourage the ratification of, the avoidance as far as possible of
the resort to reservations to, and the implementation of international
instruments and adherence to internationally recognized declarations relevant
to the elimination of discrimination and the promotion and protection
of all human rights;
(n) Further enhance international mechanisms for the provision of humanitarian
and financial assistance to refugees and host countries and promote appropriate
shared responsibility;
(o) Promote international cooperation and partnership on the basis of
equality, mutual respect and mutual benefit.
Commitment 5
------------
We commit ourselves to promoting full respect for human dignity and to
achieving equality and equity between women and men, and to recognizing
and enhancing the participation and leadership roles of women in political,
civil, economic, social and cultural life and in development.
To this end, at the national level, we will:
(a) Promote changes in attitudes, structures, policies, laws and practices
in order to eliminate all obstacles to human dignity, equality and equity
in the family and in society, and promote full and equal participation
of urban and rural women and women with disabilities in social, economic
and political life, including in the formulation, implementation and follow-up
of public policies and programmes;
(b) Establish structures, policies, objectives and measurable goals to
ensure gender balance and equity in decision-making processes at all levels,
broaden women's political, economic, social and cultural opportunities
and independence, and support the empowerment of women, including through
their various organizations, especially those of indigenous women, those
at the grass-roots level, and those of poverty-stricken communities, including
through affirmative action, where necessary, and also through measures
to integrate a gender perspective in the design and implementation of
economic and social policies;
(c) Promote full and equal access of women to literacy, education and
training, and remove all obstacles to their access to credit and other
productive resources and to their ability to buy, hold and sell property
and land equally with men;
(d) Take appropriate measures to ensure, on the basis of equality of
men and women, universal access to the widest range of health-care services,
including those relating to reproductive health care, consistent with
the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population
and Development; 5/
(e) Remove the remaining restrictions on women's rights to own land,
inherit property or borrow money, and ensure women's equal right to work;
(f) Establish policies, objectives and goals that enhance the equality
of status, welfare and opportunity of the girl child, especially in regard
to health, nutrition, literacy and education, recognizing that gender
discrimination starts at the earliest stages of life;
(g) Promote equal partnership between women and men in family and community
life and society, emphasize the shared responsibility of men and women
in the care of children and support for older family members, and emphasize
men's shared responsibility and promote their active involvement in responsible
parenthood and responsible sexual and reproductive behaviour;
(h) Take effective measures, including through the enactment and enforcement
of laws, and implement policies to combat and eliminate all forms of discrimination,
exploitation, abuse and violence against women and girl children, in accordance
with relevant international instruments and declarations;
(i) Promote and protect the full and equal enjoyment by women of all
human rights and fundamental freedoms;
(j) Formulate or strengthen policies and practices to ensure that women
are enabled to participate fully in paid work and in employment through
such measures as positive action, education, training, appropriate protection
under labour legislation, and facilitating the provision of quality child
care and other support services.
At the international level, we will:
(k) Promote and protect women's human rights and encourage the ratification
of, if possible by the year 2000, the avoidance, as far as possible, of
the resort to reservations to, and the implementation of the provisions
of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women 10/ and other relevant instruments, as well as the implementation
of the Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women,
11/ the Geneva Declaration for Rural Women, 12/ and the Programme of Action
of the International Conference on Population and Development;
(l) Give specific attention to the preparations for the Fourth World
Conference on Women, to be held at Beijing in September 1995, and to the
implementation and follow-up of the conclusions of that Conference;
(m) Promote international cooperation to assist developing countries,
at their request, in their efforts to achieve equality and equity and
the empowerment of women;
(n) Devise suitable means to recognize and make visible the full extent
of the work of women and all their contributions to the national economy,
including contributions in the unremunerated and domestic sectors.
Commitment 6
------------
We commit ourselves to promoting and attaining the goals of universal
and equitable access to quality education, the highest attainable standard
of physical and mental health, and the access of all to primary health
care, making particular efforts to rectify inequalities relating to social
conditions and without distinction as to race, national origin, gender,
age or disability; respecting and promoting our common and particular
cultures; striving to strengthen the role of culture in development; preserving
the essential bases of people-centred sustainable development; and contributing
to the full development of human resources and to social development.
The purpose of these activities is to eradicate poverty, promote full
and productive employment and foster social integration.
To this end, at the national level, we will:
(a) Formulate and strengthen time-bound national strategies for the eradication
of illiteracy and universalization of basic education, which includes
early childhood education, primary education and education for the illiterate,
in all communities, in particular for the introduction, if possible, of
national languages in the educational system and by support of the various
means of non-formal education, striving to attain the highest possible
standard of learning;
(b) Emphasize lifelong learning by seeking to improve the quality of
education to ensure that people of all ages are provided with useful knowledge,
reasoning ability, skills, and the ethical and social values required
to develop their full capacities in health and dignity and to participate
fully in the social, economic and political process of development. In
this regard, women and girls should be considered a priority group;
(c) Ensure that children, particularly girls, enjoy their rights and
promote the exercise of those rights by making education, adequate nutrition
and health care accessible to them, consistent with the Convention on
the Rights of the Child, 13/ and recognizing the rights, duties and responsibilities
of parents and other persons legally responsible for children;
(d) Take appropriate and affirmative steps to enable all children and
adolescents to attend and complete school and to close the gender gap
in primary, secondary, vocational and higher education;
(e) Ensure full and equal access to education for girls and women, recognizing
that investing in women's education is the key element in achieving social
equality, higher productivity and social returns in terms of health, lower
infant mortality and the reduced need for high fertility;
(f) Ensure equal educational opportunities at all levels for children,
youth and adults with disabilities, in integrated settings, taking full
account of individual differences and situations;
(g) Recognize and support the right of indigenous people to education
in a manner that is responsive to their specific needs, aspirations and
cultures, and ensure their full access to health care;
(h) Develop specific educational policies, with gender perspective, and
design appropriate mechanisms at all levels of society in order to accelerate
the conversion of general and specific information available world wide
into knowledge, and the conversion of that knowledge into creativity,
increased productive capacity and active participation in society;
(i) Strengthen the links between labour market and education policies,
realizing that education and vocational training are vital elements in
job creation and in combating unemployment and social exclusion in our
societies, and emphasize the role of higher education and scientific research
in all plans of social development;
(j) Develop broad-based education programmes that promote and strengthen
respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the right
to development, promote the values of tolerance, responsibility and respect
for the diversity and rights of others, and provide training in peaceful
conflict resolution, in recognition of the United Nations Decade for Human
Rights Education (1995-2005); 14/
(k) Focus on learning acquisition and outcome, broaden the means and
scope of basic education, enhance the environment for learning and strengthen
partnerships among Governments, non-governmental organizations, the private
sector, local communities, religious groups and families to achieve the
goal of education for all;
(l) Establish or strengthen both school-based and community-based health
education programmes for children, adolescents and adults, with special
attention to girls and women, on a whole range of health issues, as one
of the prerequisites for social development, recognizing the rights, duties
and responsibilities of parents and other persons legally responsible
for children consistent with the Convention on the Rights of the Child;
(m) Expedite efforts to achieve the goals of national Health-for-All
strategies, based on equality and social justice in line with the Alma-Ata
Declaration on Primary Health Care, 15/ by developing or updating country
action plans or programmes to ensure universal, non-discriminatory access
to basic health services, including sanitation and drinking water, to
protect health, and to promote nutrition education and preventive health
programmes;
(n) Strive to ensure that persons with disabilities have access to rehabilitation
and other independent living services and assistive technology to enable
them to maximize their well-being, independence and full participation
in society;
(o) Ensure an integrated and intersectoral approach so as to provide
for the protection and promotion of health for all in economic and social
development, taking cognizance of the health dimensions of policies in
all sectors;
(p) Seek to attain the maternal and child health objectives, especially
the objectives of reducing child and maternal mortality, of the World
Summit for Children, the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development and the International Conference on Population and Development;
(q) Strengthen national efforts to address more effectively the growing
HIV/AIDS pandemic by providing necessary education and prevention services,
working to ensure that appropriate care and support services are available
and accessible to those affected by HIV/AIDS, and taking all necessary
steps to eliminate every form of discrimination against and isolation
of those living with HIV/AIDS;
(r) Promote, in all educational and health policies and programmes, environmental
awareness, including awareness of unsustainable patterns of consumption
and production.
At the international level, we will:
(s) Strive to ensure that international organizations, in particular
the international financial institutions, support these objectives, integrating
them into their policy programmes and operations as appropriate. This
should be complemented by renewed bilateral and regional cooperation;
(t) Recognize the importance of the cultural dimension of development
to ensure respect for cultural diversity and that of our common human
cultural heritage. Creativity should be recognized and promoted;
(u) Request the specialized agencies, notably the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization and the World Health Organization,
as well as other international organizations dedicated to the promotion
of education, culture and health, to give greater emphasis to the overriding
goals of eradicating poverty, promoting full and productive employment
and fostering social integration;
(v) Strengthen intergovernmental organizations that utilize various forms
of education to promote culture; disseminate information through education
and communication media; help spread the use of technologies; and promote
technical and professional training and scientific research;
(w) Provide support for stronger, better coordinated global actions against
major diseases that take a heavy toll of human lives, such as malaria,
tuberculosis, cholera, typhoid fever and HIV/AIDS; in this context, continue
to support the joint and co-sponsored United Nations programme on HIV/AIDS;
16/
(x) Share knowledge, experience and expertise and enhance creativity,
for example by promoting the transfer of technology, in the design and
delivery of effective education, training and health programmes and policies,
including substance-abuse awareness, prevention and rehabilitation programmes,
which will result, inter alia, in endogenous capacity-building;
(y) Intensify and coordinate international support for education and
health programmes based on respect for human dignity and focused on the
protection of all women and children, especially against exploitation,
trafficking and harmful practices, such as child prostitution, female
genital mutilation and child marriages.
Commitment 7
------------
We commit ourselves to accelerating the economic, social and human resource
development of Africa and the least developed countries.
To this end, we will:
(a) Implement, at the national level, structural adjustment policies,
which should include social development goals, as well as effective development
strategies that establish a more favourable climate for trade and investment,
give priority to human resource development and further promote the development
of democratic institutions;
(b) Support the domestic efforts of Africa and the least developed countries
to implement economic reforms, programmes to increase food security, and
commodity diversification efforts through international cooperation, including
South-South cooperation and technical and financial assistance, as well
as trade and partnership;
(c) Find effective, development-oriented and durable solutions to external
debt problems, through the immediate implementation of the terms ofdebt
forgiveness agreed upon in the Paris Club in December 1994, which encompass
debt reduction, including cancellation or other debt-relief measures;
invite the international financial institutions to examine innovative
approaches to assist low-income countries with a high proportion of multilateral
debt, with a view to alleviating their debt burdens; and develop techniques
of debt conversion applied to social development programmes and projects
in conformity with Summit priorities. These actions should take into account
the mid-term review of the United Nations New Agenda for the Development
of Africa in the 1990s 17/ and the Programme of Action for the Least Developed
Countries for the 1990s, 18/ and should be implemented as soon as possible;
(d) Ensure the implementation of the strategies and measures for the
development of Africa decided by the international community, and support
the reform efforts, development strategies and programmes decided by the
African countries and the least developed countries;
(e) Increase official development assistance, both overall and for social
programmes, and improve its impact, consistent with countries' economic
circumstances and capacities to assist, and consistent with commitments
in international agreements;
(f) Consider ratifying the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
in Those Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification,
Particularly in Africa, 19/ and support African countries in the implementation
of urgent action to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of
drought;
(g) Take all necessary measures to ensure that communicable diseases,
particularly HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, do not restrict or reverse
the progress made in economic and social development.
Commitment 8
------------
We commit ourselves to ensuring that when structural adjustment programmes
are agreed to they include social development goals, in particular eradicating
poverty, promoting full and productive employment, and enhancingsocial
integration.
To this end, at the national level, we will:
(a) Promote basic social programmes and expenditures, in particular those
affecting the poor and the vulnerable segments of society, and protect
them from budget reductions, while increasing the quality and effectiveness
of social expenditures;
(b) Review the impact of structural adjustment programmes on social development,
including, where appropriate, by means of gender-sensitive social impact
assessments and other relevant methods, in order to develop policies to
reduce their negative effects and improve their positive impact; the cooperation
of international financial institutions in the review could be requested
by interested countries;
(c) Promote, in the countries with economies in transition, an integrated
approach to the transformation process, addressing the social consequences
of reforms and human resource development needs;
(d) Reinforce the social development components of all adjustment policies
and programmes, including those resulting from the globalization of markets
and rapid technological change, by designing policies to promote more
equitable and enhanced access to income and resources;
(e) Ensure that women do not bear a disproportionate burden of the transitional
costs of such processes.
At the international level, we will:
(f) Work to ensure that multilateral development banks and other donors
complement adjustment lending with enhanced targeted social development
investment lending;
(g) Strive to ensure that structural adjustment programmes respond to
the economic and social conditions, concerns and needs of each country;
(h) Enlist the support and cooperation of regional and international
organizations and the United Nations system, in particular the Bretton
Woods institutions, in the design, social management and assessment of
structural adjustment policies, and in implementing social development
goals and integrating them into their policies, programmes and operations.
Commitment 9
------------
We commit ourselves to increasing significantly and/or utilizing more
efficiently the resources allocated to social development in order to
achieve the goals of the Summit through national action and regional and
international cooperation.
To this end, at the national level, we will:
(a) Develop economic policies to promote and mobilize domestic savings
and attract external resources for productive investment, and seek innovative
sources of funding, both public and private, for social programmes, while
ensuring their effective utilization;
(b) Implement macroeconomic and micro-economic policies to ensure sustained
economic growth and sustainable development to support social development;
(c) Promote increased access to credit for small and micro-enterprises,
including those in the informal sector, with particular emphasis on the
disadvantaged sectors of society;
(d) Ensure that reliable statistics and statistical indicators are used
to develop and assess social policies and programmes so that economic
and social resources are used efficiently and effectively;
(e) Ensure that, in accordance with national priorities and policies,
taxation systems are fair, progressive and economically efficient, cognizant
of sustainable development concerns, and ensure effective collection of
tax liabilities;
(f) In the budgetary process, ensure transparency and accountability
in the use of public resources, and give priority to providing and improving
basic social services;
(g) Undertake to explore new ways of generating new public and private
financial resources, inter alia, through the appropriate reduction of
excessive military expenditures, including global military expenditures
and the arms trade, and investments for arms production and acquisition,
taking into consideration national security requirements, so as to allow
possible allocation of additional funds for social and economic development;
(h) Utilize and develop fully the potential and contribution of cooperatives
for the attainment of social development goals, in particular the eradication
of poverty, the generation of full and productive employment, and the
enhancement of social integration.
At the international level, we will:
(i) Seek to mobilize new and additional financial resources that are
both adequate and predictable and are mobilized in a way that maximizes
the availability of such resources and uses all available funding sources
and mechanisms, inter alia, multilateral, bilateral and private sources,
including on concessional and grant terms;
(j) Facilitate the flow to developing countries of international finance,
technology and human skill in order to realize the objective of providing
new and additional resources that are both adequate and predictable;
(k) Facilitate the flow of international finance, technology and human
skill towards the countries with economies in transition;
(l) Strive for the fulfilment of the agreed target of 0.7 per cent of
gross national product for overall official development assistance as
soon as possible, and increase the share of funding for social development
programmes, commensurate with the scope and scale of activities required
to achieve the objectives and goals of the present Declaration and the
Programme of Action of the Summit;
(m) Increase the flow of international resources to meet the needs of
countries facing problems relating to refugees and displaced persons;
(n) Support South-South cooperation, which can take advantage of the
experience of developing countries that have overcome similar difficulties;
(o) Ensure the urgent implementation of existing debt-relief agreements
and negotiate further initiatives, in addition to existing ones, to alleviate
the debts of the poorest and heavily indebted low-income countries at
an early date, especially through more favourable terms of debt forgiveness,
including application of the terms of debt forgiveness agreed upon in
the Paris Club in December 1994, which encompass debt reduction, including
cancellation or other debt-relief measures; where appropriate, these countries
should be given a reduction of their bilateral official debt sufficient
to enable them to exit from the rescheduling process and resume growth
and development; invite the international financial institutions to examine
innovative approaches to assist low-income countries with a high proportion
of multilateral debt, with a view to alleviating their debt burdens; develop
techniques of debt conversion applied to social development programmes
and projects in conformity with Summit priorities;
(p) Fully implement the Final Act of the Uruguay Round of multilateral
trade negotiations 20/ as scheduled, including the complementary provisions
specified in the Marrakesh Agreement establishing the World Trade Organization,
20/ in recognition of the fact that broadly based growth in incomes, employment
and trade are mutually reinforcing, taking into account the need to assist
African countries and the least developed countries inevaluating the impact
of the implementation of the Final Act so that they can benefit fully;
(q) Monitor the impact of trade liberalization on the progress made in
developing countries to meet basic human needs, giving particular attention
to new initiatives to expand their access to international markets;
(r) Give attention to the needs of countries with economies in transition
with respect to international cooperation and financial and technical
assistance, stressing the need for the full integration of economies in
transition into the world economy, in particular to improve market access
for exports in accordance with multilateral trade rules, taking into account
the needs of developing countries;
(s) Support United Nations development efforts by a substantial increase
in resources for operational activities on a predictable, continuous and
assured basis, commensurate with the increasing needs of developing countries,
as stated in General Assembly resolution 47/199, and strengthen the capacity
of the United Nations and the specialized agencies to fulfil their responsibilities
in the implementation of the outcome of the World Summit for Social Development.
Commitment 10
-------------
We commit ourselves to an improved and strengthened framework for international,
regional and subregional cooperation for social development, in a spirit
of partnership, through the United Nations and other multilateral institutions.
To this end, at the national level, we will:
(a) Adopt the appropriate measures and mechanisms for implementing and
monitoring the outcome of the World Summit for Social Development, with
the assistance, upon request, of the specialized agencies, programmes
and regional commissions of the United Nations system, with broad participation
of all sectors of civil society.
At the regional level, we will:
(b) Pursue such mechanisms and measures as are necessary and appropriate
in particular regions or subregions. The regional commissions, in cooperation
with regional intergovernmental organizations and banks, could convene,
on a biennial basis, a meeting at a high political level to evaluate progress
made towards fulfilling the outcome of the Summit, exchange views on their
respective experiences and adopt appropriate measures. The regional commissions
should report, through the appropriate mechanisms, to the Economic and
Social Council on the outcome of such meetings.
At the international level, we will:
(c) Instruct our representatives to the organizations and bodies of the
United Nations system, international development agencies and multilateral
development banks to enlist the support and cooperation of these organizations
and bodies to take appropriate and coordinated measures for continuous
and sustained progress in attaining the goals and commitments agreed to
by the Summit. The United Nations and the Bretton Woods institutions should
establish regular and substantive dialogue, including at the field level,
for more effective and efficient coordination of assistance for social
development;
(d) Refrain from any unilateral measure not in accordance with international
law and the Charter of the United Nations that creates obstacles to trade
relations among States;
(e) Strengthen the structure, resources and processes of the Economic
and Social Council and its subsidiary bodies, and other organizations
within the United Nations system that are concerned with economic and
social development;
(f) Request the Economic and Social Council to review and assess, on
the basis of reports of national Governments, the regional commissions,
relevant functional commissions and specialized agencies, progress made
by the international community towards implementing the outcome of the
World Summit for Social Development, and to report to the General Assembly,
accordingly, for its appropriate consideration and action;
(g) Request the General Assembly to hold a special session in the year
2000 for an overall review and appraisal of the implementation of the
outcome of the Summit and to consider further actions and initiatives.
Notes
1/ See First Call for Children (New York, United Nations Children's
Fund, 1990).
2/ See Report of the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, Rio de Janeiro, 3-14 June 1992, vol. I, Resolutions Adopted
by
the Conference (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.93.I.8 and
corrigenda).
3/ See Report of the World Conference on Human Rights, Vienna,
14-25 June 1993 (A/CONF.157/24 (Part I)).
4/ See Report of the Global Conference on the Sustainable Development
of Small Island Developing States, Bridgetown, Barbados, 25 April-6 May
1994
(United Nations publication, Sales No. E.94.I.18 and corrigenda).
5/ See Report of the International Conference on Population and
Development, Cairo, 5-13 September 1994 (A/CONF.171/13 and Add.1).
6/ General Assembly resolution 217 A (III).
7/ General Assembly resolution 2200 A (XXI), annex.
8/ General Assembly resolution 41/128, annex.
9/ See General Assembly resolution 48/183.
10/ General Assembly resolution 34/180, annex.
11/ Report of the World Conference to Review and Appraise the
Achievements of the United Nations Decade for Women: Equality, Development
and Peace, Nairobi, 15-26 July 1985 (United Nations publication, Sales
No.
E.85.IV.10), chap. I, sect. A.
12/ A/47/308, annex.
13/ General Assembly resolution 44/25, annex.
14/ See General Assembly resolution 49/184.
15/ See Report of the International Conference on Primary Health Care,
Alma-Ata, Kazakhstan, 6-12 September 1978 (Geneva, World Health Organization,
1978).
16/ See Economic and Social Council resolution 1994/24.
17/ General Assembly resolution 46/151, annex, sect. II.
18/ Report of the Second United Nations Conference on the Least
Developed Countries, Paris, 3-14 September 1990 (A/CONF.147/18), part
one.
19/ A/49/84/Add.2, annex, appendix II.
20/ See The Results of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade
Negotiations: The Legal Texts (Geneva, GATT secretariat, 1994).
Annex II
PROGRAMME OF ACTION OF THE WORLD SUMMIT FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
CONTENTS
Chapter Paragraphs Page
INTRODUCTION ....1 - 3 29
I. AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT .. 4 - 17 30
II. ERADICATION OF POVERTY ..18 - 41 41
III. EXPANSION OF PRODUCTIVE EMPLOYMENT AND REDUCTION OF
UNEMPLOYMENT ...42 - 65 57
IV. SOCIAL INTEGRATION ..66 - 81 68
V. IMPLEMENTATION AND FOLLOW-UP .82 - 100 79
INTRODUCTION
1. The present Programme of Action outlines policies, actions and measures
to implement the principles and fulfil the commitments enunciated in the
Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development adopted by the World Summit
for Social Development. Our success will be based on the results that
we achieve.
2. Actions are recommended to create, in a framework of sustained economic
growth and sustainable development, a national and international environment
favourable to social development, to eradicate poverty, to enhance productive
employment and reduce unemployment, and to foster social integration.
All the recommended actions are linked, either in the requirements for
their design, including the participation of all concerned, or in their
consequences for the various facets of the human condition. Policies to
eradicate poverty, reduce disparities and combat social exclusion require
the creation of employment opportunities, and would be incomplete and
ineffective without measures to eliminate discrimination and promote participation
and harmonious social relationships among groups and nations. Enhancing
positive interaction between environmental, economic and social policies
is also essential for success in the longer term. The well-being of people
also requires the exercise of all human rights and fundamental freedoms,
access to the provision of good education, health care and other basic
public services, and the development of harmonious relations within communities.
Social integration, or the capacity of people to live together with full
respect for the dignity of each individual, the common good, pluralism
and diversity, non-violence and solidarity, as well as their ability to
participate in social, cultural, economic and political life, encompasses
all aspects of social development and all policies. It requires the protection
of the weak, as well as the right to differ, to create and to innovate.
It calls for a sound economic environment, as well as for cultures based
on freedom and responsibility. It also calls for the full involvement
of both the State and civil society.
3. Many of the issues mentioned in the present Programme of Action have
been addressed in greater detail by previous world conferences concerned
with questions closely related to the different aspects of social development.
The Programme of Action was elaborated against the background of, and
taking into account the commitments, principles and recommendations of,
these other conferences, and is also based on the experience of many countries
in promoting social objectives in the context of their particular conditions.
The special importance of the Programme of Action lies in its integrated
approach and its attempt to combine many different actions for poverty
eradication, employment creation and social integration in coherent national
and international strategies for social development. The implementation
of the recommendations contained in the Programme of Action is the sovereign
right of each country, consistent with national laws and development priorities,
with full respect for the various religious and ethical values and cultural
backgrounds of its people, and in conformity with all human rights and
fundamental freedoms. Each country will also take action in accordance
with its evolving capacities. The outcomes of relevant international conferences
should also be duly taken into account in the implementation of the present
Programme of Action.
Chapter I
AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
Basis for action and objectives
4. Social development is inseparable from the cultural, ecological, economic,
political and spiritual environment in which it takes place. It cannot
be pursued as a sectoral initiative. Social development is also clearly
linked to the development of peace, freedom, stability and security, both
nationally and internationally. To promote social development requires
an orientation of values, objectives and priorities towards the well-being
of all and the strengthening and promotion of conducive institutions and
policies. Human dignity, all human rights and fundamental freedoms, equality,
equity and social justice constitute the fundamental values of all societies.
The pursuit, promotion and protection of these values, among others, provides
the basic legitimacy of all institutions and all exercise of authority
and promotes an environment in which human beings are at the centre of
concern for sustainable development. They are entitled to a healthy and
productive life in harmony with nature.
5. The economies and societies of the world are becoming increasingly
interdependent. Trade and capital flows, migrations, scientific and technological
innovations, communications and cultural exchanges are shaping the global
community. The same global community is threatened by environmental degradation,
severe food crises, epidemics, all forms of racial discrimination, xenophobia,
various forms of intolerance, violence and criminality and the risk of
losing the richness of cultural diversity. Governments increasingly recognize
that their responses to changing circumstances and their desires to achieve
sustainable development and social progress will require increased solidarity,
expressed through appropriate multilateral programmes and strengthened
international cooperation. Such cooperation is particularly crucial to
ensure that countries in need of assistance, such as those in Africa and
the least developed countries, can benefit from the process of globalization.
6. Economic activities, through which individuals express their initiative
and creativity and which enhance the wealth of communities, are a fundamental
basis for social progress. But social progress will not be realized simply
through the free interaction of market forces. Public policies are necessary
to correct market failures, to complement market mechanisms, to maintain
social stability and to create a national and international economic environment
that promotes sustainable growth on a global scale. Such growth should
promote equity and social justice, tolerance, responsibility and involvement.
7. The ultimate goal of social development is to improve and enhance
the quality of life of all people. It requires democratic institutions,
respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms, increased and equal
economic opportunities, the rule of law, the promotion of respect for
cultural diversity and the rights of persons belonging to minorities,
and an active involvement of civil society. Empowerment and participation
are essential for democracy, harmony and social development. All members
of society should have the opportunity and be able to exercise the right
and responsibility to take an active part in the affairs of the community
in which they live. Gender equality and equity and the full participation
of women in all economic, social and political activities are essential.
The obstacles that have limited the access of women to decision-making,
education, health-care services and productive employment must be eliminated
and an equitable partnership between men and women established, involving
men's full responsibility in family life. It is necessary to change the
prevailing social paradigm of gender to usher in a new generation of women
and men working together to create a more humane world order.
8. Against this background, we will promote an enabling environment based
on a people-centred approach to sustainable development, with the following
features:
~ Broad-based participation and involvement of civil society in the formulation
and implementation of decisions determining the functioning and well-being
of our societies;
~ Broad-based patterns of sustained economic growth and sustainable development
and the integration of population issues into economic and development
strategies, which will speed up the pace of sustainable development and
poverty eradication and contribute to the achievement of population objectives
and an improved quality of life of the population;
~ Equitable and non-discriminatory distribution of the benefits of growth
among social groups and countries and expanded access to productive resources
for people living in poverty;
~ An interaction of market forces conducive to efficiency and social
development;
~ Public policies that seek to overcome socially divisive disparities
and that respect pluralism and diversity;
~ A supportive and stable political and legal framework that promotes
the mutually reinforcing relationship between democracy, development and
all human rights and fundamental freedoms;
~ Political and social processes that avoid exclusion while respecting
pluralism and diversity, including religious and cultural diversity;
~ A strengthened role for the family in accordance with the principles,
goals and commitments of the Copenhagen Declaration on
Social Development and those of the International Conference on Population
and Development, as well as for community and civil society;
~ Expanded access to knowledge, technology, education, health-care services
and information;
~ Increased solidarity, partnership and cooperation at all levels;
~ Public policies that empower people to enjoy good health and productivity
throughout their lives;
~ Protection and conservation of the natural environment in the context
of people-centred sustainable development.
Actions
A. A favourable national and international
economic environment
9. The promotion of mutually reinforcing, broad-based, sustained economic
growth and sustainable development on a global scale, as well as growth
in production, a non-discriminatory and multilateral rule-based international
trading system, employment and incomes, as a basis for social development,
requires the following actions:
(a) Promoting the establishment of an open, equitable, cooperative and
mutually beneficial international economic environment;
(b) Implementing sound and stable macroeconomic and sectoral policies
that encourage broad-based, sustained economic growth and development
that is sustainable and equitable, that generate jobs, and that are geared
towards eradicating poverty and reducing social and economic inequalities
and exclusion;
(c) Promoting enterprise, productive investment and expanded access to
open and dynamic markets in the context of an open, equitable, secure,
non-discriminatory, predictable, transparent and multilateral rule-based
international trading system, and to technologies for all people, particularly
those living in poverty and the disadvantaged, as well as for the least
developed countries;
(d) Implementing fully and as scheduled the Final Act of the Uruguay
Round of multilateral trade negotiations; 1/
(e) Refraining from any unilateral measure not in accordance with international
law and the Charter of the United Nations that creates obstacles to trade
relations among States, impedes the full realization of social and economic
development and hinders the well-being of the population in the affected
countries;
(f) Increasing food production, through the sustainable development of
the agricultural sector and improvement of market opportunities, and improving
access to food by low-income people in developing countries, as a means
of alleviating poverty, eliminating malnutrition and raising their standards
of living;
(g) Promoting the coordination of macroeconomic policies at the national,
subregional, regional and international levels in order to promote an
international financial system that is more conducive to stable and sustained
economic growth and sustainable development through, inter alia, a higher
degree of stability in financial markets, reducing the risk of financial
crisis, improving the stability of exchange rates, stabilizing and striving
for low real interest rates in the long run and reducing the uncertainties
of financial flows;
(h) Establishing, strengthening or rehabilitating, inter alia, through
capacity-building where necessary, national and international structures,
processes and resources available, to ensure appropriate consideration
and coordination of economic policy, with special emphasis on social development;
(i) Promoting or strengthening capacity-building in developing countries,
particularly in Africa and the least developed countries, to develop social
activities;
(j) Ensuring that, in accordance with Agenda 21 2/ and the various consensus
agreements, conventions and programmes of action adopted within the framework
of the follow-up to the outcome of the United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development, broad-based, sustained economic growth and sustainable
development respects the need to protect the environment and the interests
of future generations;
(k) Ensuring that the special needs and vulnerabilities of small island
developing States are adequately addressed in order to enable them to
achieve sustained economic growth and sustainable development with equity
by implementing the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development
of Small Island Developing States. 3/
10. To ensure that the benefits of global economic growth are equitably
distributed among countries, the following actions are essential:
(a) Continuing efforts to alleviate the onerous debt and debt-service
burdens connected with the various types of debt of many developing countries,
on the basis of an equitable and durable approach and, where appropriate,
addressing the full stock of debt of the poorest and most indebted developing
countries as a matter of priority, reducing trade barriers and promoting
expanded access by all countries to markets, in the context of an open,
equitable, secure, non-discriminatory, predictable, transparent and multilateral
rule-based international trading system, as well as to productive investment,
technologies and know-how;
(b) Strengthening and improving technical and financial assistance to
developing countries to promote sustainable development and overcome hindrances
to their full and effective participation in the world economy;
(c) Changing unsustainable consumption and production patterns, taking
into account that the major cause of the continued deterioration of the
global environment is the unsustainable pattern of consumption and production,
particularly in industrialized countries, which is a matter of grave concern,
aggravating poverty and imbalances;
(d) Elaborating policies to enable developing countries to take advantage
of expanded international trading opportunities in the context of the
full implementation of the Final Act of the Uruguay Round of multilateral
trade negotiations; and assisting countries, particularly in Africa, that
are not currently in a position to benefit fully from the liberalization
of the world economy;
(e) Supporting the efforts of developing countries, particularly those
heavily dependent on commodity exports, to diversify their economies.
11. Within the framework of support to developing countries, giving priority
to the needs of Africa and the least developed countries, the following
actions are necessary at the national and international levels, as appropriate:
(a) Implementing effective policies and development strategies that establish
a more favourable climate for social development, trade and investments,
giving priority to human resource development and promoting the further
development of democratic institutions;
(b) Supporting African countries and least developed countries in their
efforts to create an enabling environment that attracts foreign and domestic
direct investment, encourages savings, induces the return of flight capital
and promotes the full participation of the private sector, including non-governmental
organizations, in the growth and development process;
(c) Supporting economic reforms to improve the functioning of commodity
markets and commodity diversification efforts through appropriate mechanisms,
bilateral and multilateral financing and technical cooperation, including
South-South cooperation, as well as through trade and partnership;
(d) Continuing to support the commodity diversification efforts of Africa
and the least developed countries, inter alia, by providing technical
and financial assistance for the preparatory phase of their commodity
diversification projects and programmes;
(e) Finding effective, development-oriented and durable solutions to
external debt problems, through the immediate implementation of the terms
of debt forgiveness agreed upon in the Paris Club in December 1994, which
encompass debt reduction, including cancellation or other debt relief
measures; inviting the international financial institutions to examine
innovative approaches to assist low-income countries with a high proportion
of multilateral debt with a view to alleviating their debt burden; developing
techniques of debt conversion applied to social development programmes
and projects in conformity with Summit priorities. These actions should
take into account the mid-term review of the United Nations New Agenda
for the Development of Africa in the 1990s 4/ and the Programme of Action
for the Least Developed Countries for the 1990s 5/ and should be implemented
as soon as possible;
(f) Supporting the development of strategies adopted by these countries
and working in partnership to ensure the implementation of measures for
their development;
(g) Taking appropriate actions, consistent with the Final Act of the
Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations, 1/ in particular the
decision on measures in favour of the least developed countries and the
decision on measures concerning the possible negative effects of the reform
programme on the least developed countries and the net food importing
developing countries, in order to give these countries special attention,
with a view to enhancing their participation in the multilateral trading
system and to mitigating any adverse effects of the implementation of
the Uruguay Round, while stressing the need to support the African countries
so that they can benefit fully from the results of the Uruguay Round;
(h) Increasing official development assistance, both in total and for
social programmes, and improving its impact, consistent with countries'
economic circumstances and capabilities to assist, and consistent with
commitments in international agreements, and striving to attain the agreed
upon target of 0.7 per cent of gross national product for official development
assistance and 0.15 per cent to the least developed countries, as soon
as possible.
12. Making economic growth and the interaction of market forces more
conducive to social development requires the following actions:
(a) Implementing measures to open market opportunities for all, especially
people living in poverty and the disadvantaged, and to encourage individuals
and communities to take economic initiatives, innovate and invest in activities
that contribute to social development while promoting broad-based sustained
economic growth and sustainable development;
(b) Improving, broadening and regulating, to the extent necessary, the
functioning of markets to promote sustained economic growth and sustainable
development, stability and long-term investment, fair competition and
ethical conduct; adopting and implementing policies to promote equitable
distribution of the benefits of growth and protect crucial social services,
inter alia, through complementing market mechanisms and mitigating any
negative impacts posed by market forces; and implementing complementary
policies to foster social development, while dismantling, consistent with
the provisions of the Final Act of the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade
negotiations, protectionist measures, and to integrate social and economic
development;
(c) Establishing an open market policy that reduces barriers to entry,
promotes transparency of markets through, inter alia, better access to
information and widens the choices available to consumers;
(d) Promoting greater access to technology and technical assistance,
as well as corresponding know-how, especially for micro-enterprises and
small and medium-sized enterprises in all countries, particularly in developing
countries;
(e) Encouraging transnational and national corporations to operate in
a framework of respect for the environment while complying with national
laws and legislation, and in accordance with international agreements
and conventions, and with proper consideration for the social and cultural
impact of their activities;
(f) Adopting and implementing long-term strategies to ensure substantial,
well-directed public and private investment in the construction and renewal
of basic infrastructure, which will benefit people living in poverty and
generate employment;
(g) Ensuring substantial public and private investment in human resource
development and in capacity-building in health and education, as well
as in empowerment and participation, especially for people living in poverty
or suffering from social exclusion;
(h) Supporting and paying special attention to the development of small-scale
and micro-enterprises, particularly in rural areas, as well as subsistence
economies, to secure their safe interaction with larger economies;
(i) Supporting the economic activities of indigenous people, improving
their conditions and development, and securing their safe interaction
with larger economies;
(j) Supporting institutions, programmes and systems to disseminate practical
information to promote social progress.
13. Ensuring that fiscal systems and other public policies are geared
towards poverty eradication and that they do not generate socially divisive
disparities calls for:
(a) Enacting rules and regulations and creating a moral and ethical climate
that prevents all forms of corruption and exploitation of individuals,
families and groups;
(b) Promoting fair competition and ethical responsibility in business
activities, and enhancing cooperation and interaction among Governments,
the private sector and civil society;
(c) Ensuring that fiscal and monetary policies promote savings and long-term
investment in productive activities in accordance with national priorities
and policies;
(d) Considering measures to address inequities arising from accumulation
of wealth through, inter alia, the use of appropriate taxation at the
national level, and to reduce inefficiencies and improve stability in
financial markets in accordance with national priorities and policies;
(e) Re-examining the distribution of subsidies, inter alia, between industry
and agriculture, urban and rural areas, and private and public consumption,
to ensure that subsidy systems benefit people living in poverty, especially
the vulnerable, and reduce disparities;
(f) Promoting international agreements that address effectively issues
of double taxation, as well as cross-border tax evasion, in accordance
with the priorities and policies of the States concerned, while improving
the efficiency and fairness of tax collection;
(g) Assisting developing countries, upon their request, to establish
efficient and fair tax systems by strengthening the administrative capacity
for tax assessment and collection and tax evader prosecution, and to support
a more progressive tax system;
(h) Assisting countries with economies in transition to establish fair
and effective systems of taxation on a solid legal basis, contributing
to the socio-economic reforms under way in those countries.
B. A favourable national and international political and legal environment
14. To ensure that the political framework supports the objectives of
social development, the following actions are essential:
(a) Ensuring that governmental institutions and agencies responsible
for the planning and implementation of social policies have the status,
resources and information necessary to give high priority to social development
in policy-making;
(b) Ensuring the rule of law and democracy and the existence of rules
and processes to create transparency and accountability for all public
and private institutions and to prevent and combat all forms of corruption,
sustained through education and the development of attitudes and values
promoting responsibility, solidarity and a strengthened civil society;
(c) Eliminating all forms of discrimination, while developing and encouraging
educational programmes and media campaigns to that end;
(d) Encouraging decentralization of public institutions and services
to a level that, compatible with the overall responsibilities, priorities
and objectives of Governments, responds properly to local needs and facilitates
local participation;
(e) Establishing conditions for the social partners to organize and function
with guaranteed freedom of expression and association and the right to
engage in collective bargaining and to promote mutual interests, taking
due account of national laws and regulations;
(f) Establishing similar conditions for professional organizations and
organizations of independent workers;
(g) Promoting political and social processes inclusive of all members
of society and respectful of political pluralism and cultural diversity;
(h) Strengthening the capacities and opportunities of all people, especially
those who are disadvantaged or vulnerable, to enhance their own economic
and social development, to establish and maintain organizations representing
their interests and to be involved in the planning and implementation
of government policies and programmes by which they will be directly affected;
(i) Ensuring full involvement and participation of women at all levels
in the decision-making and implementation process and in the economic
and political mechanisms through which policies are formulated and implemented;
(j) Removing all legal impediments to the ownership of all means of production
and property by men and women;
(k) Taking measures, in cooperation with the international community,
as appropriate, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations,
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 6/ other international instruments
and relevant United Nations resolutions, to create the appropriate political
and legal environment to address the root cause of movements of refugees,
to allow their voluntary return in safety and dignity. Measures should
also be taken at the national level, with international cooperation, as
appropriate, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, to
create conditions for internally displaced persons to voluntarily return
to their places of origin.
15. It is essential for social development that all human rights and
fundamental freedoms, including the right to development as an integral
part of fundamental human rights, be promoted and protected through the
following actions:
(a) Encouraging ratification of existing international human rights conventions
that have not been ratified; and implementing the provisions of conventions
and covenants that have been ratified;
(b) Reaffirming and promoting all human rights and fundamental freedoms,
which are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated, including
the right to development, and striving to ensure that they are respected,
protected and observed through appropriate legislation, dissemination
of information, education and training and the provision of effective
mechanisms and remedies for enforcement, inter alia, through the establishment
or strengthening of national institutions responsible for monitoring and
enforcement;
(c) Taking measures to ensure that every human person and all peoples
are entitled to participate, to contribute to and to enjoy economic, social,
cultural and political development; encouraging all human persons to take
responsibility for development, individually and collectively; and recognizing
that States have the primary responsibility for the creation of national
and international conditions favourable for the realization of the right
to development, taking into account the relevant provisions of the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action;
(d) Promoting the realization of the right to development through strengthening
democracy, development and respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms
and through effective development policies at the national level, as well
as equitable economic relations and a favourable economic environment
at the international level, since sustained action is indispensable for
fostering a more rapid development of developing countries;
(e) Removing obstacles to the realization of the right of peoples to
self-determination, in particular of peoples living under colonial or
other forms of alien domination or foreign occupation, which adversely
affect their social and economic development;
(f) Promoting and protecting the human rights of women and removing all
obstacles to full equality and equity between women and men in political,
civil, economic, social and cultural life;
(g) Giving special attention to promoting and protecting the rights of
the child, with particular attention to the rights of the girl child,
by, inter alia, encouraging the ratification and implementation of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Plan of Action for Implementing
the World Declaration on the Survival, Protection and Development of Children
in the 1990s adopted at the World Summit for Children; 7/
(h) Providing all people, in particular the vulnerable and disadvantaged
in society, with the benefit of an independent, fair and effective system
of justice, and ensuring access by all to competent sources of advice
about legal rights and obligations;
(i) Taking effective measures to bring to an end all de jure and de facto
discrimination against persons with disabilities;
(j) Strengthening the ability of civil society and the community to participate
actively in the planning, decision-making and implementation of social
development programmes, by education and access to resources;
(k) Promoting and protecting the rights of individuals in order to prevent
and eliminate situations of domestic discrimination and violence.
16. An open political and economic system requires access by all to knowledge,
education and information by:
(a) Strengthening the educational system at all levels, as well as other
means of acquiring skills and knowledge, and ensuring universal access
to basic education and lifelong educational opportunities, while removing
economic and socio-cultural barriers to the exercise of the right to education;
(b) Raising public awareness and promoting gender-sensitivity education
to eliminate all obstacles to full gender equality and equity;
(c) Enabling and encouraging access by all to a wide range of information
and opinion on matters of general interest through the mass media and
other means;
(d) Encouraging education systems and, to the extent consistent with
freedom of expression, communication media to raise people's understanding
and awareness of all aspects of social integration, including gender sensitivity,
non-violence, tolerance and solidarity and respect for the diversity of
cultures and interests, and to discourage the exhibition of pornography
and the gratuitous depiction of explicit violence and cruelty in the media;
(e) Improving the reliability, validity, utility and public availability
of statistical and other information on social development and gender
issues, including the effective use of gender-disaggregated statistics
collected at the national, regional and international levels, including
through support to academic and research institutions.
17. International support for national efforts to promote a favourable
political and legal environment must be in conformity with the Charter
of the United Nations and principles of international law and consistent
with the Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly
Relations and Cooperation among States in accordance with the Charter
of the United Nations. 8/ Support calls for the following actions:
(a) Making use, as appropriate, of the capacity of the United Nations
and other relevant international, regional and subregional organizations
to prevent and resolve armed conflicts and promote social progress and
better standards of life in larger freedom;
(b) Coordinating policies, actions and legal instruments and/or measures
to combat terrorism, all forms of extremist violence, illicit arms trafficking,
organized crime and illicit drug problems, money laundering and related
crimes, trafficking in women, adolescents, children, migrants, and human
organs, and other activities contrary to human rights and human dignity;
(c) States cooperating with one another in ensuring development and eliminating
obstacles to development. The international community should promote effective
international cooperation, supporting the efforts of developing countries,
for the full realization of the right to development and the elimination
of obstacles to development, through, inter alia, the implementation of
the provisions of the Declaration on the Right to Development 9/ as reaffirmed
by the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action. 10/ Lasting progress
towards the implementation of the right to development requires effective
development policies at the national level, as well as equitable economic
relations and a favourable economic environment at the international level.
The right to development should be fulfilled so as to equitably meet the
social development and environmental needs of present and future generations;
(d) Ensuring that human persons are at the centre of social development
and that this is fully reflected in the programmes and activities of subregional,
regional and international organizations;
(e) Reinforcing the capacity of relevant national, regional and international
organizations, within their mandates, to promote the implementation of
all human rights and fundamental freedoms and the elimination of all forms
of discrimination;
(f) Elaborating policies, within the mandates and functions of the various
international institutions, that will support the objectives of social
development and contribute to institutional development through capacity-building
and other forms of cooperation;
(g) Strengthening the capacities of Governments, the private sector and
civil society, especially in Africa and the least developed countries,
to enable them to meet their specific and global responsibilities;
(h) Reinforcing the capacities of Governments, the private sector and
civil society in the countries with economies in transition, with a view
to helping them in the process of transforming their economies from centrally
planned to market-oriented ones.
Chapter II
ERADICATION OF POVERTY
Basis for action and objectives
18. Over 1 billion people in the world today live under unacceptable
conditions of poverty, mostly in developing countries, and particularly
in rural areas of low-income Asia and the Pacific, Africa, Latin America
and the Caribbean, and the least developed countries.
19. Poverty has various manifestations, including lack of income and
productive resources sufficient to ensure sustainable livelihoods; hunger
and malnutrition; ill health; limited or lack of access to education and
other basic services; increased morbidity and mortality from illness;
homelessness and inadequate housing; unsafe environments; and social discrimination
and exclusion. It is also characterized by a lack of participation in
decision-making and in civil, social and cultural life. It occurs in all
countries: as mass poverty in many developing countries, pockets of poverty
amid wealth in developed countries, loss of livelihoods as a result of
economic recession, sudden poverty as a result of disaster or conflict,
the poverty of low-wage workers, and the utter destitution of people who
fall outside family support systems, social institutions and safety nets.
Women bear a disproportionate burden of poverty, and children growing
up in poverty are often permanently disadvantaged. Older people, people
with disabilities, indigenous people, refugees and internally displaced
persons are also particularly vulnerable to poverty. Furthermore, poverty
in its various forms represents a barrier to communication and access
to services, as well as a major health risk, and people living in poverty
are particularly vulnerable to the consequences of disasters and conflicts.
Absolute poverty is a condition characterized by severe deprivation of
basic human needs, including food, safe drinking water, sanitation facilities,
health, shelter, education and information. It depends not only on income
but also on access to social services.
20. There is general agreement that persistent widespread poverty, as
well as serious social and gender inequities, have significant influences
on and are in turn influenced by demographic parameters, such as population
growth, structure and distribution. There is also general agreement that
unsustainable consumption and production patterns are contributing to
the unsustainable use of natural resources and environmental degradation,
as well as to the reinforcement of social inequities and poverty, with
the above-mentioned consequences for demographic parameters.
21. Urban poverty is rapidly increasing in pace with overall urbanization.
It is a growing phenomenon in all countries and regions, and often poses
special problems, such as overcrowding, contaminated water and bad sanitation,
unsafe shelter, crime and additional social problems. An increasing number
of low-income urban households are female-maintained.
22. Among people living in poverty, gender disparities are marked, especially
in the increase in female-maintained households. With increasing population,
the numbers of youth living in poverty will increase significantly. Therefore,
specific measures are needed to address the juvenilization and feminization
of poverty.
23. Poverty has various causes, including structural ones. Poverty is
a complex multidimensional problem with origins in both the national and
international domains. No uniform solution can be found for global application.
Rather, country-specific programmes to tackle poverty and international
efforts supporting national efforts, as well as the parallel process of
creating a supportive international environment, are crucial for a solution
to this problem. Poverty is inseparably linked to lack of control over
resources, including land, skills, knowledge, capital and social connections.
Without those resources, people are easily neglected by policy makers
and have limited access to institutions, markets, employment and public
services. The eradication of poverty cannot be accomplished through anti-poverty
programmes alone but will require democratic participation and changes
in economic structures in order to ensure access for all to resources,
opportunities and public services, to undertake policies geared to more
equitable distribution of wealth and income, to provide social protection
for those who cannot support themselves, and to assist people confronted
by unforeseen catastrophe, whether individual or collective, natural,
social or technological.
24. The eradication of poverty requires universal access to economic
opportunities that will promote sustainable livelihood and basic social
services, as well as special efforts to facilitate access to opportunities
and services for the disadvantaged. People living in poverty and vulnerable
groups must be empowered through organization and participation in all
aspects of political, economic and social life, in particular in the planning
and implementation of policies that affect them, thus enabling them to
become genuine partners in development.
25. There is therefore an urgent need for:
~ National strategies to reduce overall poverty substantially, including
measures to remove the structural barriers that prevent people from escaping
poverty, with specific time-bound commitments to eradicate absolute poverty
by a target date to be specified by each country in its national context;
~ Stronger international cooperation and the support of international
institutions to assist countries in their efforts to eradicate poverty
and to provide basic social protection and services; Stronger international
cooperation and the support of international institutions to assist countries
in their efforts to eradicate poverty and to provide basic social protection
and services;
~ Development of methods to measure all forms of poverty, especially
absolute poverty, and to assess and monitor the circumstances of those
at risk, within the national context;
~ Regular national reviews of economic policies and national budgets
to orient them towards eradicating poverty and reducing inequalities;
~ Expanded opportunities to enable people living in poverty to enhance
their overall capacities and improve their economic and social conditions,
while managing resources sustainably;
~ Human resource development and improved infrastructural facilities;
~ Comprehensive provision for the basic needs of all;
~ Policies ensuring that all people have adequate economic and social
protection during unemployment, ill health, maternity, disability and
old age;
~ Policies that strengthen the family and contribute to its stability
in accordance with the principles, goals and commitments contained in
the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and in the Programme
of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development;
11/
~ Mobilization of both the public and the private sectors, more developed
areas, educational and academic institutions and non-governmental organizations
to assist poverty-stricken areas.
Actions
A. Formulation of integrated strategies
26. Governments should give greater focus to public efforts to eradicate
absolute poverty and to reduce overall poverty substantially by:
(a) Promoting sustained economic growth, in the context of sustainable
development, and social progress, requiring that growth be broadly based,
offering equal opportunities to all people. All countries should recognize
their common but differentiated responsibilities. The developed countries
acknowledge the responsibility they bear in the international pursuit
of sustainable development, and should continue to improve their efforts
to promote sustained economic growth and to narrow imbalances in a manner
that can benefit all countries, particularly the developing countries;
(b) Formulating or strengthening, preferably by 1996, and implementing
national poverty eradication plans to address the structural causes of
poverty, encompassing action on the local, national, subregional, regional
and international levels. These plans should establish, within each national
context, strategies and affordable time-bound goals and targets for the
substantial reduction of overall poverty and the eradication of absolute
poverty. In the context of national plans, particular attention should
be given to employment creation as a means of eradicating poverty, giving
appropriate consideration to health and education, assigning a higher
priority to basic social services, generating household income, and promoting
access to productive assets and economic opportunities;
(c) Identifying the livelihood systems, survival strategies and self-help
organizations of people living in poverty and working with such organizations
to develop programmes for combating poverty that build on their efforts,
ensuring the full participation of the people concerned and responding
to their actual needs;
(d) Elaborating, at the national level, the measurements, criteria and
indicators for determining the extent and distribution of absolute poverty.
Each country should develop a precise definition and assessment of absolute
poverty, preferably by 1996, the International Year for the Eradication
of Poverty; 12/
(e) Establishing policies, objectives and measurable targets to enhance
and broaden women's economic opportunities and their access to productive
resources, particularly women who have no source of income;
(f) Promoting effective enjoyment by all people of civil, cultural, economic,
political and social rights, and access to existing social protection
and public services, in particular through encouraging the ratification
and ensuring the full implementation of relevant human rights instruments,
such as the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
13/ and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; 13/
(g) Eliminating the injustice and obstacles that women are faced with,
and encouraging and strengthening the participation of women in taking
decisions and in implementing them, as well as their access to productive
resources and land ownership and their right to inherit goods;
(h) Encouraging and supporting local community development projects that
foster the skill, self-reliance and self-confidence of people living in
poverty and that facilitate their active participation in efforts to eradicate
poverty.
27. Governments are urged to integrate goals and targets for combating
poverty into overall economic and social policies and planning at the
local, national and, where appropriate, regional levels by:
(a) Analysing policies and programmes, including those relating to macroeconomic
stability, structural adjustment programmes, taxation, investments, employment,
markets and all relevant sectors of the economy, with respect to their
impact on poverty and inequality, assessing their impact on family well-being
and conditions, as well as their gender implications, and adjusting them,
as appropriate, to promote a more equitable distribution of productive
assets, wealth, opportunities, income and services;
(b) Redesigning public investment policies that relate to infrastructure
development, the management of natural resources and human resource development
to benefit people living in poverty and to promote their compatibility
with the long-term improvement of livelihoods;
(c) Ensuring that development policies benefit low-income communities
and rural and agricultural development;
(d) Selecting, wherever possible, development schemes that do not displace
local populations, and designing an appropriate policy and legal framework
to compensate the displaced for their losses, to help them to re-establish
their livelihoods and to promote their recovery from social and cultural
disruption;
(e) Designing and implementing environmental protection and resource
management measures that take into account the needs of people living
in poverty and vulnerable groups in accordance with Agenda 21 and the
various consensus agreements, conventions and programmes of action adopted
in the framework of the follow-up to the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development;
(f) Establishing and strengthening, as appropriate, mechanisms for the
coordination of efforts to combat poverty, in collaboration with civil
society, including the private sector, and developing integrated intersectoral
and intra-governmental responses for such purposes.
28. People living in poverty and their organizations should be empowered
by:
(a) Involving them fully in the setting of targets and in the design,
implementation, monitoring and assessment of national strategies and programmes
for poverty eradication and community-based development, and ensuring
that such programmes reflect their priorities;
(b) Integrating gender concerns in the planning and implementation of
policies and programmes for the empowerment of women;
(c) Ensuring that policies and programmes affecting people living in
poverty respect their dignity and culture and make full use of their knowledge,
skills and resourcefulness;
(d) Strengthening education at all levels and ensuring the access to
education of people living in poverty, in particular their access to primary
education and other basic education opportunities;
(e) Encouraging and assisting people living in poverty to organize so
that their representatives can participate in economic and social policy-making
and work more effectively with governmental, non-governmental and other
relevant institutions to obtain the services and opportunities they need;
(f) Placing special emphasis on capacity-building and community-based
management;
(g) Educating people about their rights, the political system and the
availability of programmes.
29. There is a need to periodically monitor, assess and share information
on the performance of poverty eradication plans, evaluate policies to
combat poverty, and promote an understanding and awareness of poverty
and its causes and consequences. This could be done, by Governments, inter
alia, through:
(a) Developing, updating and disseminating specific and agreed gender-
disaggregated indicators of poverty and vulnerability, including income,
wealth, nutrition, physical and mental health, education, literacy, family
conditions, unemployment, social exclusion and isolation, homelessness,
landlessness and other factors, as well as indicators of the national
and international causes underlying poverty; for this purpose, gathering
comprehensive and comparable data, disaggregated by ethnicity, gender,
disability, family status, language groupings, regions and economic and
social sectors;
(b) Monitoring and assessing the achievement of goals and targets agreed
to in international forums in the area of social development; evaluating,
quantitatively and qualitatively, changes in poverty levels, the persistence
of poverty, and vulnerability to poverty, particularly concerning household
income levels and access to resources and services; and assessing the
effectiveness of poverty eradication strategies, based on the priorities
and perceptions of households living in poverty and low-income communities;
(c) Strengthening international data collection and statistical systems
to support countries in monitoring social development goals, and encouraging
the expansion of international databases to incorporate socially beneficial
activities that are not included in available data, such as women's unremunerated
work and contributions to society, the informal economy and sustainable
livelihoods;
(d) Mobilizing public awareness, in particular through educational institutions,
non-governmental organizations and the media, to enable society to prioritize
the struggle against poverty, while focusing attention on progress or
failure in the pursuit of defined goals and targets;
(e); Mobilizing the resources of universities and research institutions
to improve the understanding of the causes of poverty and their solutions,
as well as the impact of structural adjustment measures on people living
in poverty and the effectiveness of anti-poverty strategies and programmes,
strengthening the capacity for social science research in developing countries
and integrating, as appropriate, the results of research into decision-making
processes
(f) Facilitating and promoting the exchange of knowledge and experience,
especially among developing countries, through, inter alia, subregional
and regional organizations.
30. Members of the international community should, bilaterally or through
multilateral organizations, foster an enabling environment for poverty
eradication by:
(a) Coordinating policies and programmes to support the measures being
taken in the developing countries, particularly in Africa and the least
developed countries, to eradicate poverty, provide remunerative work and
strengthen social integration in order to meet basic social development
goals and targets;
(b) Promoting international cooperation to assist developing countries,
at their request, in their efforts, in particular at the community level,
towards achieving gender equality and the empowerment of women;
(c) Strengthening the capacities of developing countries to monitor the
progress of national poverty eradication plans and to assess the impact
of national and international policies and programmes on people living
in poverty and address their negative impacts;
(d) Strengthening the capacity of countries with economies in transition
to develop their social protection systems and social policies for, inter
alia, the reduction of poverty;
(e) Addressing the special needs of small island developing States with
respect to eradicating poverty and meeting poverty eradication goals and
targets, within the context of social development programmes that reflect
their national priorities;
(f) Addressing the problems faced by the land-locked developing countries
in eradicating poverty and supporting their efforts aimed at social development;
(g) Supporting societies disrupted by conflict in their efforts to rebuild
their social protection systems and eradicate poverty.
B. Improved access to productive resources and infrastructure
31. The opportunities for income generation, diversification of activities
and increase of productivity in low-income and poor communities should
be enhanced by:
(a) Improving the availability and accessibility of transportation, communication,
power and energy services at the local or community level, in particular
for isolated, remote and marginalized communities;
(b) Ensuring that investments in infrastructure support sustainable development
at the local or community levels;
(c) Emphasizing the need for developing countries that are heavily dependent
on primary commodities to continue to promote a domestic policy and an
institutional environment that encourage diversification and enhance competitiveness;
(d) Supporting the importance of commodity diversification as a means
to increase the export revenues of developing countries and to improve
their competitiveness in the face of the persistent instability in the
price of some primary commodities and the general deterioration in the
terms of trade;
(e) Promoting, including by micro-enterprises, rural non-farm production
and service activities, such as agro-processing, sales and services of
agricultural equipment and inputs, irrigation, credit services and other
income-generating activities through, inter alia, supportive laws and
administrative measures, credit policies, and technical and administrative
training;
(f) Strengthening and improving financial and technical assistance for
community-based development and self-help programmes, and strengthening
cooperation among Governments, community organizations, cooperatives,
formal and informal banking institutions, private enterprises and international
agencies, with the aim of mobilizing local savings, promoting the creation
of local financial networks, and increasing the availability of credit
and market information to small entrepreneurs, small farmers and other
low-income self-employed workers, with particular efforts to ensure the
availability of such services to women;
(g) Strengthening organizations of small farmers, landless tenants and
labourers, other small producers, fisherfolk, community-based and workers'
cooperatives, especially those run by women, in order to, inter alia,
improve market access and increase productivity, provide inputs and technical
advice, promote cooperation in production and marketing operations, and
strengthen participation in the planning and implementation of rural development;
(h) Promoting national and international assistance in providing economically
viable alternatives for social groups, especially farmers involved in
the cultivation and processing of crops used for the illegal drug trade;
(i) Improving the competitiveness of natural products with environmental
advantages and strengthening the impact that this could have on promoting
sustainable consumption and production patterns, and strengthening and
improving financial and technical assistance to the developing countries
for research and development of such products;
(j) Promoting comprehensive rural development, including by land reform,
land improvement and economic diversification; (k) Improving economic
opportunities for rural women through the elimination of legal, social,
cultural and practical obstacles to women's participation in economic
activities and ensuring that women have equal access to productive resources.
32. Rural poverty should be addressed by:
(a) Expanding and improving land ownership through such measures as land
reform and improving the security of land tenure, and ensuring the equal
rights of women and men in this respect, developing new agricultural land,
promoting fair land rents, making land transfers more efficient and fair,
and adjudicating land disputes;
(b) Promoting fair wages and improving the conditions of agricultural
labour, and increasing the access of small farmers to water, credit, extension
services and appropriate technology, including for women, persons with
disabilities and vulnerable groups on the basis of equality;
(c) Strengthening measures and actions designed to improve the social,
economic and living conditions in rural areas and thereby discouraging
rural exodus;
(d) Promoting opportunities for small farmers and other agricultural,
forestry and fishery workers on terms that respect sustainable development;
(e) Improving access to markets and market information in order to enable
small producers to obtain better prices for their products and pay better
prices for the materials they need;
(f) Protecting, within the national context, the traditional rights to
land and other resources of pastoralists, fishery workers and nomadic
and indigenous people, and strengthening land management in the areas
of pastoral or nomadic activity, building on traditional communal practices,
controlling encroachment by others, and developing improved systems of
range management and access to water, markets, credit, animal production,
veterinary services, health including health services, education and information;
(g) Promoting education, research and development on farming systems
and smallholder cultivation and animal husbandry techniques, particularly
in environmentally fragile areas, building on local and traditional practices
of sustainable agriculture and taking particular advantage of women's
knowledge;
(h) Strengthening agricultural training and extension services to promote
a more effective use of existing technologies and indigenous knowledge
systems and to disseminate new technologies in order to reach both men
and women farmers and other agricultural workers, including through the
hiring of more women as extension workers;
(i) Promoting infrastructural and institutional investment in small-scale
farming in resource-poor regions so that small-scale farmers can fully
explore market opportunities, within the context of liberalization.
33. Access to credit by small rural or urban producers, landless farmers
and other people with low or no income should be substantially improved,
with special attention to the needs of women and disadvantaged and vulnerable
groups, by:
(a) Reviewing national legal, regulatory and institutional frameworks
that restrict the access of people living in poverty, especially women,
to credit on reasonable terms;
(b) Promoting realistic targets for access to affordable credit, where
appropriate;
(c) Providing incentives for improving access to and strengthening the
capacities of the organized credit system to deliver credit and related
services to people living in poverty and vulnerable groups;
(d) Expanding financial networks, building on existing community networks,
promoting attractive opportunities for savings and ensuring equitable
access to credit at the local level.
34. Urban poverty should further be addressed by:
(a) Promoting and strengthening micro-enterprises, new small businesses,
cooperative enterprises, and expanded market and other employment opportunities
and, where appropriate, facilitating the transition from the informal
to the formal sector;
(b) Promoting sustainable livelihoods for people living in urban poverty
through the provision or expansion of access to training, education and
other employment assistance services, in particular for women, youth,
the unemployed and the underemployed;
(c) Promoting public and private investments to improve for the deprived
the overall human environment and infrastructure, in particular housing,
water and sanitation, and public transportation;
(d) Ensuring that strategies for shelter give special attention to women
and children, bearing in mind the perspectives of women in the development
of such strategies;
(e) Promoting social and other essential services, including, where necessary,
assistance for people to move to areas that offer better employment opportunities,
housing, education, health and other social services;
(f) Ensuring safety through effective criminal justice administration
and protective measures that are responsive to the needs and concerns
of the community;
(g) Strengthening the role and expanding the means of municipal authorities,
non-governmental organizations, universities and other educational institutions,
businesses and community organizations, enabling them to be more actively
involved in urban planning, policy development and implementation;
(h) Ensuring that special measures are taken to protect the displaced,
the homeless, street children, unaccompanied minors and children in special
and difficult circumstances, orphans, adolescents and single mothers,
people with disabilities, and older persons, and to ensure that they are
integrated into their communities.
C. Meeting the basic human needs of all
35. Governments, in partnership with all other development actors, in
particular with people living in poverty and their organizations, should
cooperate to meet the basic human needs of all, including people living
in poverty and vulnerable groups, by:
(a) Ensuring universal access to basic social services, with particular
efforts to facilitate access by people living in poverty and vulnerable
groups;
(b) Creating public awareness that the satisfaction of basic human needs
is an essential element of poverty reduction; these needs are closely
interrelated and comprise nutrition, health, water and sanitation, education,
employment, housing and participation in cultural and social life;
(c) Ensuring full and equal access to social services, especially education,
legal services and health-care services for women of all ages and children,
recognizing the rights, duties and responsibilities of parents and other
persons legally responsible for children, consistent with the Convention
on the Rights of the Child;
(d) Ensuring that due priority is given and adequate resources made available,
at the national, regional and international levels, to combat the threat
to individual and public health posed by the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS
globally and by the re-emergence of major diseases, such as tuberculosis,
malaria, onchocerciasis (river blindness) and diarrhoeal diseases, in
particular cholera;
(e) Taking particular actions to enhance the productive capacities of
indigenous people, ensuring their full and equal access to social services
and their participation in the elaboration and implementation of policies
that affect their development, with full respect for their cultures, languages,
traditions and forms of social organizations, as well as their own initiatives;
(f) Providing appropriate social services to enable vulnerable people
and people living in poverty to improve their lives, to exercise their
rights and to participate fully in all social, economic and political
activities and to contribute to social and economic development;
(g) Recognizing that improving people's health is inseparably linked
to a sound environment;
(h) Ensuring physical access to all basic social services for persons
who are older, disabled or home-bound;
(i) Ensuring that people living in poverty have full and equal access
to justice, including knowledge of their rights and, as appropriate, through
the provision of free legal assistance. The legal system should be made
more sensitive and responsive to the needs and special circumstances of
vulnerable and disadvantaged groups in order to ensure a strong and independent
administration of justice;
(j) Promoting full restorative services, in particular for those who
require institutional care or are home-bound, and a comprehensive array
of community-based, long-term care services for those facing loss of independence.
36. Governments should implement the commitments that have been made
to meet the basic needs of all, with assistance from the international
community consistent with chapter V of the present Programme of Action,
including, inter alia, the following:
(a) By the year 2000, universal access to basic education and completion
of primary education by at least 80 per cent of primary school-age children;
closing the gender gap in primary and secondary school education by the
year 2005; universal primary education in all countries before the year
2015;
(b) By the year 2000, life expectancy of not less than 60 years in any
country;
(c) By the year 2000, reduction of mortality rates of infants and children
under five years of age by one third of the 1990 level, or 50 to 70 per
1,000 live births, whichever is less; by the year 2015, achievement of
an infant mortality rate below 35 per 1,000 live births and an under-five
mortality rate below 45 per 1,000;
(d) By the year 2000, a reduction in maternal mortality by one half of
the 1990 level; by the year 2015, a further reduction by one half;
(e) Achieving food security by ensuring a safe and nutritionally adequate
food supply, at both the national and international levels, a reasonable
degree of stability in the supply of food, as well as physical, social
and economic access to enough food for all, while reaffirming that food
should not be used as a tool for political pressure;
(f) By the year 2000, a reduction of severe and moderate malnutrition
among children under five years of age by half of the 1990 level;
(g) By the year 2000, attainment by all peoples of the world of a level
of health that will permit them to lead a socially and economically productive
life, and to this end, ensuring primary health care for all;
(h) Making accessible through the primary health-care system reproductive
health to all individuals of appropriate ages as soon as possible and
no later than the year 2015, in accordance with the Programme of Action
of the International Conference on Population and Development, and taking
into account the reservations and declarations made at that Conference,
especially those concerning the need for parental guidance and parental
responsibility;
(i) Strengthening efforts and increasing commitments with the aim, by
the year 2000, of reducing malaria mortality and morbidity by at least
20 per cent compared to 1995 levels in at least 75 per cent of affected
countries, as well as reducing social and economic losses due to malaria
in the developing countries, especially in Africa, where the overwhelming
majority of both cases and deaths occur;
(j) By the year 2000, eradicating, eliminating or controlling major diseases
constituting global health problems, in accordance with paragraph 6.12
of Agenda 21; 2/
(k) Reducing the adult illiteracy rate - the appropriate age group to
be determined in each country - to at least half its 1990 level, with
an emphasis on female literacy; achieving universal access to quality
education, with particular priority being given to primary and technical
education and job training, combating illiteracy, and eliminating gender
disparities in access to, retention in and support for education;
(l) Providing, on a sustainable basis, access to safe drinking water
in sufficient quantities, and proper sanitation for all;
(m) Improving the availability of affordable and adequate shelter for
all, in accordance with the Global Strategy for Shelter to the Year 2000;
14/
(n) Monitoring the implementation of those commitments at the highest
appropriate level and considering the possibility of expediting their
implementation through the dissemination of sufficient and accurate statistical
data and appropriate indicators.
37. Access to social services for people living in poverty and vulnerable
groups should be improved through:
(a) Facilitating access and improving the quality of education for people
living in poverty by establishing schools in unserved areas, providing
social services, such as meals and health care, as incentives for families
in poverty to keep children in school, and improving the quality of schools
in low-income communities;
(b) Expanding and improving opportunities for continuing education and
training by means of public and private initiatives and non-formal education
in order to improve opportunities for people living in poverty, including
people with disabilities, and in order to develop the skills and knowledge
that they need to better their conditions and livelihoods;
(c) Expanding and improving preschool education, both formal and non-formal,
including through new learning technologies, radio and television, to
overcome some of the disadvantages faced by young children growing up
in poverty;
(d) Ensuring that people living in poverty and low-income communities
have access to quality health care that provides primary health-care services,
consistent with the Programme of Action of the International Conference
on Population and Development, free of charge or at affordable rates;
(e) Promoting cooperation among government agencies, health-care workers,
non-governmental organizations, women's organizations and other institutions
of civil society in order to develop a comprehensive national strategy
for improving reproductive health care and child health-care services
and ensuring that people living in poverty have full access to those services,
including, inter alia, education and services on family planning, safe
motherhood and prenatal and postnatal care, and the benefits of breast-feeding,
consistent with the Programme of Action of the International Conference
on Population and Development;
(f) Encouraging health-care workers to work in low-income communities
and rural areas, and providing outreach services to make health care available
to otherwise unserved areas, recognizing that investing in a primary health-care
system that ensures prevention, treatment and rehabilitation for all individuals
is an effective means of promoting social and economic development as
well as broad participation in society.
D. Enhanced social protection and reduced vulnerability
38. Social protection systems should be based on legislation and, as
appropriate, strengthened and expanded, as necessary, in order to protect
from poverty people who cannot find work; people who cannot work due to
sickness, disability, old age or maternity, or to their caring for children
and sick or older relatives; families that have lost a breadwinner through
death or marital breakup; and people who have lost their livelihoods due
to natural disasters or civil violence, wars or forced displacement. Due
attention should be given to people affected by the human immunodeficiency
virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) pandemic. Actions
to this end should include:
(a) Strengthening and expanding programmes targeted to those in need,
programmes providing universal basic protection, and social security insurance
programmes, with the choice of programmes depending on national financial
and administrative capacities;
(b) Developing, where necessary, a strategy for a gradual expansion of
social protection programmes that provide social security for all, according
to a schedule and terms and conditions related to national contexts;
(c) Ensuring that social safety nets associated with economic restructuring
are considered as complementary strategies to overall poverty reduction
and an increase in productive employment. Short term by nature, safety
nets must protect people living in poverty and enable them to find productive
employment;
(d) Designing social protection and support programmes to help people
become self-sufficient as fully and quickly as possible, to assist and
protect families, to reintegrate people excluded from economic activity
and to prevent the social isolation or stigmatization of those who need
protection;
(e) Exploring a variety of means for raising revenues to strengthen social
protection programmes, and promoting efforts by the private sector and
voluntary associations to provide social protection and support;
(f) Promoting the innovative efforts of self-help organizations, professional
associations and other organizations of civil society in this sphere;
(g) Expanding and strengthening social protection programmes to protect
working people, including the self-employed and their families, from the
risk of falling into poverty, by extending coverage to as many as possible,
providing benefits quickly and ensuring that entitlements continue when
workers change jobs;
(h) Ensuring, through appropriate regulation, that contributory social
protection plans are efficient and transparent so that the contributions
of workers, employers and the State and the accumulation of resources
can be monitored by the participants;
(i) Ensuring an adequate social safety net under structural adjustment
programmes;
(j) Ensuring that social protection and social support programmes meet
the needs of women, and especially that they take into account women's
multiple roles and concerns, in particular the reintegration of women
into formal work after periods of absence, support for older women, and
the promotion of acceptance of women's multiple roles and responsibilities.
39. Particular efforts should be made to protect children and youth by:
(a) Promoting family stability and supporting families in providing mutual
support, including in their role as nurturers and educators of children;
(b) Promoting social support, including good quality child care and working
conditions that allow both parents to reconcile parenthood with working
life;
(c) Supporting and involving family organizations and networks in community
activities;
(d) Taking the necessary legislative, administrative, social and educational
measures to protect and promote the rights of the child, with particular
attention to the girl child;
(e) Improving the situation and protecting the rights of children in
especially difficult circumstances, including children in areas of armed
conflict, children who lack adequate family support, urban street children,
abandoned children, children with disabilities, children addicted to narcotic
drugs, children affected by war or natural and man-made disasters, unaccompanied
minor refugee children, working children, and children who are economically
and sexually exploited or abused, including the victims of the sale and
trafficking of children; ensuring that they have access to food, shelter,
education and health care and are protected from abuse and violence, as
well as provided with the necessary social and psychological assistance
for their healthy reintegration into society and for family reunification
consistent with the Convention on the Rights of the Child; and substituting
education for child work;
(f) Developing and strengthening programmes targeted at youth living
in poverty in order to enhance their economic, educational, social and
cultural opportunities, to promote constructive social relations among
them and to provide them with connections outside their communities to
break the intergenerational cycle of poverty;
(g) Addressing the special needs of indigenous children and their families,
particularly those living in poor areas, enabling them to benefit adequately
from economic and social development programmes, with full respect for
their cultures, languages and traditions;
(h) Improving the condition of the single parent in society and ensuring
that single-parent families and female-headed or female-maintained households
receive the social support they need, including support for adequate housing
and child care.
40. Particular efforts should be made to protect older persons, including
those with disabilities, by:
(a) Strengthening family support systems;
(b) Improving the situation of older persons, in particular in cases
where they lack adequate family support, including rural older persons,
working older persons, those affected by armed conflicts and natural or
man-made disasters, and those who are exploited, physically or psychologically
neglected, or abused;
(c) Ensuring that older persons are able to meet their basic human needs
through access to social services and social security, that those in need
are assisted, and that older persons are protected from abuse and violence
and are treated as a resource and not a burden;
(d) Providing assistance to grandparents who have been required to assume
responsibility for children, particularly of parents who are affected
by serious diseases, including AIDS or leprosy, or others who are unable
to care for their dependants;
(e) Creating a financial environment that encourages people to save for
their old age;
(f) Strengthening measures and mechanisms to ensure that retired workers
do not fall into poverty, taking into account their contribution to the
development of their countries;
(g) Encouraging and supporting cross-generational participation in policy
and programme development and in decision-making bodies at all levels.
41. People and communities should be protected from impoverishment and
long-term displacement and exclusion resulting from disasters through
the following actions at the national and international levels, as appropriate:
(a) Designing effective mechanisms to reduce the impact and to mitigate
the effects of natural disasters, such as droughts, earthquakes, cyclones
and floods;
(b) Developing long-term strategies and contingency plans for the effective
mitigation of natural disasters and for famine, including early warning,
assessment, information dissemination and management, as well as rapid
response strategies, that ensure the quick evolution of relief activities
into rehabilitation and development;
(c) Developing complementary mechanisms that integrate governmental,
intergovernmental and non-governmental efforts, including the establishment
of national volunteer corps to support United Nations activities in the
areas of humanitarian emergency assistance, as well as mechanisms to promote
a smooth transition from relief to rehabilitation, reconstruction and
development, in accordance with General Assembly resolutions 46/182 and
49/139 B;
(d) Developing and strengthening emergency food reserves as a means to
prevent acute food shortages and stabilize prices, with facilities for
food storage, transportation and distribution during emergencies, making
full use of traditional and market mechanisms;
(e) In disaster-prone areas and in cooperation with community-based organizations,
developing drought and flood mitigation agronomic practices and resource
conservation and infrastructure-building programmes, using food-for-work,
where appropriate, and incorporating traditional disaster-response practices
that can be rapidly expanded into emergency employment and rebuilding
programmes in disaster situations;
(f) Establishing the necessary planning and logistical mechanisms to
enable quick and effective response in disaster situations to provide
food, psychological and social care, medicines, medical supplies and other
relief to victims, especially women and children, and ensuring that the
relief is effectively targeted to those who need it; and channelling and
organizing disaster assistance so as to regenerate the local economy and
support resource protection and development efforts;
(g) Mobilizing and coordinating regional and international assistance,
including assistance from the United Nations system, and from non-governmental
organizations, to support the actions of Governments and communities confronting
disaster situations;
(h) Reducing vulnerability to natural disasters through the development
of early warning systems.
Chapter III
EXPANSION OF PRODUCTIVE EMPLOYMENT AND REDUCTION OF UNEMPLOYMENT
Basis for action and objectives
42. Productive work and employment are central elements of development
as well as decisive elements of human identity. Sustained economic growth
and sustainable development as well as the expansion of productive employment
should go hand in hand. Full and adequately and appropriately remunerated
employment is an effective method of combating poverty and promoting social
integration. The goal of full employment requires that the State, the
social partners and all the other parts of civil society at all levels
cooperate to create conditions that enable everyone to participate in
and benefit from productive work. In a world of increasing globalization
and interdependence among countries, national efforts need to be buttressed
by international cooperation.
43. Globalization and rapid technological development give rise to increased
labour mobility, bringing new employment opportunities as well as new
uncertainties. There has been an increase in part-time, casual and other
forms of atypical employment. In addition to requiring the creation of
new employment opportunities on an unprecedented scale, such an environment
calls for expanded efforts to enhance human resource development for sustainable
development by, inter alia, enhancing the knowledge and skills necessary
for people, particularly for women and youth, to work productively and
adapt to changing requirements.
44. In many developed countries, growth in employment is currently great
in small and medium-sized enterprises and in self-employment. In many
developing countries, informal sector activities are often the leading
source of employment opportunities for people with limited access to formal-sector
wage employment, in particular for women. The removal of obstacles to
the operation of such enterprises and the provision of support for their
creation and expansion must be accompanied by protection of the basic
rights, health and safety of workers and the progressive improvement of
overall working conditions, together with the strengthening of efforts
to make some enterprises part of the formal sector.
45. While all groups can benefit from more employment opportunities,
specific needs and changing demographic patterns and trends call for appropriate
measures. Particular efforts by the public and private sectors are required
in all spheres of employment policy to ensure gender equality, equal opportunity
and non-discrimination on the basis of race/ethnic group, religion, age,
health and disability, and with full respect for applicable international
instruments. Special attention must also be paid to the needs of groups
who face particular disadvantages in their access to the labour market
so as to ensure their integration into productive activities, including
through the promotion of effective support mechanisms.
46. Much unremunerated productive work, such as caring for children and
older persons, producing and preparing food for the family, protecting
the environment and providing voluntary assistance to vulnerable and disadvantaged
individuals and groups, is of great social importance. World wide, most
of this work is done by women who often face the double burden of remunerated
and unremunerated work. Efforts are needed to acknowledge the social and
economic importance and value of unremunerated work, to facilitate labour-force
participation in combination with such work through flexible working arrangements,
encouraging voluntary social activities as well as broadening the very
conception of productive work, and to accord social recognition for such
work, including by developing methods for reflecting its value in quantitative
terms for possible reflection in accounts that may be produced separately
from, but consistent with, core national accounts.
47. There is therefore an urgent need, in the overall context of promoting
sustained economic growth and sustainable development, for:
~ Placing the creation of employment at the centre of national strategies
and policies, with the full participation of employers and trade unions
and other parts of civil society;
~ Policies to expand work opportunities and increase productivity in
both rural and urban sectors;
~ Education and training that enable workers and entrepreneurs to adapt
to changing technologies and economic conditions;
~ Quality jobs, with full respect for the basic rights of workers as
defined by relevant International Labour Organization and other international
instruments;
~ Giving special priority, in the design of policies, to the problems
of structural, long-term unemployment and underemployment of youth, women,
persons with disabilities and all other disadvantaged groups and individuals;
~ Empowerment of women, gender balance in decision-making processes at
all levels and gender analysis in policy development to ensure equal employment
opportunities and wage rates for women and to enhance harmonious and mutually
beneficial partnerships between women and men in sharing family and employment
responsibilities;
~ Empowerment of members of vulnerable and disadvantaged groups, including
through the provision of education and training;
~ A broader recognition and understanding of work and employment and
greater flexibility in working time arrangements for both men and women.
Actions
A. The centrality of employment in policy formulation
48. Placing the expansion of productive employment at the centre of sustainable
development strategies and economic and social policies requires:
(a) Promoting and pursuing active policies for full, productive, appropriately
remunerated and freely chosen employment;
(b) Giving priority at the national and international levels to the policies
that can address the problems of unemployment and underemployment.
49. Minimizing the negative impact on jobs of measures for macroeconomic
stability requires:
(a) Pursuing the coordination of macroeconomic policies so that they
are mutually reinforcing and conducive to broad-based and sustained economic
growth and sustainable development, as well as to substantial increases
in productive employment expansion and a decline in unemployment world
wide;
(b) Giving priority to programmes that most directly promote viable and
long-term job growth when budgetary adjustments are required;
(c) Removing structural constraints to economic growth and employment
creation as a part of stabilization policies;
(d) Enabling competing claims on resources to be resolved in a non-inflationary
manner through the development and use of sound industrial relations systems;
(e) Monitoring, analysing and disseminating information on the impact
of trade and investment liberalization on the economy, especially on employment;
(f) Exchanging information on different employment promotion measures
and their consequences, and monitoring the development of global employment
trends;
(g) Establishing appropriate social safety mechanisms to minimize the
adverse effects of structural adjustment, stabilization or reform programmes
on the workforce, especially the vulnerable, and for those who lose their
jobs, creating conditions for their re-entry through, inter alia, continuing
education and retraining.
50. Promoting patterns of economic growth that maximize employment creation
requires:
(a) Encouraging, as appropriate, labour-intensive investments in economic
and social infrastructure that use local resources and create, maintain
and rehabilitate community assets in both rural and urban areas;
(b) Promoting technological innovations and industrial policies that
have the potential to stimulate short and long-term employment creation,
and considering their impact on vulnerable and disadvantaged groups;
(c) Giving developing countries the capacity to select specific and suitable
technologies;
(d) Providing technical assistance and expanded transfer of technology
to developing countries to integrate technology and employment policies
with other social objectives, and to establish and strengthen national
and local technology institutions;
(e) Encouraging the realization in the countries with economies in transition
of programmes for on-the-job personnel training, facilitating their adaptation
to market-oriented reforms and reducing mass unemployment;
(f) Promoting mutually supportive improvements in rural farm and non-farm
production, including animal husbandry, forestry, fisheries and agro-processing
industries, aiming to expand and diversify environmentally sound, sustained
economic activity and productive employment in the rural sector;
(g) Encouraging community economic development strategies that build
on partnerships among Governments and members of civil society to create
jobs and address the social circumstances of individuals, families and
communities;
(h) Introducing sound policies to mobilize savings and stimulate investment
in capital-short areas;
(i) Maximizing the job creation potential inherent in Agenda 21 through
the conservation and management of natural resources, the promotion of
alternative livelihoods in fragile ecosystems, and the rehabilitation
and regeneration of critically affected and vulnerable land areas and
natural resources;
(j) Encouraging the utilization of renewable energy, based on local employment-intensive
resources, in particular in rural areas.
51. Enhancing opportunities for the creation and growth of private-sector
enterprises that would generate additional employment requires:
(a) Removing obstacles faced by small and medium-sized enterprises and
easing regulations that discourage private initiative;
(b) Facilitating access by small and medium-sized enterprises to credit,
national and international markets, management training and technological
information;
(c) Facilitating arrangements between large and small enterprises, such
as subcontracting programmes, with full respect for workers' rights;
(d) Improving opportunities and working conditions for women and youth
entrepreneurs by eliminating discrimination in access to credit, productive
resources and social security protection, and providing and increasing,
as appropriate, family benefits and social support, such as health care
and child care;
(e) Promoting, supporting and establishing legal frameworks to foster
the development of cooperative enterprises, and encouraging them to mobilize
capital, develop innovative lending programmes and promote entrepreneurship;
(f) Assisting informal sectors and local enterprises to become more productive
and progressively integrated into the formal economy through access to
affordable credit, information, wider markets, new technology and appropriate
technological and management skills, opportunities to upgrade technical
and management skills, and improved premises and other physical infrastructure,
as well as by progressively extending labour standards and social protection
without destroying the ability of informal sectors to generate employment;
(g) Promoting the creation and development of independent organizations,
such as chambers of commerce and other associations or self-help institutions
of small formal and informal enterprises;
(h) Facilitating the expansion of the training and employment-generating
opportunities of industries.
B. Education, training and labour policies
52. Facilitating people's access to productive employment in today's
rapidly changing global environment and developing better quality jobs
requires:
(a) Establishing well-defined educational priorities and investing effectively
in education and training systems;
(b) Introducing new and revitalized partnerships between education and
other government departments, including labour, and communications and
partnerships between Governments and non-governmental organizations, the
private sector, local communities, religious groups and families;
(c) Ensuring broad basic education, especially literacy, and promoting
general education, including the analytical and critical thinking that
is essential to improve learning skills. This is the foundation for acquiring
specialized skills and for renewing, adapting and upgrading them rapidly
to facilitate horizontal and vertical occupational mobility;
(d) Promoting the active participation of youth and adult learners in
the design of literacy campaigns, education and training programmes to
ensure that the labour force and social realities of diverse groups are
taken into account;
(e) Promoting lifelong learning to ensure that education and training
programmes respond to changes in the economy, provide full and equal access
to training opportunities, secure the access of women to training programmes,
offer incentives for public and private sectors to provide and for workers
to acquire training on a continuous basis, and stimulate entrepreneurial
skills;
(f) Encouraging and supporting through technical assistance programmes,
including those of the United Nations system, well-designed and adaptable
vocational training and apprenticeship programmes to enhance productivity
and productive employment;
(g) Promoting and strengthening training programmes for the employment
of new entrants to the job market and retraining programmes for displaced
and retrenched workers;
(h) Developing an enhanced capacity for research and knowledge dissemination
by encouraging national and international exchanges of information on
innovative models and best practices;
(i) Developing, in the area of vocational and continuing education, innovative
methods of teaching and learning, including interactive technologies and
inductive methods involving close coordination between working experience
and training.
53. Helping workers to adapt and to enhance their employment opportunities
under changing economic conditions requires:
(a) Designing, developing, implementing, analysing and monitoring active
labour policies to stimulate the demand for labour in order to ensure
that the burden of indirect labour costs on employers does not constitute
a disincentive to hiring workers, identifying skill shortages and surpluses,
providing vocational guidance and counselling services and active help
in job searches, promoting occupational choice and mobility, offering
advisory services and support to enterprises, particularly small enterprises,
for the more effective use and development of their workforce, and establishing
institutions and processes that prevent all forms of discrimination and
improve the employment opportunities of groups that are vulnerable and
disadvantaged;
(b) Improving employment opportunities and increasing ways and means
of helping youth and persons with disabilities to develop the skills they
need to enable them to find employment;
(c) Promoting access by women and girls to traditionally male-dominated
occupations;
(d) Developing strategies to address the needs of people engaged in various
forms of atypical employment;
(e) Promoting labour mobility, retraining and maintenance of adequate
levels of social protection to facilitate worker redeployment when there
is phasing out of production or closure of an enterprise, giving special
attention to vulnerable and disadvantaged groups;
(f) Facilitating the integration or reintegration of women into the workforce
by developing adequate child care, care for older persons and other support
services and facilities;
(g) Encouraging cooperation between employers and workers to prepare
for the introduction of new technologies and to plan for their employment
effects as far in advance as possible, while ensuring adequate protection
and adjustment;
(h) Strengthening public and private employment services to assist workers
to adapt to changing job markets and provide social safety mechanisms,
occupational guidance, employment and job search counselling, training,
placement, apprenticeships and the sharing of information;
(i) Strengthening labour market information systems, particularly through
development of appropriate data and indicators on employment, underemployment,
unemployment and earnings, as well as dissemination of information concerning
labour markets, including, as far as possible, work situations outside
formal markets. All such data should be disaggregated by gender in order
to monitor the status of women relative to men.
C. Enhanced quality of work and employment
54. Governments should enhance the quality of work and employment by:
(a) Observing and fully implementing the human rights obligations that
they have assumed;
(b) Safeguarding and promoting respect for basic workers' rights, including
the prohibition of forced labour and child labour, freedom of association
and the right to organize and bargain collectively, equal remuneration
for men and women for work of equal value, and non-discrimination in employment,
fully implementing the conventions of the International Labour Organization
(ILO) in the case of States parties to those conventions, and taking into
account the principles embodied in those conventions in the case of those
countries that are not States parties to thus achieve truly sustained
economic growth and sustainable development;
(c) Strongly considering ratification and full implementation of ILO
conventions in these areas, as well as those relating to the employment
rights of minors, women, youth, persons with disabilities and indigenous
people;
(d) Using existing international labour standards to guide the formulation
of national labour legislation and policies;
(e) Promoting the role of ILO, particularly as regards improving the
level of employment and the quality of work;
(f) Encouraging, where appropriate, employers and workers to consider
ways and means for enhancing the sharing of workers in the profits of
enterprises and promoting cooperation between workers and employers in
the decisions of enterprises.
55. To achieve a healthy and safe working environment, remove exploitation,
abolish child labour, raise productivity and enhance the quality of life
requires:
(a) Developing and implementing policies designed to promote improved
working conditions, including health and safety conditions;
(b) Improving health policies that reduce, with a view to eliminating,
environmental health hazards and provide for occupational health and safety,
in conformity with the relevant conventions, and providing informal sector
enterprises and all workers with accessible information and guidance on
how to enhance occupational safety and reduce health risks;
(c) Promoting, in accordance with national laws and regulations, sound
labour relations based on tripartite cooperation and full respect for
freedom of association and the right to organize and bargain collectively;
(d) Setting specific target dates for eliminating all forms of child
labour that are contrary to accepted international standards and ensuring
the full enforcement of relevant existing laws, and, where appropriate,
enacting the legislation necessary to implement the Convention on the
Rights of the Child and ILO standards, ensuring the protection of working
children, in particular of street children, through the provision of appropriate
health, education and other social services;
(e) Designing labour policies and programmes to help eradicate family
poverty, which is a main cause of child labour, eliminating child labour
and encouraging parents to send their children to school through, inter
alia, the provision of social services and other incentives;
(f) Establishing policies and programmes to protect workers, especially
women, from sexual harassment and violence;
(g) Encouraging incentives to public and private enterprises to develop,
transfer and adopt technologies and know-how that improve the working
environment, enhance occupational safety and reduce, with a view to eliminating,
health risks.
56. The full participation of women in the labour market and their equal
access to employment opportunities require:
(a) Establishing the principle of equality between men and women as a
basis for employment policy and promoting gender-sensitivity training
to eliminate prejudice against the employment of women;
(b) Eliminating gender discrimination, including by taking positive action,
where appropriate, in hiring, wages, access to credit, benefits, promotion,
training, career development, job assignment, working conditions, job
security and social security benefits;
(c) Improving women's access to technologies that facilitate their occupational
and domestic work, encourage self-support, generate income, transform
gender-prescribed roles within the productive process and enable them
to move out of stereotyped, low-paying jobs;
(d) Changing those policies and attitudes that reinforce the division
of labour based on gender, and providing institutional support, such as
social protection for maternity, parental leave, technologies that facilitate
the sharing and reduce the burden of domestic chores, and flexible working
arrangements, including parental voluntary part-time employment and work-sharing,
as well as accessible and affordable quality child-care facilities, to
enable working parents to reconcile work with family responsibilities,
paying particular attention to the needs of single-parent households;
(e) Encouraging men to take an active part in all areas of family and
household responsibilities, including the sharing of child-rearing and
housework.
D. Enhanced employment opportunities for groups with specific needs
57. The improvement of the design of policies and programmes requires:
(a) Identifying and reflecting the specific needs of particular groups,
and ensuring that programmes are equitable and non-discriminatory, efficient
and effective in meeting the needs of those groups;
(b) Actively involving representatives of these groups in planning, design
and management, and monitoring, evaluating and reorienting these programmes
by providing access to accurate information and sufficient resources to
ensure that they reach their intended beneficiaries.
58. Employment policies can better address the problem of short- and
long-term unemployment by:
(a) Incorporating, with the involvement of the unemployed and/or their
associations, a comprehensive set of measures, including employment planning,
re-education and training programmes, literacy, skills upgrading, counselling
and job-search assistance, temporary work schemes, frequent contact with
employment service offices and preparing for entry and re-entry into the
labour market;
(b) Analysing the underlying causes of long-term unemployment and their
effect on different groups, including older workers and single parents,
and designing employment and other supporting policies that address specific
situations and needs;
(c) Promoting social security schemes that reduce barriers and disincentives
to employment so as to enable the unemployed to improve their capacity
to participate actively in society, to maintain an adequate standard of
living and to be able to take advantage of employment opportunities.
59. Programmes for entry or re-entry into the labour market aimed at
vulnerable and disadvantaged groups can effectively combat the causes
of exclusion on the labour market by:
(a) Complementing literacy actions, general education or vocational training
by work experience that may include support and instruction on business
management and training so as to give better knowledge of the value of
entrepreneurship and other private-sector contributions to society;
(b) Increasing the level of skills, and also improving the ability to
get a job through improvements in housing, health and family life.
60. Policies should seek to guarantee all youth constructive options
for their future by:
(a) Providing equal access to education at the primary and secondary
levels, with literacy as a priority and with special attention to girls;
(b) Encouraging the struggle against illiteracy and promoting literacy
training in national languages in developing countries, in particular
in Africa;
(c) Encouraging various actors to join forces in designing and carrying
out comprehensive and coordinated programmes that stimulate the resourcefulness
of youth, preparing them for durable employment or self-employment, and
providing them with guidance, vocational and managerial training, social
skills, work experience and education in social values;
(d) Ensuring the participation of youth, commensurate with their age
and responsibility, in planning and decision-making with regard to their
future.
61. The full participation of indigenous people in the labour market
and their equal access to employment opportunities requires developing
comprehensive employment, education and training programmes that take
account of the particular needs of indigenous people.
62. Broadening the range of employment opportunities for persons with
disabilities requires:
(a) Ensuring that laws and regulations do not discriminate against persons
with disabilities;
(b) Taking proactive measures, such as organizing support services, devising
incentive schemes and supporting self-help schemes and small businesses;
(c) Making appropriate adjustments in the workplace to accommodate persons
with disabilities, including in that respect the promotion of innovative
technologies;
(d) Developing alternative forms of employment, such as supported employment,
for persons with disabilities who need these services;
(e) Promoting public awareness within society regarding the impact of
the negative stereotyping of persons with disabilities on their participation
in the labour market.
63. There is need for intensified international cooperation and national
attention to the situation of migrant workers and their families. To that
end:
(a) Governments are invited to consider ratifying existing instruments
pertaining to migrant workers, particularly the International Convention
on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of
Their Families; 15/
(b) In accordance with national legislation, Governments of receiving
countries are urged to consider extending to documented migrants who meet
appropriate length-of-stay requirements and to members of their families
whose stay in the receiving country is regular, treatment equal to that
accorded their own nationals with regard to the enjoyment of basic human
rights, including equality of opportunity and treatment in respect of
religious practices, working conditions, social security, participation
in trade unions and access to health, education, cultural and other social
services, as well as equal access to the judicial system and equal treatment
before the law;
(c) Governments of countries of origin, transit countries and countries
of destination are urged to cooperate in reducing the causes of undocumented
migration, safeguarding the basic human rights of undocumented migrants
and preventing their exploitation;
(d) Governments of both receiving countries and countries of origin should
adopt effective sanctions against those who organize undocumented migration,
exploit undocumented migrants or engage in trafficking in undocumented
migrants;
(e) Governments of countries of origin are urged to facilitate the return
of migrants and their reintegration into their home communities and to
devise ways of using their skills. Governments of countries of origin
should consider collaborating with countries of destination and engaging
the support of appropriate international organizations in promoting the
return on a voluntary basis of qualified migrants who can play a crucial
role in the transfer of knowledge, skills and technology. Countries of
destination are encouraged to facilitate return migration on a voluntary
basis by adopting flexible policies, such as the transferability of pensions
and other work benefits.
E. A broader recognition and understanding of work and employment
64. A broader recognition and understanding of work and employment requires:
(a) Acknowledging the important contribution of unremunerated work to
societal well-being and bringing respect, dignity and value to societal
perceptions of such work and the people who do it;
(b) Developing a more comprehensive knowledge of work and employment
through, inter alia, efforts to measure and better understand the type,
extent and distribution of unremunerated work, particularly work in caring
for dependants and unremunerated work done for family farms or businesses,
and encouraging, sharing and disseminating information, studies and experience
in this field, including on the development of methods for assessing its
value in quantitative terms, for possible reflection in accounts that
may be produced separately from, but are consistent with, core national
accounts;
(c) Recognizing the relationship between remunerated employment and unremunerated
work in developing strategies to expand productive employment, to ensure
equal access by women and men to employment, and to ensure the care and
well-being of children and other dependants, as well as to combat poverty
and promote social integration;
(d) Encouraging an open dialogue on the possibilities and institutional
requirements for a broader understanding of various forms of work and
employment;
(e) Examining a range of policies and programmes, including social security
legislation, and taxation systems, in accordance with national priorities
and policies, to ascertain how to facilitate flexibility in the way people
divide their time between education and training, paid employment, family
responsibilities, volunteer activity and other socially useful forms of
work, leisure and retirement, giving particular attention to the situation
of women, especially in female-maintained households;
(f) Promoting socially useful volunteer work and allocating appropriate
resources to support such work without diluting the objectives regarding
employment expansion;
(g) Intensifying international exchange of experience on various aspects
of change in the recognition and understanding of work and employment
and on new forms of flexible working time arrangements over the lifetime.
65. The development of additional socially useful new types of employment
and work requires, inter alia:
(a) Helping vulnerable and disadvantaged groups to integrate better into
society and thus participate more effectively in economic and social development;
(b) Helping older persons who are dependent or providing support for
families in need of educational assistance or social support;
(c) Strengthening social ties through these forms of employment and work,
which represents an important achievement of social development policy.
Chapter IV
SOCIAL INTEGRATION
Basis for action and objectives
66. The aim of social integration is to create "a society for all",
in which every individual, each with rights and responsibilities, has
an active role to play. Such an inclusive society must be based on respect
for all human rights and fundamental freedoms, cultural and religious
diversity, social justice and the special needs of vulnerable and disadvantaged
groups, democratic participation and the rule of law. The pluralistic
nature of most societies has at times resulted in problems for the different
groups to achieve and maintain harmony and cooperation, and to have equal
access to all resources in society. Full recognition of each individual's
rights in the context of the rule of law has not always been fully guaranteed.
Since the founding of the United Nations, this quest for humane, stable,
safe, tolerant and just societies has shown a mixed record at best.
67. Nevertheless, progress has been noted, as shown in the continuation
of the ongoing process of decolonization; the elimination of apartheid;
the spread of democracy; wider recognition of the need to respect human
dignity, all human rights and fundamental freedoms and cultural diversity;
the unacceptability of discrimination; increasing recognition of the unique
concerns of indigenous people in the world; an expanded notion of collective
responsibility for all members of a society; expanded economic and educational
opportunities and the globalization of communication; and greater possibilities
for social mobility, choice and autonomy of action.
68. Notwithstanding the instances of progress, there are negative developments
that include social polarization and fragmentation; widening disparities
and inequalities of income and wealth within and among nations; problems
arising from uncontrolled urban development and the degradation of the
environment; marginalization of people, families, social groups, communities
and even entire countries; and strains on individuals, families, communities
and institutions as a result of the rapid pace of social change, economic
transformation, migration and major dislocations of population, particularly
in the areas of armed conflict.
69. Furthermore, violence, in its many manifestations, including domestic
violence, especially against women, children, older persons and people
with disabilities, is a growing threat to the security of individuals,
families and communities everywhere. Total social breakdown is an all
too real contemporary experience. Organized crime, illegal drugs, the
illicit arms trade, trafficking in women and children, ethnic and religious
conflict, civil war, terrorism, all forms of extremist violence, xenophobia,
and politically motivated killing and even genocide present fundamental
threats to societies and the global social order. These are compelling
and urgent reasons for action by Governments individually and, as appropriate,
jointly to foster social cohesion while recognizing, protecting and valuing
diversity.
70. There is therefore an urgent need for:
þ Transparent and accountable public institutions that are accessible
to people on an equal basis and are responsive to their needs;
þ Opportunities for all to participate in all spheres of public
life;
þ Strengthened participation and involvement of civil society in
the formulation, implementation and evaluation of decisions determining
the functioning and well-being of societies;
þ Publicly available objective data to enable people to make informed
decisions;
þ Maintenance of social stability and promotion of social justice
and progress;
þ Promotion of non-discrimination, tolerance and mutual respect
for and the value of diversity;
þ Equity and equality of opportunity and social mobility;
þ Gender equality and equity and empowerment of women;
þ Elimination of physical and social barriers with the aim of creating
a society accessible for all, with special emphasis on measures to meet
the needs and interests of those who face obstacles in participating fully
in society;
þ Giving special attention to the right to the enjoyment of the
highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, and to health
as a factor of development;
þ Promoting the principle of caring for one another's well-being
and fostering the spirit of mutual support, within the context of human
rights education;
þ While acknowledging legitimate national defence needs, recognizing
and addressing the dangers to society of armed conflict, and the negative
effect of excessive military expenditures, trade in arms, especially of
those arms that are particularly injurious or have indiscriminate effects,
and excessive investment for arms production and acquisition. Similarly,
the need to combat illicit arms trafficking, violence, crime, the production,
use and trafficking of illicit drugs, and trafficking in women and children
should be recognized and addressed;
þ The elimination of all forms of violence and the full implementation
of the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women. 16/
Actions
A. Responsive government and full participation in society
71. Governments should promote and protect all human rights and fundamental
freedoms, including the right to development, bearing in mind the interdependent
and mutually reinforcing relationship between democracy, development and
respect for human rights, and should make public institutions more responsive
to people's needs by:
(a) Ensuring that decisions are based on accurate data and are taken
with the participation of those who will be affected, keeping under review,
within each country's constitutional framework, the responsibilities of
the different levels of government and the administrative arrangements
for organizing and delivering services;
(b) Keeping under review, within each country's constitutional framework,
the national, provincial, municipal and local capacity and capability
in raising revenue, and allocating resources to promote local initiatives
in maintaining and increasing community cohesion;
(c) Simplifying administrative regulations, disseminating information
about public policy issues and initiatives for collective interests, and
facilitating maximum access to information;
(d) Opening channels and promoting full confidence between citizens and
government agencies, and developing affordable recourse procedures accessible
to all people, especially those who have no access to channels and agencies
of communication to seek redress of grievances;
(e) Encouraging the production of relevant studies/research to assess
the consequences of global and technological changes on social integration
and the production of evaluations of the policies and programmes put in
place to achieve the various components of social integration; and encouraging
national and international exchanges and dissemination of information
on innovative models and successful practices;
(f) Requiring accountability for the honest, just and equitable delivery
of public services to the people from all public officials;
(g) Making their services accessible to all citizens and taking special
care to ensure that the services are provided to all persons in need;
(h) Strengthening popular political participation, and promoting the
transparency and accountability of political groupings at the local and
national levels;
(i) Encouraging the ratification of, the avoidance as far as possible
of the resort to reservations to and the implementation of international
human rights instruments aiming to eliminate barriers to the full enjoyment
of all human rights.
72. Encouraging the fullest participation in society requires:
(a) Strengthening the capacities and opportunities for all people, especially
those who are vulnerable and disadvantaged, to establish and maintain
independent organizations representing their interests, within each country's
constitutional framework;
(b) Enabling institutions of civil society, with special attention to
those representing vulnerable and disadvantaged groups, to participate
in the formulation, on a consultative basis, implementation and evaluation
of policies related to social development;
(c) Giving community organizations greater involvement in the design
and implementation of local projects, particularly in the areas of education,
health care, resource management and social protection;
(d) Ensuring a legal framework and a support structure that encourage
the formation of and constructive contributions from community organizations
and voluntary associations of individuals;
(e) Encouraging all members of society to exercise their rights, fulfil
their responsibilities and participate fully in their societies, recognizing
that Governments alone cannot meet all needs in society;
(f) Establishing a universal and flexible social safety net that takes
into account available economic resources and encourages rehabilitation
and active participation in society;
(g) Facilitating the access of disadvantaged and marginalized people
to education and information, as well as their participation in social
and cultural life;
(h) Promoting equality and social integration through sports and cultural
activities.
B. Non-discrimination, tolerance and mutual respect for and value of
diversity
73. Eliminating discrimination and promoting tolerance and mutual respect
for and the value of diversity at the national and international levels
requires:
(a) Enacting and implementing appropriate laws and other regulations
to combat racism, racial discrimination, religious intolerance in all
its various forms, xenophobia and all forms of discrimination in all walks
of life in societies;
(b) Encouraging the ratification of the avoidance as far as possible
of the resort to reservations, and the implementation of international
instruments, including the International Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination 17/ and the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women; 18/
(c) Taking specific measures, in the context of the implementation of
the Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women, 19/
to remove long-standing legal and social barriers to employment, education,
productive resources and public services; assist women in becoming aware
of and realizing their rights; and ensure the elimination of intra-family
discrimination for the girl child, especially in regard to health, nutrition
and education;
(d) Ensuring gender equality and equity through changes in attitudes,
policies and practices, encouraging the full participation and empowerment
of women in social, economic and political life, and enhancing gender
balance in decision-making processes at all levels;
(e) Reviewing with a view to changing legislation, public codes and practices
that perpetuate discriminatory practices;
(f) Disseminating information in plain language to all groups in society
about people's rights and the means available to redress complaints;
(g) Strengthening or establishing machinery for monitoring and resolving
disputes and conflicts related to discriminatory practices, and developing
arbitration and conciliation procedures at the local and national levels;
(h) Setting an example through State institutions and the educational
system to promote and protect respect for freedom of expression; democracy;
political pluralism; diversity of heritage, cultures and values; religious
tolerance and principles; and the national traditions on which a country
has been built;
(i) Recognizing that the languages spoken or used in the world should
be respected and protected;
(j) Recognizing that it is of utmost importance for all people to live
in cooperation and harmony, and ensuring that the traditions and cultural
heritage of nations are fully protected;
(k) Encouraging independent communication media that promote people's
understanding and awareness of all aspects of social integration, with
full respect for freedom of information and expression.
C. Equality and social justice
74. Governments should promote equality and social justice by:
(a) Ensuring that all people are equal before the law;
(b) Carrying out a regular review of public policy, including health
and education policies, and public spending from a social and gender equality
and equity perspective, and promoting their positive contribution to equalizing
opportunities;
(c) Expanding and improving access to basic services with the aim of
ensuring universal coverage;
(d) Providing equal opportunities in public-sector employment and providing
guidance, information and, as appropriate, incentives to private employers
to do the same;
(e) Encouraging the free formation of cooperatives, community and other
grass-roots organizations, mutual support groups, recreational/sports
associations and similar institutions that tend to strengthen social integration,
paying particular attention to policies that assist families in their
support, educational, socializing and nurturing roles;
(f) Ensuring that structural adjustment programmes are so designed as
to minimize their negative effects on vulnerable and disadvantaged groups
and communities while ensuring their positive effects on them by preventing
their marginalization in economic and social activities, and devising
measures to ensure that such groups and communities gain access to and
control over economic resources and economic and social activities. Actions
should be taken to reduce inequality and economic disparity;
(g) Promoting full access to preventive and curative health care to improve
the quality of life, especially by the vulnerable and disadvantaged groups,
in particular women and children;
(h) Expanding basic education by developing special measures to provide
schooling for children and youth living in sparsely populated and remote
areas, for children and youth of nomadic, pastoral, migrant or indigenous
parents, and for street children, children and youth working or looking
after younger siblings and disabled or aged parents, and disabled children
and youth; establishing, in partnership with indigenous people, educational
systems that will meet the unique needs of their cultures;
(i) Ensuring that the expansion of basic education is accompanied by
improved quality, appropriate attention to children of different abilities,
cooperation between family and school, and a close link between the school
curriculum and the needs of the workplace;
(j) Evaluating school systems on a regular basis by results achieved,
and disseminating research findings regarding the appropriateness of different
methods of evaluation;
(k) Ensuring that all people can have access to a variety of formal and
non-formal learning activities throughout their lives that allows them
to contribute to and benefit from full participation in society; making
use of all forms of education, including non-conventional and experimental
means of education, such as tele-courses and correspondence courses, through
public institutions, the institutions of civil society and the private
sector, to provide educational opportunities for those who in childhood
missed necessary schooling, for youth in the process of transition from
school to work, and for those who wish to continue education and upgrade
skills throughout their lives;
(l) Providing equal access for girls to all levels of education, including
non-traditional and vocational training, and ensuring that measures are
taken to address the various cultural and practical barriers that impede
their access to education through such measures as the hiring of female
teachers, adoption of flexible hours, care of dependants and siblings,
and provision of appropriate facilities.
D. Responses to special social needs
75. Governmental responses to special needs of social groups should include:
(a) Identifying specific means to encourage institutions and services
to adapt to the special needs of vulnerable and disadvantaged groups;
(b) Recognizing and promoting the abilities, talents and experience of
groups that are vulnerable and disadvantaged, identifying ways to prevent
isolation and alienation, and enabling them to make a positive contribution
to society;
(c) Ensuring access to work and social services through such measures
as education, language training and technical assistance for people adversely
affected by language barriers;
(d) Supporting by legislation, incentives and other means, where appropriate,
organizations of the vulnerable and disadvantaged groups so that they
may promote the interests of the groups concerned and become involved
in local and national, economic, social and political decision-making
that guides society as a whole;
(e) Improving the opportunities for people who are disadvantaged or vulnerable
to seek positions in legislatures, Governments, judiciaries and other
positions of public authority or influence;
(f) Taking measures to integrate into economic and social life demobilized
persons and persons displaced by civil conflict and disasters;
(g) Promoting and protecting the rights of indigenous people, and empowering
them to make choices that enable them to retain their cultural identity
while participating in national, economic and social life, with full respect
for their cultural values, languages, traditions and forms of social organization;
(h) Implementing the Plan of Action adopted by the World Summit for Children
in 1990 and ratifying, as appropriate, and implementing the provisions
of the Convention on the Rights of the Child;
(i) Encouraging youth to participate in discussions and decisions affecting
them and in the design, implementation and evaluation of policies and
programmes; ensuring that youth acquire the skills to participate in all
aspects of life in society and to lead self-sufficient lives through the
provision of relevant and innovative educational programmes; and establishing
laws and measures that ensure the protection of youth against physical
and mental abuse and economic exploitation;
(j) Adopting specific measures to equip young people for responsible
adulthood, particularly out-of-school youth and street children;
(k) Promoting the United Nations Standard Rules on the Equalization of
Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities 20/ and developing strategies
for implementing the Rules. Governments, in collaboration with organizations
of people with disabilities and the private sector, should work towards
the equalization of opportunities so that people with disabilities can
contribute to and benefit from full participation in society. Policies
concerning people with disabilities should focus on their abilities rather
than their disabilities and should ensure their dignity as citizens;
(l) Within the context of the United Nations Principles for Older Persons
21/ and the global targets on ageing for the year 2001, 22/ reviewing
or developing strategies for implementing the International Plan of Action
on Ageing 23/ so that older persons can maximize their contribution to
society and play their full part in the community;
(m) Facilitating the implementation of the guidelines for further planning
and suitable follow-up in the field of youth 24/ with a view to promoting
the integration of youth into societies;
(n) Taking measures to enable persons belonging to minorities to participate
fully and contribute to the development of their society.
E. Responses to specific social needs of refugees, displaced persons
and asylum-seekers, documented migrants and undocumented migrants
76. In order to address the special needs of refugees, displaced persons
and asylum-seekers:
(a) Governments are urged to address the root causes of movements of
refugees and displaced persons by taking appropriate measures, particularly
with respect to conflict resolution; the promotion of peace and reconciliation;
respect for human rights, including those of persons belonging to minorities;
and respect for the independence, territorial integrity and sovereignty
of States. Governments and all other entities should respect and safeguard
the right of people to remain in safety in their homes and should refrain
from policies or practices that force people to flee;
(b) Governments are urged to strengthen their support for international
protection and assistance activities on behalf of refugees and, as appropriate,
displaced persons, and to promote the search for durable solutions to
their plight. In so doing, Governments are encouraged to enhance regional
and international mechanisms that promote appropriate shared responsibility
for the protection and assistance needs of refugees. All necessary measures
should be taken to ensure the physical protection of refugees, in particular
that of refugee women and refugee children and especially against exploitation,
abuse and all forms of violence;
(c) Adequate international support should be extended to countries of
asylum to meet the basic needs of refugees and to assist in the search
for durable solutions. Refugee populations should be assisted in achieving
self-sufficiency. Refugees, particularly refugee women, should be involved
in the planning of refugee assistance activities and in their implementation.
In planning and implementing refugee assistance activities, special attention
should be given to the specific needs of refugee and displaced women and
children. Refugees should be provided with access to adequate accommodation,
education, health services, including family planning, and other necessary
social services. Refugees should respect the laws and regulations of their
countries of asylum;
(d) Governments and other relevant actors should create comprehensive
conditions that allow for the voluntary repatriation of refugees in safety
and dignity, and the voluntary and safe return of internally displaced
persons to their homes of origin and their smooth reintegration into society;
(e) Governments are urged to abide by international law concerning refugees.
States that have not already done so are invited to consider acceding
to the international instruments concerning refugees, in particular the
1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 25/ and the 1967 Protocol
to the Convention. 26/ Governments are furthermore urged to respect the
principle of non-refoulement, that is, the principle of no forcible return
of persons to places where their lives or freedom would be threatened
because of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social
group or political opinion. Governments should ensure that asylum-seekers
in the Government's territory have access to a fair hearing and should
facilitate the expeditious processing of asylum requests, ensuring that
guidelines and procedures for the determination of refugee status are
sensitive to the particular situation of women;
(f) Governments and relevant actors should respect the right of people
to seek and enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.
77. To promote the equitable treatment and integration of documented
migrants, particularly documented migrant workers and members of their
families:
(a) Governments should ensure that documented migrants receive fair and
equal treatment, including full respect of their human rights, protection
of the laws of the host society, appropriate access to economic opportunities
and social services; protection against racism, ethnocentrism and xenophobia;
and protection from violence and exploitation. Language training should
be provided, in recognition of the centrality of language acquisition
to the effective integration of documented migrants, including those not
destined for the labour market, in so far as resources permit. Early integration
is the key to allowing documented migrants to contribute their skills,
knowledge and potential to the development of countries of destination,
and involves mutual understanding by documented migrants and the host
society. The former need to know and respect the values, laws, traditions
and principles of the host society, which in turn should respect the religions,
cultures and traditions of documented migrants;
(b) Governments of receiving countries are urged to consider giving to
documented migrants having the right to long-term residence, civil and
political rights and responsibilities, as appropriate, and facilitating
their naturalization. Special efforts should be made to enhance the integration
of the children of long-term migrants by providing them with educational
and training opportunities equal to those of nationals, allowing them
to exercise an economic activity and facilitating the naturalization of
those who have been raised in the receiving country. Consistent with article
10 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child 27/ and all relevant universally
recognized human rights instruments, all Governments, particularly those
of receiving countries, must recognize the vital importance of family
reunification and promote its integration into their national legislation
in order to ensure protection of the unity of the families of documented
migrants. Governments of receiving countries must ensure the protection
of migrants and their families, giving priority to programmes and strategies
that combat religious intolerance, racism, ethnocentrism, xenophobia and
gender discrimination, and that generate the necessary public sensitivity
in that regard;
(c) Governments and relevant actors should encourage the international
exchange of information on educational and training institutions in order
to promote the productive employment of documented migrants through greater
recognition of foreign education and credentials;
(d) Governments should encourage interracial harmony and cross-cultural
understanding through educational programmes, where appropriate, including
alternative dispute resolution and conflict prevention training in schools.
78. In order to address the concerns and basic human needs related to
undocumented migrants:
(a) Governments are urged to cooperate in reducing the causes of undocumented
migration, safeguarding the basic human rights of undocumented migrants,
preventing their exploitation and offering them appropriate means of appeal
according to national legislation, and punishing criminals who organize
trafficking in human beings;
(b) Countries of destination, countries of transit and countries of origin
should cooperate, as appropriate, to manage immigration flows, prevent
undocumented migration, and, if appropriate, facilitate the return of
migrants and their reintegration in their home communities;
(c) Governments are urged to cooperate to reduce the effects of undocumented
migration on receiving countries, bearing in mind the special circumstances
and needs of such countries, in particular developing countries;
(d) Governments are urged to promote effective measures to protect all
undocumented migrants and members of their families against racism, ethnocentrism
and xenophobia.
F. Violence, crime, the problem of illicit drugs and substance abuse
79. Addressing the problems created by violence, crime, substance abuse
and the production, use and trafficking of illicit drugs, and the rehabilitation
of addicts requires:
(a) Introducing and implementing specific policies and public health
and social service programmes to prevent and eliminate all forms of violence
in society, particularly to prevent and eliminate domestic violence and
to protect the victims of violence, with particular attention to violence
against women, children, older persons and persons with disabilities.
In particular, the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against
Women should be implemented and enforced nationally. In addition, the
provisions of the Convention on the Rights of the Child should be respected;
(b) Taking full measures to eliminate all forms of exploitation, abuse,
harassment and violence against women, in particular domestic violence
and rape. Special attention should be given to violence resulting from
harmful traditional or customary practices and all forms of extremism,
which implies both preventive actions and the rehabilitation of victims;
(c) Implementing programmes that channel the energy and creativity of
children and youth towards improving themselves and their communities
in order to prevent their participation in crime, violence, and drug abuse
and trafficking;
(d) Improving mechanisms for resolving conflicts peacefully and reintegrating
society following conflicts, including efforts towards reconciliation
and confidence-building between the conflicting groups, training in non-violent
conflict resolution at all levels of education, the reconstruction of
social institutions that have been destroyed, the reintegration of displaced
and disabled persons, and the re-establishment of the rule of law and
respect for all human rights;
(e) Establishing partnerships with non-governmental organizations and
community organizations to make adequate provision for the rehabilitation
and reintegration into society of offenders, especially young offenders;
measures will include efforts to maintain links with their families during
detention and to reintegrate them into productive employment and social
life after their release from detention;
(f) Strengthening international cooperation and coordination in devising
strategies, policies, legislation and other measures in combating national
and transnational organized crime and the use of violence and terrorism;
(g) Adopting effective and environmentally sound national strategies
to prevent or substantially reduce the cultivation and processing of crops
used for the illegal drug trade, paying particular attention to national
and international support for development programmes that create viable
economic alternatives to drug production and promote the full integration
of the social groups involved in such activities;
(h) Combating drug and substance abuse and drug trafficking, corruption
and related criminal activities through national and internationally coordinated
measures, while strengthening integrated, multisectoral programmes to
prevent and reduce the demand for consumption of drugs in order to create
a society free of illicit drugs. In cooperation with the institutions
of civil society and the private sector, drug abuse prevention should
be promoted as well as preventive education for children and youth, rehabilitation
and education programmes for former drug and alcohol addicts, especially
children and youth, to enable them to obtain productive employment and
achieve the independence, dignity and responsibility for a drug-free,
crime-free, productive life;
(i) Working nationally and internationally to identify narcotics trafficking
and money laundering networks, prosecuting their leaders and seizing assets
derived from such criminal activities;
(j) Supporting comprehensive drug interdiction strategies and strengthening
efforts to control precursor chemicals and firearms, ammunition and explosives
in order to prevent their diversion to drug trafficking and terrorist
groups;
(k) Combating trafficking in women and children through national and
internationally coordinated measures, at the same time establishing or
strengthening institutions for the rehabilitation of the victims of the
trafficking of women and children.
G. Social integration and family responsibilities
80. The family is the basic unit of society and as such should be strengthened.
It is entitled to receive comprehensive protection and support.
In different cultural, political and social systems, various forms of
the family exist. Marriage must be entered into with the free consent
of the intending spouses, and husband and wife should be equal partners.
81. Helping the family in its supporting, educating and nurturing roles
in contributing to social integration should involve:
(a) Encouraging social and economic policies that are designed to meet
the needs of families and their individual members, especially the most
disadvantaged and vulnerable members, with particular attention to the
care of children;
(b) Ensuring opportunities for family members to understand and meet
their social responsibilities;
(c) Promoting mutual respect, tolerance and cooperation within the family
and within society;
(d) Promoting equal partnership between women and men in the family.
Chapter V
IMPLEMENTATION AND FOLLOW-UP
82. Nothing short of a renewed and massive political will at the national
and international levels to invest in people and their well-being will
achieve the objectives of social development. Social development and the
implementation of the Programme of Action of the Summit are primarily
the responsibility of Governments, although international cooperation
and assistance are essential for their full implementation. At all levels
of implementation, the crucial and essential requirements are:
þ The promotion and protection of all human rights and fundamental
freedoms, the support for democratic institutions and the empowerment
of women;
þ The integration of goals, programmes and review mechanisms that
have developed separately in response to specific problems;
þ Partnership involving States, local authorities, non-governmental
organizations, especially voluntary organizations, other major groups
as defined in Agenda 21, the media, families and individuals;
þ The recognition of the diversity in the world and the need to
take measures geared to achieve the Summit's goals;
þ The empowerment of people, who are to be assisted so that they
fully participate in setting goals, designing programmes, implementing
activities and evaluating performance;
þ Efforts to mobilize new and additional financial resources that
are both adequate and predictable, and are mobilized in a way that maximizes
the availability of such resources, and uses all available funding sources
and mechanisms, inter alia, multilateral, bilateral and private sources,
including on concessional and grant terms;
þ Solidarity, extending the concept of partnership and a moral
imperative of mutual respect and concern among individuals, communities
and nations.
Actions
A. National strategies, evaluations and reviews
83. The promotion of an integrated approach to the implementation of
the Programme of Action at the national level, in accordance with national
specificities, requires:
(a) Analysing and reviewing macroeconomic, micro-economic and sectoral
policies and their impact on poverty, employment, social integration and
social development;
(b) Enhancing government policies and programmes to promote social development
by strengthening the coordination of all efforts by national and international
actors, strengthening the efficiency and operational capacity of public
management structures, and facilitating the effective and transparent
use of resources, taking due account of the recommendations and follow-up
to Agenda 21;
(c) Assessing the extent, distribution and characteristics of poverty,
unemployment, social tensions, and social exclusion, taking measures aiming
at eradicating poverty, increasing productive employment and enhancing
social integration;
(d) Formulating or strengthening, by 1996, comprehensive cross-sectoral
strategies for implementing the Summit outcome and national strategies
for social development, including government action, actions by States
in cooperation with other Governments, international, regional and subregional
organizations, and actions taken in partnership and cooperation with actors
of civil society, the private sector and cooperatives, with specific responsibilities
to be undertaken by each actor and with agreed priorities and time-frames;
(e) Integrating social development goals into national development plans,
policies and budgets, cutting across traditional sectoral boundaries,
with transparency and accountability, and formulated and implemented with
the participation of the groups directly affected;
(f) Defining time-bound goals and targets for reducing overall poverty
and eradicating absolute poverty, expanding employment and reducing unemployment,
and enhancing social integration, within each national context;
(g) Promoting and strengthening institutional capacity-building for inter-ministerial
coordination, intersectoral collaboration, the coordinated allocation
of resources and vertical integration from national capitals to local
districts;
(h) Developing quantitative and qualitative indicators of social development,
including, where possible, disaggregation by gender, to assess poverty,
employment, social integration and other social factors, to monitor the
impact of social policies and programmes, and to find ways to improve
the effectiveness of policies and programmes and introduce new programmes;
(i) Strengthening implementation and monitoring mechanisms, including
arrangements for the participation of civil society in policy-making and
implementation and collaboration with international organizations;
(j) Regularly assessing national progress towards implementing the outcome
of the Summit, possibly in the form of periodic national reports, outlining
successes, problems and obstacles. Such reports could be considered within
the framework of an appropriate consolidated reporting system, taking
into account the different reporting procedures in the economic, social
and environmental fields.
84. International support for the formulation of national strategies
for social development will require actions by bilateral and multilateral
agencies for:
(a) Assisting countries to strengthen or rebuild their capacities for
formulating, coordinating, implementing and monitoring integrated strategies
for social development;
(b) Coordinating the assistance provided by different agencies for similar
planning processes under other international action plans;
(c) Developing improved concepts and programmes for the collection and
dissemination of statistics and indicators for social development to facilitate
review and policy analysis and provide expertise, advice and support to
countries at their request.
B. Involvement of civil society
85. Effective implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration on Social
Development and the Programme of Action of the Summit requires strengthening
community organizations and non-profit non-governmental organizations
in the spheres of education, health, poverty, social integration, human
rights, improvement of the quality of life, and relief and rehabilitation,
enabling them to participate constructively in policy-making and implementation.
This will require:
(a) Encouraging and supporting the creation and development of such organizations,
particularly among the disadvantaged and vulnerable people;
(b) Establishing legislative and regulatory frameworks, institutional
arrangements and consultative mechanisms for involving such organizations
in the design, implementation and evaluation of social development strategies
and programmes;
(c) Supporting capacity-building programmes for such organizations in
critical areas, such as participatory planning, programme design, implementation
and evaluation, economic and financial analysis, credit management, research,
information and advocacy;
(d) Providing resources through such measures as small grant programmes,
and technical and other administrative support for initiatives taken and
managed at the community level;
(e) Strengthening networking and exchange of expertise and experience
among such organizations.
86. The contribution of civil society, including the private sector,
to social development can be enhanced by:
(a) Developing planning and policy-making procedures that facilitate
partnership and cooperation between Governments and civil society in social
development;
(b) Encouraging business enterprises to pursue investment and other policies,
including non-commercial activities, that will contribute to social development,
especially in relation to the generation of work opportunities, social
support services at the workplace, access to productive resources and
construction of infrastructure;
(c) Enabling and encouraging trade unions to participate in the planning
and implementation of social development programmes, especially in relation
to the generation of work opportunities under fair conditions, the provision
of training, health care and other basic services, and the development
of an economic environment that facilitates sustained economic growth
and sustainable development;
(d) Enabling and encouraging farmers' representative organizations and
cooperatives to participate in the formulation and implementation of sustainable
agricultural and rural development policies and programmes;
(e) Encouraging and facilitating the development of cooperatives, including
among people living in poverty or belonging to vulnerable groups;
(f) Supporting academic and research institutions, particularly in the
developing countries, in their contribution to social development programmes,
and facilitating mechanisms for independent, detached, impartial and objective
monitoring of social progress, especially through collecting, analysing
and disseminating information and ideas about economic and social development;
(g) Encouraging educational institutions, the media and other sources
of public information and opinion to give special prominence to the challenges
of social development and to facilitate widespread and well-informed debate
about social policies throughout the community.
C. Mobilization of financial resources
87. The implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme
of Action of the Summit at the national level may require substantial
new and additional resources, in both the public and the private sectors.
Augmenting the availability of public resources for social development
requires at the national level:
(a) Implementing macroeconomic and micro-economic policies in accordance
with national priorities and policies, aimed at encouraging greater domestic
savings and investment required for public spending, through progressive,
fair and economically efficient taxes that are cognizant of sustainable
development concerns, and through cutting back on subsidies that do not
benefit the poor;
(b) Reducing, as appropriate, excessive military expenditures and investments
for arms production and acquisition, consistent with national security
requirements, in order to increase resources for social and economic development;
(c) Giving high priority to social development in the allocation of public
spending and ensuring predictable funding for the relevant programmes;
(d) Ensuring that the resources for social development are available
at the level of administration that is responsible for formulating and
implementing the relevant programmes;
(e) Increasing the effective and transparent utilization of public resources,
reducing waste and combating corruption, and concentrating on the areas
of greatest social need;
(f) Developing innovative sources of funding, both public and private,
for social programmes, and creating a supportive environment for the mobilization
of resources by civil society for social development, including beneficiary
contributions and individual voluntary contributions.
88. Implementation of the Declaration and the Programme of Action in
developing countries, in particular in Africa and the least developed
countries, will need additional financial resources and more effective
development cooperation and assistance. This will require:
(a) Translating the commitments of the Summit into financial implications
for social development programmes in developing countries, particularly
Africa and the least developed countries;
(b) Striving for the fulfilment of the agreed target of 0.7 per cent
of gross national product for overall official development assistance
(ODA) as soon as possible, and increasing the share of funding for social
development programmes, commensurate with the scope and scale of activities
required to achieve the objectives and goals of the Declaration and Programme
of Action;
(c) Agreeing on a mutual commitment between interested developed and
developing country partners to allocate, on average, 20 per cent of ODA
and 20 per cent of the national budget, respectively, to basic social
programmes;
(d) Giving high priority in ODA to the eradication of poverty in developing
countries, in particular in Africa, low-income countries in Asia and the
Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the least developed countries;
(e) Providing assistance for social-sector activities, such as the rehabilitation
and development of social infrastructure, including in the form of grants
or soft loans;
(f) Implementing the commitments of the international community to the
special needs and vulnerabilities of the small island developing States,
in particular by providing effective means, including adequate, predictable,
new and additional resources for social development programmes, in accordance
with the Declaration of Barbados 3/ and on the basis of the relevant provisions
of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island
Developing States;
(g) Providing international support and assistance to the land-locked
developing countries in their efforts to implement the outcome of the
Summit, taking into account the challenges and problems characteristic
to those countries;
(h) Giving preference, wherever possible, to the utilization of competent
national experts or, where necessary, of competent experts from within
the subregion or region or from other developing countries, in project
and programme design, preparation and implementation, and to the building
of local expertise where it does not exist;
(i) Exploring ways and means to strengthen support and expand South-South
cooperation based on partnership between developing and developed countries,
as well as enhanced cooperation among developing countries;
(j) Maximizing project and programme efficiency by keeping overhead costs
to a minimum;
(k) Developing economic policies to promote and mobilize domestic savings
and attract external resources for productive investment, and seeking
innovative sources of funding, both public and private, for social programmes,
while ensuring their effective utilization;
(l) Monitoring the impact of trade liberalization on progress made in
developing countries to meet basic human needs, giving particular attention
to new initiatives to expand the access of developing countries to international
markets;
(m) Encouraging direct cooperation to promote joint ventures, including
in the sector of social programmes and infrastructure;
(n) Encouraging recipient Governments to strengthen their national coordination
mechanisms for international cooperation in social development and to
ensure the effective use of international assistance so as to assist donors
to secure commitment to further resources for national action plans;
(o) Inviting multilateral and bilateral donors to consult with a view
to coordinating their financing policies and planning procedures in order
to improve the impact, complementarity and cost-effectiveness of their
contributions to the achievement of the objectives of social development
programmes of developing countries.
89. Implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme of
Action of the Summit in countries with economies in transition will require
continued international cooperation and assistance. To this end, there
is a need to:
(a) Assess the financial implications of the commitments of the Summit
for social development programmes in countries with economies in transition;
(b) Enhance technical and financial assistance for the implementation
of programmes of macroeconomic stabilization in order to ensure sustained
economic growth and sustainable development;
(c) Support and encourage transformations in the field of human resources
development;
(d) Invite multilateral and bilateral donors to consult with a view to
coordinating their financing policies and planning procedures in order
to improve the impact of their contribution to the achievement of the
objectives of social development programmes of countries with economies
in transition.
90. Substantial debt reduction is needed to enable developing countries
to implement the Declaration and Programme of Action. Building on, inter
alia, the momentum from the July 1994 meeting of the seven major industrialized
countries in Naples and the October 1994 meeting of the governors of the
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, further progress can be
made by:
(a) Inviting the international community, including the international
financial institutions, to continue to explore ways of implementing additional
and innovative measures to alleviate substantially the debt burdens of
developing countries, in particular of the highly indebted low-income
countries, in order to help them to achieve sustained economic growth
and sustainable development without falling into a new debt crisis;
(b) Adopting measures to substantially reduce the bilateral debts of
the least developed countries, in particular the countries of Africa,
as soon as possible, and exploring other innovative approaches to managing
and alleviating the onerous debts and debt service burdens of other developing
countries as soon as possible;
(c) Giving special consideration to those developing countries in which
multilateral debt constitutes an important part of their total debt in
order to seek a durable solution to this increasing problem;
(d) Encouraging the possibilities of debt swaps for social development,
with the resources released by debt cancellation or reduction to be invested
in social development programmes, without prejudice to more durable solutions,
such as debt reduction and/or cancellation;
(e) Mobilizing the resources of the Debt Reduction Facility of the International
Development Association in order to help eligible developing countries
to reduce their commercial debt; considering alternative mechanisms to
complement that Facility;
(f) Inviting creditor countries, private banks and multilateral financial
institutions, within their prerogatives, to consider continuing the initiatives
and efforts to address the commercial debt problems of the least developed
countries and of low and middle-income developing countries; to consider
the extension of appropriate new financial support to the low-income countries
with substantial debt burdens that continue, at great cost, to service
debt and meet their international obligations; to continue to explore
ways of implementing additional and innovative measures to substantially
alleviate the debt burdens of developing countries, in particular of the
highly indebted low-income countries, in order to help them achieve sustained
economic growth and sustainable development without falling into a new
debt crisis.
91. In order to ensure that structural adjustment programmes include
social development goals, in particular the eradication of poverty, the
generation of productive employment and the enhancement of social integration,
Governments, in cooperation with the international financial institutions
and other international organizations, should:
(a) Protect basic social programmes and expenditures, in particular those
affecting the poor and vulnerable segments of society, from budget reductions;
(b) Review the impact of structural adjustment programmes on social development
by means of gender-sensitive social-impact assessments and other relevant
methods, and develop policies to reduce their negative effects and improve
their positive impact;
(c) Further promote policies enabling small enterprises, cooperatives
and other forms of micro-enterprises to develop their capacities for income
generation and employment creation.
92. International financial institutions should contribute to the mobilization
of resources for the implementation of the Declaration and Programme of
Action. To this end, the relevant institutions are urged to take the following
measures:
(a) The World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the regional and
subregional development banks and funds, and all other international finance
organizations should further integrate social development goals in their
policies, programmes and operations, including by giving higher priority
to social-sector lending, where applicable, in their lending programmes;
(b) The Bretton Woods institutions and other organizations and bodies
of the United Nations system should work together with concerned countries
to improve policy dialogues and develop new initiatives to ensure that
structural adjustment programmes promote sustained economic and social
development, with particular attention to their impact on people living
in poverty and vulnerable groups;
(c) The United Nations, in cooperation with the World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund and other multilateral development institutions, should
study the impact of structural adjustment programmes on economic and social
development and assist adjusting countries in creating conditions for
economic growth, job creation, poverty eradication and social development.
93. In addition to augmenting the flow of resources through established
channels, relevant United Nations bodies, in particular the Economic and
Social Council, should be requested to consider new and innovative ideas
for generating funds and, for this purpose, to offer any useful suggestions.
D. The role of the United Nations system
94. A framework for international cooperation must be developed in the
context of the agenda for development 28/ in order to ensure the integrated
and comprehensive implementation, follow-up and assessment of the outcome
of the Summit, together with the results of other recent and planned United
Nations conferences related to social development, in particular the World
Summit for Children, the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, the World Conference on Human Rights, the Global Conference
on the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States, the
International Conference on Population and Development, the Fourth World
Conference on Women, and the United Nations Conference on Human Settlements
(Habitat II). At the international level, as at the national, the financial
and organizational implications of the commitments, goals and targets
should be assessed, priorities established, and budgets and work programmes
planned.
95. With regard to the consideration of social development at the intergovernmental
level, special consideration should be given to the roles of the General
Assembly and of the Economic and Social Council. To this end:
(a) The General Assembly, as the highest intergovernmental mechanism,
is the principal policy-making and appraisal organ on matters relating
to the follow-up to the Summit. The Assembly should include the follow-up
to the Summit in its agenda as an item entitled "Implementation of
the outcome of the World Summit for Social Development". In 1996,
it should review the effectiveness of the steps taken to implement the
outcome of the Summit with regard to poverty eradication, as part of the
activities relating to the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty;
(b) The General Assembly should hold a special session in the year 2000
for an overall review and appraisal of the implementation of the outcome
of the Summit, and should consider further action and initiatives;
(c) The General Assembly, at its fiftieth session, should declare the
first United Nations decade for the eradication of poverty, following
the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty (1996), with a view
to its considering further initiatives on the eradication of poverty;
(d) The General Assembly, as well as the Economic and Social Council,
could convene meetings of high-level representatives to promote international
dialogue on critical social issues and on policies for addressing them
through international cooperation;
(e) The General Assembly should draw upon the initial work of the agenda
for development working group on a common framework for the implementation
of the outcome of conferences;
(f) The Economic and Social Council, in the context of its role under
the Charter of the United Nations vis-a`-vis the General Assembly and
in accordance with Assembly resolutions 45/264, 46/235 and 48/162, would
oversee system-wide coordination in the implementation of the Summit outcome
and make recommendations in this regard. It should look at ways to strengthen,
consistent with the mandates of the Charter of the United Nations, the
role and authority, structures, resources and processes of the Council,
bringing specialized agencies into a closer working relationship with
the Council so that it can review progress made towards implementing the
outcome of the Summit as well as improving the Council's effectiveness.
The Council, at its substantive session of 1995, should be invited to
review the mandate, agenda and composition of the Commission for Social
Development, including considerations of the strengthening of the Commission,
taking into account the need for synergy with other related commissions
and conference follow-up. The Council should also draw upon any initial
work completed by that time on a common framework for the implementation
of conference outcomes (see paras. 94 and 95 (e) above). The Council should
also be invited to review the reporting system in the area of social development
with a view to establishing a coherent system that would result in clear
policy recommendations for Governments and international actors;
(g) Within the framework of the discussions on an agenda for development
and the discussions of the Economic and Social Council at its coordination
segment of 1995 on a common framework for the implementation of the outcome
of United Nations conferences in the economic and social fields, consideration
should be given to the possibility of holding joint meetings of the Council
and the Development Committee of the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund. The Secretary-General and the heads of IMF, the World Bank,
ILO, the United Nations funds and programmes, and other relevant agencies
should consider the possibility of holding joint meetings for the purpose
of considering the implementation of the Declaration and the Programme
of Action prior to the Development Committee sessions;
(h) To promote implementation of the outcomes at the regional and subregional
levels, the regional commissions, in cooperation with the regional intergovernmental
organizations and banks, could convene, on a biennial basis, a meeting
at a high political level to review progress made towards implementing
the outcome of the Summit, exchange views on their respective experiences
and adopt the appropriate measures. The regional commissions should report
to the Council on the outcome of such meetings through the appropriate
mechanisms;
(i) The important role of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights in monitoring those aspects of the Declaration and Programme of
Action that relate to compliance, by States Parties, with the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights should be emphasized.
96. The United Nations system should provide technical cooperation and
other forms of assistance to the developing countries, in particular in
Africa and the least developed countries, in implementing the Declaration
and Programme of Action. To this end:
(a) The United Nations system, including the technical and sectoral agencies
and the Bretton Woods institutions, should expand and improve their cooperation
in the field of social development to ensure that their efforts are complementary
and, where possible, should combine resources in joint initiatives for
social development built around common objectives of the Summit;
(b) In order to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of United Nations
organizations in providing support for social development efforts at the
national level, and to enhance their capacity to serve the objectives
of the Summit, there is a need to renew, reform and revitalize the various
parts of the United Nations system, in particular its operational activities.
All specialized agencies and related organizations of the United Nations
system are invited to strengthen and adjust their activities, programmes
and medium-term strategies, as appropriate, to take into account the follow-up
to the Summit. Relevant governing bodies should review their policies,
programmes, budgets and activities in this regard;
(c) The Administrative Committee on Coordination should consider how
its participating entities might best coordinate their activities to implement
the objectives of the Summit;
(d) Regular reports on their plans and programmes related to implementation
should be provided to the appropriate forums by United Nations funds and
programmes and the specialized agencies.
97. The United Nations system should consider and provide appropriate
technical cooperation and other forms of assistance to the countries with
economies in transition. To this end:
(a) The respective United Nations bodies should assist the efforts of
those countries in designing and implementing social development programmes;
(b) The United Nations Development Programme should continue to undertake
efforts to support the implementation of the social development programmes,
taking into account the specific needs of the countries with economies
in transition;
(c) The organizations and bodies of the United Nations system, including
the technical and sectoral agencies, the International Monetary Fund and
the World Bank, should continue their cooperation in the field of social
development of countries with economies in transition.
98. The implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme
of Action of the Summit will involve many entities of the United Nations
system. In order to ensure coherence in this effort, the General Assembly
should give consideration to:
(a) Promoting and strengthening the coordination of United Nations system
activities, the Bretton Woods institutions and the World Trade Organization
at the global, regional and national levels in the area of economic and
social development programmes, including, inter alia, through reports
to and meetings in coordination with the Economic and Social Council;
(b) Inviting the World Trade Organization to consider how it might contribute
to the implementation of the Programme of Action, including activities
in cooperation with the United Nations system;
(c) Requesting the International Labour Organization, which because of
its mandate, tripartite structures and expertise has a special role to
play in the field of employment and social development, to contribute
to the implementation of the Programme of Action;
(d) Requesting the Secretary-General to ensure effective coordination
of the implementation of the Declaration and Programme of Action.
99. United Nations operational activities for development should be strengthened
in order to implement the Summit outcome, in accordance with relevant
resolutions, particularly General Assembly resolution 47/199, and to this
end:
(a) The United Nations Development Programme should organize United Nations
system efforts towards capacity-building at the local, national and regional
levels, and should support the coordinated implementation of social development
programmes through its network of field offices;
(b) Coordination at the country level should be improved through the
resident coordinator system to take full account of the Copenhagen Declaration
and the Programme of Action of the Summit and related international agreements;
(c) The United Nations system should encourage and assist South-South
cooperation and technical cooperation among developing countries, at all
levels, as an important instrument for social development and the implementation
of the Programme of Action;
(d) United Nations development efforts should be supported by a substantial
increase in resources for operational activities for development on a
predictable, continuous and assured basis, commensurate with the increasing
needs of developing countries, as stated in resolution 47/199;
(e) The United Nations system's capacity for gathering and analysing
information and developing indicators of social development should be
strengthened, taking into account the work carried out by different countries,
in particular by developing countries. The capacity of the United Nations
system for providing policy and technical support and advice, upon request,
to improve national capacities in this regard should also be strengthened.
100. The support and participation of major groups as defined in Agenda
21 are essential to the success of the implementation of the Programme
of Action.
To ensure the commitment of these groups, they must be involved in planning,
elaboration, implementation and evaluation at both the national and the
international levels. To this end, mechanisms are needed to support, promote
and allow their effective participation in all relevant United Nations
bodies, including the mechanisms responsible for reviewing the implementation
of the Programme of Action.
Notes
1/ See The Results of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations:
The Legal Texts (Geneva, GATT secretariat, 1994).
2/ Report of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development,
Rio de Janeiro, 3-14 June 1992, vol. I, Resolutions Adopted by the Conference
(United Nations publication, Sales No. E.93.I.8), resolution 1, annex
II.
3/ Report of the Global Conference on the Sustainable Development of
Small Island Developing States, Bridgetown, Barbados, 25 April-6 May 1994
(United Nations publication, Sales No. 94.I.18), resolution 1, annex II.
4/ General Assembly resolution 46/151, annex, sect. III.
5/ Report of the Second United Nations Conference on the Least Developed
Countries, Paris, 3-14 September 1990 (A/CONF.147/18), part one.
6/ General Assembly resolution 217 A (III).
7/ See First Call for Children (New York, United Nations Children's Fund,
1990).
8/ General Assembly resolution 2625 (XXV), annex.
9/ General Assembly resolution 41/128, annex.
10/ Report of the World Conference on Human Rights, Vienna, 14-25 June
1993 (A/CONF.157/24 (Part I)), chap. III.
11/ Report of the International Conference on Population and Development,
Cairo, 5-13 September 1994 (A/CONF.171/13 and Add.1), chap. I, resolution
1, annex.
12/ See General Assembly resolution 48/183.
13/ General Assembly resolution 2200 A (XXI), annex.
14/ General Assembly resolution 43/181.
15/ General Assembly resolution 45/158, annex.
16/ General Assembly resolution 48/104.
17/ General Assembly resolution 2106 A (XX), annex.
18/ General Assembly resolution 34/180, annex.
19/ Report of the World Conference to Review and Appraise the Achievements
of the United Nations Decade for Women: Equality, Development and Peace,
Nairobi, 15-26 July 1985 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.85.IV.10),
chap. I, sect. A.
20/ General Assembly resolution 48/96, annex.
21/ General Assembly resolution 46/91, annex.
22/ See A/47/339, sect. III.
23/ See Report of the World Assembly on Ageing, Vienna, 26 July- 6 August
1992 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.82.I.16), chap. VI.
24/ See General Assembly resolution 40/14 and A/40/256, annex.
25/ United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 189 (1954), No. 2545.
26/ Ibid., vol. 606 (1970), No. 8791.
27/ See General Assembly resolution 44/25, annex.
28/ See A/48/935 and An Agenda for Development (United Nations publication,
Sales No. E.95.I.16).
Resolution 2
Expression of thanks to the people and Government of Denmark*
* Adopted at the 14th plenary meeting, on 12 March 1995; for the discussion,
see chap. IX.
The World Summit for Social Development,
Having met in Copenhagen from 6 to 12 March 1995 at the invitation of
the Government of Denmark,
1. Expresses its profound gratitude to the Government of Denmark for
having made it possible for the World Summit for Social Development to
be held in Copenhagen and for the excellent facilities, staff and services
so graciously placed at its disposal;
2. Requests the Government of Denmark to convey to the city of Copenhagen
and to the people of Denmark the gratitude of the Summit for the hospitality
and warm welcome extended to all participants.
Resolution 3
Credentials of representatives to the World Summit for Social Development**
** Adopted at the 10th plenary meeting, on 10 March 1995; for the discussion,
see chap. VI.
The World Summit for Social Development,
Having considered the report of the Credentials Committee 1/ and the
recommendation contained therein,
Approves the report of the Credentials Committee.
---------------- 1/ A/CONF.166/7.
Chapter II
ATTENDANCE AND ORGANIZATION OF WORK
A. Date and place of the Summit
1. The World Summit for Social Development was held at Copenhagen from
6 to 12 March 1995, in conformity with General Assembly resolution 47/92
of 16 December 1992. During that period, the Summit held 14 plenary meetings.
B. Attendance
2. The following States and regional economic integration organization
were represented at the Summit:
Afghanistan Albania Algeria Andorra Angola Antigua and Barbuda Argentina
Armenia Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados
Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana
Brazil Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon
Canada Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Chile China Colombia Comoros
Congo Cook Islands Costa Rica Co^te d'Ivoire Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech
Republic Democratic People's Republic of Korea Denmark Djibouti Dominica
Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea
Estonia Ethiopia European Community Fiji Finland France Gabon Gambia Georgia
Germany Ghana Greece Grenada Guatemala Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti
Holy See Honduras Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran (Islamic Republic
of) Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Madagascar Malawi
Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius Mexico
Micronesia (Federated States of) Monaco Mongolia Morocco Mozambique Myanmar
Namibia Nepal Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norway
Oman Pakistan Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland
Portugal Qatar Republic of Korea Republic of Moldova Romania Russian Federation
Rwanda Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Seychelles Sierra
Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands South Africa Spain Sri
Lanka Sudan Suriname Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syrian Arab Republic
Tajikistan Thailand The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Togo Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Uganda Ukraine United
Arab Emirates United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland United
Republic of Tanzania United States of America Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu
Venezuela Viet Nam Yemen Zaire Zambia Zimbabwe
3. The observer for Palestine attended the Summit.
4. The following associate members of the regional commissions were represented
by observers:
Macau Netherlands Antilles
5. The secretariats of the following regional commissions were represented:
Economic Commission for Africa Economic Commission for Europe Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean Economic and Social Commission
for Asia and the Pacific Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia
6. The following United Nations bodies and programmes were represented:
United Nations Children's Fund United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development United Nations Development Fund for Women United Nations Development
Programme United Nations Environment Programme United Nations Population
Fund United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in
the Near East United Nations University World Food Programme United Nations
Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat) United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,
Office of the United Nations International Drug Control Programme International
Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women United Nations
Research Institute for Social Development
7. The following specialized agencies were represented:
International Labour Organization Food and Agriculture Organization of
the United Nations United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization World Health Organization World Bank International Monetary
Fund World Meteorological Organization World Intellectual Property Organization
International Fund for Agricultural Development United Nations Industrial
Development Organization
8. The following intergovernmental organizations were accredited to participate
in the Summit:
African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States African Development Bank
African Society for Humanitarian Aid and Development Sudan Andean Parliament
Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development Asian-African Legal Consultative
Committee Asian and Pacific Development Centre Asian Development Bank
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development Association
of South-East Asian Nations Commonwealth of Independent States Commonwealth
Secretariat Council of Europe Economic Affairs Secretariat Gulf Cooperation
Council Inter-American Development Bank International Committee of the
Red Cross International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
International Food Policy Research Institute International Organization
for Migration Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
Latin American Economic System Latin American Parliament League of Arab
States Nordic Council Secretariat of the Presidium Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development Organization of African Unity Organization
of American States Organization of Eastern Caribbean States Organization
of the Islamic Conference South Pacific Commission
9. A large number of non-governmental organizations attended the Summit.
The list of non-governmental organizations participating is given in documents
A/CONF.166/PC/11 and Add.1-3 and A/CONF.166/4.
C. Opening of the Summit and election of the President
10. The Summit was declared open by the Secretary-General of the United
Nations. The Secretary-General then addressed the Summit.
11. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, the Summit elected, by acclamation,
as President of the Summit, His Excellency Mr. Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, Prime
Minister of the Kingdom of Denmark. The President of the Summit made a
statement.
D. Messages from heads of State
12. The Summit received a message wishing it success from His Excellency
Mr. Jose' Eduardo dos Santos, President of the Republic of Angola.
E. Adoption of the rules of procedure
13. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, the Summit adopted the provisional
rules of procedure (A/CONF.166/2) as recommended by the Preparatory Committee
for the Summit and approved by the General Assembly in its decision 49/446
of 23 December 1994.
F. Adoption of the agenda
14. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, the Summit adopted as its
agenda the provisional agenda (A/CONF.166/1) recommended by the Preparatory
Committee in its decision 3/3. The agenda as adopted was as follows:
1. Inaugural ceremony.
2. Election of the President.
3. Adoption of the rules of procedure.
4. Adoption of the agenda and other organizational matters.
5. Election of officers other than the President.
6. Organization of work, including establishment of the Main Committee.
7. Credentials of representatives to the Summit:
(a) Appointment of the members of the Credentials Committee;
(b) Report of the Credentials Committee.
8. General exchange of views.
9. Meeting of heads of State or Government.
10. Declaration and Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social
Development.
11. Adoption of the report of the Summit.
G. Election of officers other than the President
15. At the 1st and 7th plenary meetings, on 6 and 9 March, the Summit
elected Vice-Presidents from the following regional groups:
African States (7 Vice-Presidents): Algeria, Burkina Faso, Cameroon,
Ethiopia, Guinea-Bissau, Sudan and Zimbabwe;
Asian States (6 Vice-Presidents): China, India, Indonesia, Philippines,
Qatar and Republic of Korea;
Eastern European States (3 Vice-Presidents): Latvia, Slovakia and Ukraine;
Latin American and Caribbean States (5 Vice-Presidents): Belize, Chile,
Cuba, Panama and Paraguay;
Western European and other States (6 Vice-Presidents): Andorra, Australia,
Canada, Germany, Portugal and Sweden.
16. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, the Summit elected, by acclamation,
an ex officio Vice-President from the host country, His Excellency Mr.
Poul Nielson, Minister for Development Cooperation of the Kingdom of Denmark.
17. At the same meeting, the Summit elected Mr. Sadok Rabah (Tunisia),
Rapporteur-General of the Summit.
18. Also at the 1st plenary meeting, the Summit elected Mr. Juan Somavia
(Chile), Chairman of the Main Committee.
H. Organization of work, including establishment of the Main Committee
19. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, the Summit approved the organization
of work as set out in document A/CONF.166/3 and orally amended. It decided
to allocate agenda item 10 (Declaration and Programme of Action of the
World Summit for Social Development) to the Main Committee.
I. Accreditation of intergovernmental organizations
20. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, the Summit approved the accreditation
of the intergovernmental organizations listed in document A/CONF.166/6.
J. Accreditation of non-governmental organizations
21. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, the Summit approved the accreditation
of the non-governmental organizations listed in document A/CONF.166/4.
K. Appointment of the members of the Credentials Committee
22. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March, in conformity with rule 4
of the rules of procedure of the Summit (A/CONF.166/2), the Summit established
a Credentials Committee composed of China, Fiji, Honduras, Namibia, Portugal,
the Russian Federation, Suriname, Togo and the United States of America,
on the understanding that if one of those States did not participate in
the Summit, it would be replaced by another State from the same regional
group.
Chapter III
GENERAL EXCHANGE OF VIEWS
1. The Summit held a general exchange of views at the 1st to 10th meetings,
from 6 to 10 March 1995. Representatives of States, specialized agencies,
United Nations bodies, programmes and offices, intergovernmental organizations
and non-governmental organizations and observers of associate members
of the regional commissions addressed the Summit. All speakers expressed
their appreciation of the efforts made by the host Government and the
secretariat in preparing for the Summit.
2. At the 1st meeting, on 6 March, statements were made by the representatives
of the Philippines (on behalf of the States Members of the United Nations
that are members of the Group of 77), France (on behalf of the European
Union), Chile, Malaysia, Venezuela, Slovakia, Mali and Ukraine.
3. At the 2nd meeting, on 6 March, statements were made by the representatives
of Norway, Kuwait, Jamaica, Italy, Germany, the Republic of Korea, Barbados,
Seychelles, Azerbaijan, Bolivia and Papua New Guinea.
4. At the same meeting, the Director-General of the World Health Organization
made a statement. The Administrator of the United Nations Development
Programme made a statement. The representative of the Islamic Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, an intergovernmental organization,
made a statement. Statements were also made by the representatives of
the following non-governmental organizations: World Council of Churches,
Baha'i International Community and South Asia Caucus. Her Royal Highness
Princess Basma Bint Talal of Jordan introduced the report of the forty-seventh
annual Department of Public Information/Non-Governmental Organizations
Conference, held on 20-22 September 1994.
5. At the 3rd meeting, on 7 March, statements were made by the representatives
of Mexico, Burkina Faso, the Syrian Arab Republic, Algeria, Romania, Guyana,
Kenya, Ethiopia, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the Marshall
Islands, Mongolia, the Lao People's Democratic Republic, the Gambia, Tunisia
and China.
6. At the same meeting, statements were made by the Managing Director
of the International Monetary Fund and the Director-General of the Food
and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. The representative
of the Commission on Global Governance, a non-governmental organization,
also made a statement.
7. At the 4th meeting, on 7 March, statements were made by the representatives
of Swaziland, the United Arab Emirates, Austria, India, Benin, the Holy
See, the United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, Switzerland, Malawi, Sri
Lanka, Guinea, Peru, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Nepal and the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia.
8. At the same meeting, the President of the International Fund for Agricultural
Development made a statement. Statements were made by the Executive Director
of the United Nations International Drug Control Programme, the Executive
Director of the World Food Programme, the Deputy Executive Director of
the United Nations Children's Fund and the Executive Director of the United
Nations Environment Programme. Statements were made by the representatives
of the following intergovernmental organizations: International Committee
of the Red Cross, International Organization for Migration and Latin American
Parliament. Statements were also made by the representatives of the following
non-governmental organizations: International Planned Parenthood Federation,
Me'decins du Monde, International Council on Social Welfare, International
Federation of Agricultural Producers, International Union of Local Authorities
and World Assembly of Youth.
9. At the 5th meeting, on 8 March, statements were made by the First
Lady of Panama and by the representatives of Pakistan, Spain, Ghana, Namibia,
Senegal, Haiti, the Bahamas, Slovenia, the Niger, the United States of
America, Botswana, Belize and the Russian Federation.
10. At the same meeting, the representative of the Women's Environment
and Development Organization, a non-governmental organization, made a
statement.
11. At the 6th meeting, on 8 March, statements were made by His Highness
Prince Sisowath Sirirath of Cambodia and by the representatives of Liechtenstein,
Brazil, Guinea-Bissau, Malta, Antigua and Barbuda, Iceland, Cameroon,
Jordan, the Sudan, Ireland, Sierra Leone, Burundi, Ecuador, Nigeria, Rwanda,
the Congo and Chad.
12. At the same meeting, statements were made by the Secretary-General
of the Fourth World Conference on Women, the Executive Director of the
United Nations Population Fund, the Director of the United Nations Development
Fund for Women, the President of the Board of Trustees of the International
Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women, the Executive
Coordinator of the United Nations Volunteers and the Director of the United
Nations Research Institute for Social Development. Statements were made
by the representatives of the following intergovernmental organizations:
Organization of African Unity, Asian Development Bank and International
Food Policy Research Institute. Statements were also made by the representatives
of the following non-governmental organizations: Inter-Parliamentary Union,
Women's Caucus, Union Nationale de la Femme Tunisienne, World Movement
of Mothers, National Union of Working Women, Soroptimist International,
International Council of Women, International Center for Economic Growth
and World Blind Union.
13. At the 7th meeting, on 9 March, statements were made by the representatives
of Colombia, Belarus, Poland, Finland, Turkey, Canada, Andorra, Portugal,
Bulgaria, Uganda, Saudi Arabia, Estonia, Cyprus and Gabon.
14. At the same meeting, statements were made by the Directors-General
of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization,
the International Labour Organization and the United Nations Industrial
Development Organization. The United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights made a statement. The representative of the European Commission,
an intergovernmental organization, also made a statement.
15. At the 8th meeting, on 9 March, statements were made by the representatives
of Mauritius, the Netherlands, Suriname, Guatemala, Greece, Djibouti,
Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Mozambique, Lesotho, Brunei Darussalam, Myanmar,
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Nicaragua, Niue and the Cook Islands.
16. At the same meeting, statements were made by the Secretary-General
of the United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II), the
Rector of the United Nations University and the Officer-in-Charge of the
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Statements were made
by the representatives of the following intergovernmental organizations:
Agency for Cultural and Technical Cooperation and Nordic Council. Statements
were also made by the representatives of the following non-governmental
organizations: International Chamber of Commerce, International Confederation
of Free Trade Unions, Rotary International, Small Farmers, Producers and
Micro-entrepreneurs Caucus, World Confederation of Labour, Independent
Commission for Population and Quality of Life, Values Caucus, African
Caucus, International Movement ATD Fourth World and Bonn International
Centre for Conversion. The President of the Conference of Non-Governmental
Organizations in Consultative Status with the Economic and Social Council
and the representative of the NGO Committee on Ageing made statements.
17. At the 9th meeting, on 10 March, statements were made by the representatives
of Viet Nam, Sweden, Vanuatu, Denmark, Singapore, the Islamic Republic
of Iran, Trinidad and Tobago, Japan, Israel, Latvia, Croatia, Belgium,
Lithuania and Uruguay. The observer for Palestine made a statement.
18. At the same meeting, the Managing Director of the World Bank made
a statement. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees made a
statement. The representative of the Commonwealth Secretariat, an intergovernmental
organization, made a statement. The representative of the Disability Caucus,
a non-governmental organization, made a statement.
19. At the 10th meeting, on 10 March, statements were made by the representatives
of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Fiji, Thailand,
Egypt, Angola, Cuba, Hungary, Lebanon, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Qatar,
Iraq, Argentina, Mauritania, Saint Lucia, Morocco, Georgia, the Central
African Republic and the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. The observer for Macau
made a statement.
20. At the same meeting, the representative of the World Meteorological
Organization made a statement. Statements were made by the following intergovernmental
organizations: Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development,
Inter-American Development Bank, Council of Europe, League of Arab States
and International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
The following non-governmental organizations also made statements: Business
Association for the World Social Summit, Copenhagen Alternative Declaration,
Cousteau Society, Development Caucus, Latin American Caucus, Rights of
the Child Caucus, Third World Network and Eurostep, People's Alliance
of Social Development and Center of Concern.
Chapter IV
REPORT OF THE MAIN COMMITTEE
1. The Main Committee considered agenda item 10 (Declaration and Programme
of Action of the World Summit for Social Development) at its 1st to 5th
meetings, on 6, 7, 9 and 10 March 1995. It also held a number of informal
meetings.
2. The Main Committee had before it a note by the Secretary-General transmitting
the draft declaration and draft programme of action of the World Summit
for Social Development (A/CONF.166/L.1 and Corr.1 and 2) and a note by
the Secretariat transmitting additional proposals for the draft declaration
and draft programme of action (A/CONF.166/L.2).
3. The Chairman of the Main Committee was Juan Somavia (Chile), who was
elected by acclamation at the 1st plenary meeting of the Summit.
4. The Main Committee, at the 1st meeting, on 6 March, elected by acclamation
the following States as Vice-Chairmen: Australia, Cameroon, India, Indonesia,
Latvia, Mexico, Netherlands, Poland, Zimbabwe and Denmark (ex officio).
5. Also at the 1st meeting, the Main Committee established a Working
Group, chaired by Mr. Prakash Shah (India). The Working Group held a number
of meetings.
Consideration of the draft declaration and draft programme of action
6. At the 2nd to 5th meetings, on 6, 7, 9 and 10 March, the Main Committee
considered the draft declaration and draft programme of action and the
amendments thereto (see A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.1, Add.1/Corr.1-3, Add.2 and
3, Add.3/Corr.1, Add.4, Add.4/Corr.1, Add.5-7 and Add.7/Corr.1).
7. At the 4th meeting, on 9 March, the Main Committee approved a new
commitment for the draft declaration, to be included in the declaration
as commitment 6, and recommended it to the Summit for adoption (see A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.2).
Statements were made by the representatives of Tunisia, Indonesia, the
Holy See, Brazil, India, the United States of America, Egypt, Canada,
Benin, Switzerland, Uganda, Guatemala, the Islamic Republic of Iran, Algeria,
Malta, France (on behalf of the European Union), the Sudan, Fiji, Pakistan
and the Philippines (on behalf of the States Members of the United Nations
that are members of the Group of 77 and China). The Vice- Chairman of
the Committee, Mr. Shah (India), also made a statement.
8. The Main Committee then considered the draft declaration as a whole.
The Vice-Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Richard Butler (Australia), informed
the Committee of the progress made during informal consultations. Statements
were made by the representatives of the United State of America, Egypt,
the Russian Federation, the Philippines (on behalf of the States Members
of the United Nations that are members of the Group of 77 and China) and
Cuba.
9. At the same meeting, the Main Committee considered chapter I of the
draft programme of action. The Vice-Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Butler
(Australia), informed the Committee of the progress made during informal
consultations. Statements were made by the representatives of the United
States of America, Egypt, Pakistan, the Sudan, Benin, China, Bangladesh,
Canada, France (on behalf of the European Union), the Holy See, Azerbaijan
and Belize.
10. Also at the 4th meeting, the Main Committee approved chapter II of
the draft programme of action and recommended it to the Summit for adoption
(see A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.4 and Corr.1). Statements were made by the representatives
of Saudi Arabia, Canada, the United States of America, Pakistan, Guatemala,
the United Arab Emirates, the Sudan, Norway, Mongolia, Zambia, Jamaica,
Australia, Malta, Bangladesh, the Holy See, the Islamic Republic of Iran
and Egypt.
11. At the same meeting, the Main Committee approved chapter III of the
draft programme of action and recommended it to the Summit for adoption
(see A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.5). Statements were made by the representatives
of the United States of America and Australia.
12. At the same meeting, the Main Committee approved chapter IV of the
draft programme of action and recommended it to the Summit for adoption
(see A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.6). Statements were made by the representatives
of the Philippines (on behalf of the States Members of the United Nations
that are members of the Group of 77 and China), Canada and the Holy See.
13. Also at the 4th meeting, the Main Committee considered chapter V
of the draft programme of action. The representative of Malaysia informed
the Committee of the progress made during informal consultations. Statements
were made by the representatives of Ukraine, Egypt, the United States
of America, Benin, Algeria and Indonesia.
14. At the 5th meeting, on 10 March, the Main Committee approved the
draft declaration (see A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.1 and Corr.1-3) and chapters
I and V of the draft programme of action (see A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.3 and
Corr.1 and A/CONF.166/L.3/Add.7 and Corr.1). It deleted former paragraph
88 (c) of the draft programme of action, concerning the establishment
of an international fund for social development, on the understanding
that the issue would be considered by the Economic and Social Council
at its substantive session of 1995 in the context of the discussion of
the World Summit for Social Development.
15. Statements were made by the representatives of the Philippines (on
behalf of the States Members of the United Nations that are members of
the Group of 77 and China), the United States of America, Azerbaijan,
Egypt, India, Iraq, Tunisia, Guatemala, Kuwait, Belize, Saudi Arabia,
Costa Rica, Pakistan, Ecuador, Argentina, Malta, Peru, the Holy See, the
Sudan and Jordan.
16. At the same meeting, the Chairman of the Main Committee and the Under-
Secretary-General for Policy Coordination and Sustainable Development
made statements.
17. The following requested that their reservations or comments be placed
on record:
(a) The representative of Egypt expressed a reservation on any reference
counter to the laws and Constitution of Egypt and wished to see specific
commitments from donor countries on assistance to social development and
debt alleviation;
(b) The representatives of Iraq and Kuwait stated that the thrust of
commitment 9 of the Copenhagen Declaration should be on social development;
(c) The representative of Peru stated that nothing in the Copenhagen
Declaration or the Programme of Action should be contrary to the right
to life;
(d) The representative of the Philippines, on behalf of the States Members
of the United Nations that are members of the Group of 77, stated that,
owing to inequalities between the developing countries and countries with
economies in transition, the two should not be treated on an equal basis.
He expressed a reservation on paragraph 6 of the Copenhagen Declaration;
(e) The representative of the Sudan expressed a reservation on any paragraphs
that contradict Islamic law (Sharia);
(f) The representative of Ukraine expressed a preference for alternative
wording at the end of paragraph 89 (b).
Chapter V
ADOPTION OF THE COPENHAGEN DECLARATION ON SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE
PROGRAMME OF ACTION OF THE WORLD SUMMIT FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
1. At the 14th plenary meeting, on 12 March, the representative of the
Philippines, on behalf of the States Members of the United Nations that
are members of the Group of 77 and China, introduced and orally revised
a draft resolution (A/CONF.166/L.5) entitled "Declaration and Programme
of Action of the World Summit for Social Development".
2. At the same meeting, the Summit adopted the draft resolution as revised
(for the text, see chap. I, resolution 1).
3. Before the adoption of the draft resolution, statements were made
by the representatives of Azerbaijan, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the Islamic
Republic of Iran, Qatar, the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, the United Arab Emirates
and the Holy See.
Reservations on the Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme of Action
4. The representatives of a number of countries made statements which
they requested the secretariat of the Summit to place on record. Those
statements are set out below.
5. The representative of Argentina submitted the following written statement:
The Argentine Republic wishes to place on record the following reservations
with regard to the terms "reproductive health" and "forms
of family", contained in the text of the Declaration and Programme
of Action of the World Summit for Social Development held in Copenhagen,
adopted at a plenary meeting of the Summit:
Reproductive health
The Argentine Republic cannot accept the idea that reproductive health
should include abortion, either as a service or as a method of birth control.
This reservation, which is based on the universal nature of the right
to life, extends to all references of this kind.
Forms of family
The Argentine Republic declares that it accepts those paragraphs that
refer to forms of family on the understanding that the references in question
do not imply any change in the meaning of the origin and foundation of
the family, which is the union of a man and a woman from which children
are derived.
6. The representative of Azerbaijan submitted the following written statement:
The delegation of Azerbaijan welcomes the adoption of the Declaration
and Programme of Action.
Paragraph 26 (k) of the Declaration is based on article 2 of the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action, adopted at the World Conference on
Human Rights. However, this paragraph does not completely reflect the
wording of the Vienna Declaration.
In fact, section I, paragraph 2, of the Vienna Declaration states: "Taking
into account the particular situation of peoples under colonial or other
forms of alien domination or foreign occupation ...".
The wording of paragraph 26 (k) of the Declaration is different from
that of the Vienna Declaration. Instead of stating: "Taking into
account the particular situation of peoples ...", it states: "...
in particular of peoples ...". We would prefer that paragraph 26
(k) reflect the exact wording of the Vienna Declaration.
As far as paragraph 15 (e) of the Programme of Action of the Summit is
concerned, there is no reference at all to the Vienna Declaration.
For this reason, my delegation would like to reserve its position on
paragraph 15 (e) and ask the secretariat to duly reflect this reservation
in the records of the Summit.
7. The representative of Costa Rica submitted the following written statement:
Costa Rica respectfully requests the President of the World Summit for
Social Development, held in Copenhagen, to include in the report Costa
Rica's reservation concerning paragraph 21 of the Declaration and the
twelfth point in paragraph 70 in chapter IV, on social integration. Even
though Costa Rica recognizes the existence of conflicts and differences
between nations and peoples and between social groups, it considers that
such conflicts should be resolved through negotiation, dialogue and efforts
to achieve a consensus, and that the resources spent on arms would be
better invested in the social development of peoples.
8. The representative of Guatemala submitted the following written statement:
My delegation requests that the following statement be included in the
final report of the World Summit for Social Development. For reasons that
concern my country, Guatemala wishes to make an express reservation with
regard to all uses of the term "territorial integrity" or of
any other term which might have implications with respect to the territorial
dispute in which Guatemala is involved and which my Government is seeking
to resolve in accordance with the principle of the peaceful settlement
of disputes between States.
The delegation of Guatemala also has reservations with respect to all
such topics as "reproductive health", "family planning"
and "health education" which, in one way or another, might be
contrary to the Constitution of our country, our laws or the religious,
ethical and cultural values upheld by Guatemala.
My delegation also wishes to express the reservations of Guatemala with
respect to anything that might in any way be prejudicial to the commitments
and positions of Guatemala set forth in the following documents:
The Alliance for the Sustainable Development of Central America, adopted
at the Central American environment summit meeting for sustainable development
held in Managua, Nicaragua, on 12 October 1994, and circulated as an official
document of the General Assembly and the Security Council (A/49/580-S/1994/1217,
annex I), dated 27 October 1994,
The Tegucigalpa International Declaration on Peace and Development in
Central America adopted by the Central American Presidents at the International
Conference on Peace and Development in Central America, held in Tegucigalpa,
Honduras, on 24 and 25 October 1994, and circulated as an official document
of the General Assembly and the Security Council (A/49/639-S/1994/1247,
annex I), dated 4 November 1994,
The reservations submitted by Guatemala to the Programme of Action of
the Conference on Population and Development, held in Cairo on 13 September
1994, and the documents referred to in the aforementioned reservations,
in particular:
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the constitutional principles
and provisions embodied in the domestic law of the Republic of Guatemala.
9. The representative of the Holy See submitted the following written
statement:
The Holy See, in conformity with its nature and particular mission, in
joining the consensus at the World Summit for Social Development, held
in Copenhagen from 6 to 12 March 1995, wishes to express its understanding
of some concepts used in the documents of the Summit.
1. The Holy See reaffirms the reservation it expressed at the conclusion
of the International Conference on Population and Development, held in
Cairo from 5 to 13 September 1994, which is included in the report of
that Conference, concerning the interpretation given to the term "reproductive
health". In particular, the Holy See reiterates that it does not
consider abortion or access to abortion as a dimension of reproductive
health or reproductive health services.
2. The Holy See's joining the consensus on the term "family planning"
should in no way be interpreted as constituting a change in its well-
known position concerning those family planning methods that the Catholic
Church considers morally unacceptable or concerning family planning services
that do not respect the liberty of spouses, human dignity and the human
rights of those concerned.
3. The Holy See, in line with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
stresses that the family is the basic unit of society and is based on
marriage as an equal partnership between husband and wife.
4. With reference to all international agreements and instruments mentioned
in the documents of the Summit, the Holy See reserves its position in
a manner consistent with its acceptance or non-acceptance of them or of
any expression found in them.
5. Nothing that the Holy See has done in this consensus process should
be understood or interpreted as an endorsement of concepts that it cannot
support for moral reasons. Especially, nothing is to be understood to
imply that the Holy See endorses abortion or has in any way changed its
moral position concerning abortion or on contraceptives, sterilization
or the use of condoms in HIV/AIDS prevention programmes.
The Holy See asks that these reservations be included in the report of
the Summit.
10. The representative of Iraq submitted the following written statement:
Although the delegation of Iraq joined the other delegations in agreeing
on the Declaration and the Programme of Action, it is important to point
out that this document neglected to deal with a very important question
that has negative effects on the process of social development, that is,
the "brain drain". It is well known that some of the industrialized
countries are enacting legislation and inciting qualified third world
persons to emigrate from their home countries. This process has had very
adverse effects on the development of the affected third world countries.
It is unfortunate that the Summit did not pay any attention to this question.
The delegation of Iraq would, therefore, like to put this question on
record.
The pressures that were applied by some Western countries have also resulted
in the Summit not dealing with the serious effects of economic sanctions
on the social development of targeted countries that belong to the third
world, which are already suffering from social backwardness. Here, also,
the delegation of Iraq would like to put on record this defect in the
final document of the Summit.
11. The representative of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya submitted the following
written statement:
The delegation of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya has expressed certain observations
during previous meetings namely:
"What has been ordained to us by God cannot be changed by man. What
has been particularly textually defined by the Holy Koran cannot be countered."
The delegation of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya expresses reservations about
what has been stated in the Declaration and the Programme of Action that
counters Islamic Sharia.
12. The representative of Malta submitted the following written statement:
The delegation of Malta reserves its position on the use of the term
"reproductive health" in the Declaration and the Programme of
Action.
The interpretation given by Malta to this term is consistent with its
national legislation which considers the termination of pregnancy through
procedures of induced abortion as illegal.
The delegation of Malta requests that this reservation be included in
the final document of the World Summit for Social Development.
13. The representative of Oman submitted the following written statement:
The Sultanate of Oman adopts the Declaration and Programme of Action
of the World Summit for Social Development, provided they are not in conflict
with the requirements of the Islamic religion and our national laws.
14. The representative of Qatar submitted the following written statement:
The delegation of the State of Qatar would like to make reservations
on any part or paragraph of the Declaration and Programme of Action adopted
by the Summit, in case of any contradictions with Islamic principles (Sharia),
our moral values or our national traditions.
The delegation of Qatar requests that its reservations be included in
the final report of the Summit.
15. The representative of Saudi Arabia submitted the following written
statement:
The delegation of Saudi Arabia would like to express its reservations
on any part of the Declaration or Programme of Action of the Summit that
does not conform to, is not in line with or contradicts Islamic law (Sharia)
or our values and traditions.
We would not be obliged to implement and will not commit ourselves to
implementing any such part.
The delegation of Saudi Arabia requests that its reservations be included
in the final report of the Summit.
16. The representative of the United Arab Emirates submitted the following
written statement:
The delegation of the United Arab Emirates would like to express its
reservations on any part or paragraph in the Declaration or Programme
of Action of the Summit that contradicts in any way Islamic law (Sharia)
or does not conform to our ethical values and traditions. It should be
noted that we have expressed our reservations during the discussion in
the Main Committee.
The delegation of the United Arab Emirates requests that its reservations
be included in the final report of the Summit.
17. The representative of the United States of America submitted the
following written statement:
Declaration, paragraph 16 (d), and Programme of Action, paragraph 10
(c)
As recognized in paragraph 10 of the Declaration, Governments reaffirm
and are guided by the principles of the Charter of the United Nations
and by the decisions of, inter alia, the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development, held at Rio de Janeiro in 1992. We understand
and accept the references to consumption in both paragraph 16 (d) of the
Declaration and paragraph 10 (c) of the Programme of Action in the context
of the full reference from paragraph 4.3 of Agenda 21, as follows:
Poverty and environmental degradation are closely interrelated. While
poverty results in certain kinds of environmental stress, the major cause
of the continued deterioration of the global environment is the unsustainable
pattern of consumption and production, particularly in industrialized
countries, which is a matter of grave concern, aggravating poverty and
imbalances.
Declaration, paragraph 27
We understand and accept that the goals referred to in paragraph 27 refer
to achieving social development in general and to creating a suitable
framework of action in particular.
Commitment 9 (l) and Programme of Action, paragraphs 11 (h) and 88 (b)
The United States reiterates that, with respect to commitment 9 (l) and
paragraphs 11 (h) and 88 (b) of the Programme of Action, it is not one
of the countries that have accepted an "agreed target" for official
development assistance or have made a commitment to fulfil such a target.
We believe that national Governments, not international donors, must have
primary responsibility for their country's development. Targets detract
from the more important issues of the effectiveness and quality of aid
and the policies of the recipient country. The United States has traditionally
been one of the largest aid donors in volume terms and will continue to
work with developing countries to provide aid in support of their efforts.
In addition, the United States understands and accepts the reference
in commitment 9 (l) to increasing the share of official development assistance
for social development programmes to apply to only those countries that
have accepted the target.
Commitment 9 (m)
The United States understands the word "resources" in commitment
9 (m) to include technical and other non-financial forms of assistance,
and accepts the commitment on that basis. The United States will strive
to increase resources for the United States Food for Peace Program and
will continue to provide resources for major refugee relief and logistic
activities. The United States does not accept an interpretation of commitment
9 (m) that would commit States to provide only financial assistance.
Commitment 9 (s)
The United States understands commitment 9 (s) to reiterate, as stated
in General Assembly resolution 47/199, that there is a need for a substantial
increase in resources for operational activities from all available sources
for development and accepts the commitment on that basis. The United States
understands the word "resources" to include technical and other
non-financial forms of assistance and, in the spirit of commitment 9 (s)
and General Assembly resolution 47/199, will seek to increase such resources
from governmental and other sources in support of United Nations development
efforts.
Programme of Action, paragraph 54 (b)
The United States understands the intention of the inclusion of "equal
remuneration for men and women for work of equal value" to be to
promote pay equity between men and women and accepts the recommendation
on that basis. The United States implements it by observing the principle
of "equal pay for equal work".
Programme of Action, paragraph 83 (b)
The United States understands and accepts the reference in paragraph
83 (b) of the Programme of Action to social development as primarily the
responsibility of Governments to refer to Governments' responsibility
to create an environment that includes the promotion and protection of
all human rights and fundamental freedoms, thereby allowing each person
to reach his or her full human potential.
Terminology
The United States understands and accepts that paragraph 28 of the Declaration
and paragraphs 2 and 3 of the Programme of Action confirm that the Programme
of Action, like the Declaration, is not legally binding and that it consists
of recommendations concerning how States can and should promote social
development. Accordingly, the United States understands and accepts that
the words "requires" and "required" as used in the
Declaration and in the Programme of Action suggest practical measures
to help achieve social development and do not alter the status of the
documents or the recommendations contained therein.
Reservation
Commitment 7 (e) and Programme of Action, paragraph 11 (h)
As the United States stated several times during the World Summit for
Social Development and the preparations for it, owing to domestic funding
constraints it cannot agree to increase official development assistance,
as called for by commitment 7 (e) and as recommended in paragraph 11 (h)
of the Programme of Action. Accordingly, the United States wishes to express
its reservations on commitment 7 (e) and on paragraph 11 (h) of the Programme
of Action. The United States remains none the less committed to working
to accelerate the development of Africa and the least developed countries.
Chapter VI
REPORT OF THE CREDENTIALS COMMITTEE
1. At the 1st plenary meeting, on 6 March 1995, the World Summit for
Social Development, in accordance with rule 4 of its rules of procedure,
appointed a Credentials Committee, based on that of the Credentials Committee
of the General Assembly of the United Nations at its forty-ninth session,
consisting of the following nine members: China, Fiji, Honduras, Namibia,
Portugal, Russian Federation, Suriname, Togo and United States of America.
2. The Credentials Committee held one meeting, on 9 March 1995.
3. Mr. Pedro Catarino (Portugal) was unanimously elected Chairman of
the Committee.
4. The Committee had before it a memorandum by the Secretary-General
dated 8 March 1995 on the status of credentials of representatives participating
in the Summit. Additional information on credentials received by the Secretary-General
after the issuance of the memorandum was provided to the Committee by
its Secretary.
5. The Chairman proposed that the Committee accept the credentials of
all the representatives mentioned in the memorandum by the Secretary-General,
on the understanding that formal credentials for representatives referred
to in paragraph 2 of the Secretary-General's memorandum would be communicated
to the Secretary-General as soon as possible. The following draft resolution
was proposed by the Chairman for adoption by the Committee:
The Credentials Committee,
Having examined the credentials of the representatives to the World Summit
for Social Development referred to in the memorandum by the Secretary-General
dated 8 March 1995,
Accepts the credentials of the representatives concerned.
6. The draft resolution was adopted by the Committee without a vote.
7. Subsequently, on the proposal of the Chairman, the Committee agreed
to recommend to the Summit the adoption of a draft resolution approving
the report of the Credentials Committee.
Action taken by the Summit
8. At the 10th plenary meeting, on 10 March 1995, the Summit considered
the report of the Credentials Committee (A/CONF.166/7).
9. The Summit adopted the draft resolution recommended by the Committee
in its report (for the text, see chap. I, resolution 3). The States and
regional economic integration organization that participated in the Summit
are listed in chapter II, paragraph 2.
Chapter VII
MEETING OF HEADS OF STATE OR GOVERNMENT
The meeting of heads of State or Government took place on 11 and 12 March
1995. The following 134 heads of State or Government or their personal
representatives made statements:
H.E. Mr. Poul Nyrup Rasmussen Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Denmark
and President of the Summit
H.E. Sr. Eduardo Frei Ruiz Tagle President of the Republic of Chile
H.E. President Soeharto Republic of Indonesia
H.E. Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari President of the Islamic Republic
of Pakistan
H.E. Mr. Li Peng Premier of the State Council of the People's Republic
of China
H.E. Mr. P. V. Narasimha Rao Prime Minister of the Republic of India
H.E. Mr. Franz Vranitzky Federal Chancellor of the Republic of Austria
H.E. Mr. Tomiichi Murayama Prime Minister of Japan
H.E. Mr. Ingvar Carlsson Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Sweden
H.E. Mr. Leonid D. Kuchma President of Ukraine
H.E. Sr. Felipe Gonzalez Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Spain
H.E. M. Franc'ois Mitterrand President of the French Republic
H.E. Mr. Willem Kok Prime Minister of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
H.E. Mr. Robert G. Mugabe President of the Republic of Zimbabwe
H.E. Mr. Kim Young Sam President of the Republic of Korea
H.E. Mr. Su"leyman Demirel President of the Republic of Turkey
H.E. Mr. Sam Nujoma President of the Republic of Namibia
H.E. M. Blaise Compaore President of Burkina Faso
H.E. Sr. Marc Forne' Molne' Head of Government of the Principality of
Andorra
H.E. Flt. Lt. (Rtd.) Jerry John Rawlings President of the Republic of
Ghana
H.E. Mr. Lamberto Dini President of the Council of Ministers of the Italian
Republic
H.E. Dr. Cheddi B. Jagan President of the Republic of Guyana
H.E. Mr. Martti Ahtisaari President of the Republic of Finland
H.E. Mr. Helmut Kohl Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany
H.E. Mrs. Gro Harlem Brundtland Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Norway
H.E. Mr. Lech Walesa President of the Republic of Poland
H.E. M. Jean-Luc Dehaene Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Belgium
H.E. M. Liamine Zeroual President of the People's Democratic Republic
of Algeria
H.E. Mr. Ion Iliescu President of Romania
H.E. Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah Amir of the State of Kuwait
H.E. Dato' Seri Dr. Mahathir Mohamad Prime Minister of Malaysia
H.E. Dr. Janez Drnovsek Prime Minister of the Republic of Slovenia
H.E. El Hadj Omar Bongo President of the Gabonese Republic
H.E. Mr. Levon Ter-Petrossian President of the Republic of Armenia
H.E. M. Paul Biya President of the Republic of Cameroon
H.E. M. Habib Thiam Prime Minister of the Republic of Senegal
H.E. Mr. Va'clav Klaus Prime Minister of the Czech Republic
H.E. Mr. Alberto Fujimori Fujimori President of the Republic of Peru
H.E. Mr. Chuan Leekpai Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Thailand
H.E. The Hon. Ali Hassan Mwinyi President of the United Republic of Tanzania
His Majesty King Mswati III of the Kingdom of Swaziland
H.E. Mr. Joaquim Alberto Chissano President of the Republic of Mozambique
H.E. Mr. Kim Pyong Sik Vice-President of the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea
H.E. Mr. Victor S. Chernomyrdin Prime Minister of the Russian Federation
H.E. Dr. Ernesto Samper Pizano President of the Republic of Colombia
H.E. Ing. Juan Carlos Wasmosy President of the Republic of Paraguay
H.E. The Rt. Hon. Percival James Patterson Prime Minister of Jamaica
H.E. Mr. Fidel V. Ramos President of the Republic of the Philippines
H.E. Begum Khaleda Zia Prime Minister of the People's Republic of Bangladesh
H.E. Mr. Albert Gore Vice-President of the United States of America
H.E. Mr. Lennart Meri President of the Republic of Estonia
H.E. Mr. Heydar Alirza ogly Aliyev President of the Azerbaijani Republic
H.E. Dr. Ramiro de Leon Carpio President of the Republic of Guatemala
H.E. Mr. Mare'chal Mobuto Sese Seko President of the Republic of Zaire
H.E. Dr. Fidel Castro Ruz President of the Council of State and the Council
of Ministers of the Republic of Cuba
H.E. The Rt. Hon. Dr. Ntsu Mokhehle Prime Minister of the Kingdom of
Lesotho
H.E. Sir Ketumile Masire President of the Republic of Botswana
H.E. Mr. Puntsagiin Jasrai Prime Minister of Mongolia
H.E. The Hon. Paul Keating Prime Minister of Australia
H.E. The Hon. Daniel Toroitich arap Moi President and Commander-in-Chief
of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Kenya
H.E. Dr. Franjo Tudjman President of the Republic of Croatia
H.E. Madame Ruth Dreifuss Federal Counsellor, Head of the Federal Department
of the Interior of the Swiss Confederation
H.E. Dr. Haris Silajdzic Prime Minister of the Republic of Bosnia and
Herzegovina
H.E. The Hon. Dr. Edward Fenech Adami Prime Minister of the Republic
of Malta
H.E. Lic. Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada President of the Republic of Bolivia
H.E. Mrs. Violeta Barrios de Chamorro President of Nicaragua
H.E. Mr. Jacques Santer President of the European Community
H.E. Mr. Nelson Rorihlahla Mandela President of the Republic of South
Africa
H.E. Mr. Alberto Dahik Vice-President of the Republic of Ecuador
H.E. The Hon. Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga President of the Democratic
Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
H.E. Mr. Daniel Kablan Duncan Prime Minister of the Republic of Co^te
d'Ivoire
H.E. Mr. Eduard A. Shevardnadze President of the Republic of Georgia
H.E. Ing. Jose' Mari'a Figueres Olsen President of the Republic of Costa
Rica
H.E. Mr. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni President of the Republic of Uganda
H.E. Mr. Alpha Oumar Konare President of the Republic of Mali
H.E. Mr. Abdellatif Filali Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Morocco
His Eminence Angelo Cardinal Sodano Secretary of State of the Holy See
H.E. Mr. Alyaksandr Lukashenka President of the Republic of Belarus
H.E. Mr. John Bruton Prime Minister of Ireland
H.E. Mr. Guntis Ulmanis President of the Republic of Latvia
H.E. Mr. Islam A. Karimov President of the Republic of Uzbekistan
H.E. General Lansana Conte President of the Republic of Guinea
H.E. Dr. Mario Frick Prime Minister of the Principality of Liechtenstein
H.E. Dr. Sali Berisha President of the Republic of Albania
H.E. Captain Yahya A. J. J. Jammeh President of the Republic of the Gambia
H.E. Dr. Arpa'd Go"ncz President of the Republic of Hungary
H.E. Mr. Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas President of the Republic of Lithuania
H.E. Mr. David Oddsson Prime Minister of the Republic of Iceland
H.E. Dr. Carlos Roberto Reina Idiaquez President of the Republic of Honduras
H.E. The Rt. Hon. Man Mohan Adhikari Prime Minister of the Kingdom of
Nepal
H.E. Mr. Hassan Gouled Aptidon President of the Republic of Djibouti
H.E. Mr. Zhelyu Zhelev President of the Republic of Bulgaria
H.E. General Joao Bernardo Vieira President of the Republic of Guinea-Bissau
H.E. Mr. Jean-Claude Juncker Prime Minister of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
H.E. Mr. Glafcos Clerides President of the Republic of Cyprus
H.E. Mr. Ange-Fe'lix Patasse President of the Central African Republic
H.E. Mr. Sidi Mohamed Ould Boubacar Prime Minister of the Islamic Republic
of Mauritania
H.E. Mr. Kiro Gligorov President of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
H.E. Dr. Carlos Alberto Wahnon de Carvalho Veiga Prime Minister of the
Republic of Cape Verde
H.E. Lt. Gen. Omer Hassan Ahmed Al Bashir President of the Republic of
the Sudan
H.E. Dr. Armando Calderon Sol President of the Republic of El Salvador
H.E. Mr. Andrei Nicolae Sangheli Prime Minister of the Republic of Moldova
H.E. Mr. Renzo Ghiotti Captain Regent of the Republic of San Marino
H.E. Mr. Emomaili Rakhmonov President of the Republic of Tajikistan
H.E. Mr. Runaldo Ronald Venetiaan President of the Republic of Suriname
H.E. Mr. Michal Kovac President of the Slovak Republic
H.E. Mr. Edem Kodjo Prime Minister of the Togolese Republic
H.E. The Hon. Dr. Kennedy A. Simmonds Prime Minister of Saint Kitts and
Nevis
H.E. Mr. Jacinto Peynado Vice-President of the Dominican Republic
H.E. Mr. Halifa Houmadi Prime Minister of the Islamic Federal Republic
of the Comoros
H.E. Mr. Sylvestre Ntibantunganya President of the Republic of Burundi
H.E. Mr. Abdorabo Mansoor Hadi Vice-President of the Republic of Yemen
H.E. Mr. Miguel dos Angos da Canha Lisboa Trovoada Head of State of the
Democratic Republic of Sao Tome and Principe
H.E. Mr. Francisque Ravony Prime Minister of the Republic of Madagascar
His Highness Sheikh Sultan Bin Zayed Al-Nahayan Deputy Prime Minister
of the United Arab Emirates
H.E. The Hon. Philip Muller Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic
of the Marshall Islands
H.E. Dr. Paulo Renato de Souza Minister for Education and Sports of the
Federative Republic of Brazil
H.E. Mr. Jose' Angel Gurria Trevin~a Minister for Foreign Affairs of
the United Mexican States
H.E. Mr. Abdallah Kallel Minister of State, Adviser to the President
of the Republic of Tunisia
H.E. Mr. Desire' Vieyra Ministre d'Etat, Charge' de la Coordination de
l'Action Gourvernementale of the Republic of Benin
H.E. The Hon. Peter Gresham Minister for Social Welfare of New Zealand
H.E. Shaikh Isa Bin Ali Al-Khalifa Minister for Labour and Social Affairs
of the State of Bahrain
H.E. Mr. Sadoom Hamadi Adviser to the Office of the President of the
Republic of Iraq
H.E. The Hon. Ratu Jo Nacola Minister for Regional Development and Multi-Ethnic
Affairs of the Republic of Fiji
H.E. The Hon. Dharmanand Goopt Fokeer Minister for Social Security and
National Solidarity of the Republic of Mauritius
H.E. The Hon. Ismail Shafeeu Minister for Planning, Human Resources and
Environment of the Republic of Maldives
H.E. Mr. Ali Khalil Minister of Social Affairs and Labour of the Syrian
Arab Republic
H.E. Mr. Fares Bouez Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Lebanese Republic
H.E. Mrs. Salwa Damen Al-Masri Minister for Social Development of the
Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
H.E. Mr. Omar Mustafa Muntasser Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Libyan
Arab Jamahiriya
H.E. Chief Anthony A. Ani Minister for Foreign Affairs and Finance of
the Federal Republic of Nigeria
H.E. Mr. Arse`ne Tsaty-Boungou Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic
of the Congo
H.E. Mr. Usmonakum Ibraimov Vice-Prime Minister of the Republic of Kyrgyzstan
H.E. Dr. Ali Akbar Velayati Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Islamic
Republic of Iran*
* The representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran delivered a message
from his head of State in advance, on 10 March 1995.
Chapter VIII
ADOPTION OF THE REPORT OF THE SUMMIT
1. The Rapporteur-General introduced and orally revised the draft report
of the Summit (A/CONF.166/L.4 and Add.1) at the 14th plenary meeting,
on 12 March 1995.
2. At the same meeting, the Summit adopted the draft report, as revised,
and authorized the Rapporteur-General to complete the report, in conformity
with the practice of the United Nations, with a view to submitting it
to the General Assembly at its fiftieth session.
Chapter IX
CLOSURE OF THE SUMMIT
1. At the 14th plenary meeting, on 12 March 1995, the representative
of the Philippines, on behalf of the States Members of the United Nations
that are members of the Group of 77 and China, introduced a draft resolution
(A/CONF.166/L.6) expressing the Summit's gratitude to the host country.
2. At the same meeting, the Summit adopted the draft resolution (for
the text, see chap. I, resolution 2).
3. Also at the same meeting, statements were made by the representatives
of the Philippines (on behalf of the States Members of the United Nations
that are members of the Group of 77 and China), France (on behalf of the
European Union) and the United States of America.
4. After a statement had been made by the Secretary-General, the President
of the Summit made a concluding statement and declared the Summit closed.
Annex I
LIST OF DOCUMENTS
Symbol Title or description
A/CONF.166/1 Provisional agenda
A/CONF.166/2 Provisional rules of procedure: note by the Secretariat
A/CONF.166/3 Organizational and procedural matters: note by the Secretariat
A/CONF.166/4 Accreditation of non-governmental organizations in accordance
with the rules for their participation set out in Preparatory Committee
decision 2: note by the Secretariat
A/CONF.166/5 Note verbale dated 2 February 1995 from the Permanent Mission
of Bangladesh to the United Nations addressed to the secretariat of the
World Summit for Social Development
A/CONF.166/6 Participation of intergovernmental organizations in the
work of the World Summit for Social Development: note by the secretariat
of the Summit
A/CONF.166/7 Report of the Credentials Committee
A/CONF.166/8 Note verbale dated 11 March 1995 from the delegation of
Greece to the World Summit for Social Development addressed to the secretariat
of the Summit
A/CONF.166/L.1 and Draft declaration and draft programme of action: note
Corr.1 and 2 by the Secretary-General
A/CONF.166/L.2 Additional proposals for the draft declaration and draft
programme of action: note by the Secretariat
A/CONF.166/L.3 and Report of the Main Committee Add.1, Add.1/Corr.1-3,
Add.2 and 3, Add.3/ Corr.1, Add.4, Add.4/ Corr.1, Add.5-7 and Add.7/Corr.1
A/CONF.166/L.4 and Draft report of the Summit Add.1
A/CONF.166/L.5 Declaration and Programme of Action of the World Summit
for Social Development: draft resolution submitted by the Philippines
(on behalf of the States Members of the United Nations that are members
of the Group of 77 and China)
A/CONF.166/L.6 Expression of thanks to the people and Government of Denmark:
draft resolution submitted by the Philippines (on behalf of the States
Members of the United Nations that are members of the Group of 77 and
China)
A/CONF.166/INF/1 Information for participants
A/CONF.166/INF/2 and Provisional list of delegations to the Summit Add.1
A/CONF.166/INF/3 and List of documents circulated for information Add.1-4
A/CONF.166/PC/28 Report of the Preparatory Committee for the World Summit
for Social Development on its third session
Annex II
OPENING STATEMENTS
Statement by Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, Prime Minister of Denmark and President
of the World Summit for Social Development
The American astronaut, James Lovell, had no doubts about the qualities
of the planet Earth, when in 1968 on board Apollo 8 he described the Earth
as a grand oasis to the vastness of space.
But we have not treated our planet in a way that warrants this description.
Man has often treated nature unwisely and short-sightedly. We are gradually
beginning to do things better. But man has treated man even worse. In
this century alone we have lived in the shadow of two world wars and of
totalitarian regimes, not to mention the nuclear bomb.
Security of the State has been more important than security of people.
We have now learned that real lasting security is based upon the security
of people.
We have come to a turning-point for mankind. At last we recognize that
the security of people is the main topic of the international agenda.
Let this Summit focus on the security of people.
The Summit is the first of its kind: a World Summit for Social Development.
We will provide leadership and direction.
I wish to thank the General Assembly of the United Nations for having
chosen Copenhagen as the venue for the World Summit for Social Development.
The Government and people of Denmark are proud to be hosting this Summit.
I welcome you to Copenhagen and Denmark. I hope that you will find time
to get to know this country, its people, its culture and its social development.
I wish to express my deep appreciation to the Summit for having elected
me President.
My task is made easier through the tremendous work done by the Secretary-General
of the United Nations, his collaborators in the Secretariat, and the Preparatory
Committee.
In particular, I wish to pay tribute to the Chairman of the Preparatory
Committee, Ambassador Juan Somavia of Chile. For years he has worked hard
and with dedication to make this Summit come true.
Let us use the Summit to turn the analysis of problems and possibilities
into concrete commitments and actions as we did in Rio.
If we are to shape the future, we must have goals, ambition and decisions.
These we have. We are gathered here to promote social development and
social justice, placing the needs, rights and aspirations of people at
the centre of our decisions and joint actions. We want to open a new era
of international cooperation between Governments and people based on a
spirit of partnership.
The core issues to be discussed at the Summit - poverty, employment and
social integration - are well chosen. At this Summit we are discussing
the real problems, which concern all people. Therefore the Summit is at
the very heart of all political work and governance.
We need to focus on human security. Human security and social progress
must be maintained by ensuring proper living conditions.
Each person's security has to do with adequate income and employment,
education and training, health and housing, equality and legal protection
and the exercise of human rights.
The key word is solidarity. The means are political power and economic
and sustainable growth used for the right purposes. It is not a question
of whether we can afford it. It is a question of priorities and determination.
We must find new answers to these well-known, fundamental questions.
Poverty is linked to lack of access to resources, including knowledge.
Poor people are easily neglected by policy makers. Anti-poverty programmes
alone are not sufficient. Democratic participation is necessary to ensure
equal access to opportunities, public services and political life.
All Governments should undertake policies geared to a better distribution
of wealth and income. We must offer social protection and opportunities
for those who cannot support themselves. We must assist people in social
distress. In short, we must empower people to become genuine partners
in developing our societies.
For the poorest countries, we must extend the national effort to include
international actions of solidarity.
For many years the international community was divided into ideological
blocs. This Summit is historic as it gives us the chance - for the first
time after the cold war - to share a common vision on how to solve the
social problems of the world.
Let this Summit of hope result in better opportunities for an exchange
of experiences. No country can claim to have solved its social problems.
Some countries are rich. Some are poor. The acuteness of the problems
varies. But they have one thing in common: they are an offence to human
dignity and a threat to mankind if not attended to in time.
Social problems are of a size and a complexity that call for new solutions,
new alliances and new values. Many nations have welfare systems that could
be an inspiration to others. It is our task to encourage people to take
an active part in creating new societies.
We have learned that social progress will not be realized simply through
the free market forces. Nothing short of the political will to invest
- nationally and internationally - in people's well-being will accomplish
the objective of social security.
The private sector, including businesses and enterprises, must assume
a co-responsibility for the solution of social problems.
This new partnership for social development must include actions that
enable poor and disadvantaged people to participate fully and productively
in the economy and in society.
This Summit is a historic and unique platform for global social development.
But we must not give the impression that the Summit alone will dramatically
change daily life. We still have to put actions behind the words.
The true significance of the Summit will therefore have to be measured
by what happens after the Summit. This is only the beginning of a new,
global process. But the difference between last week and next week should
be increased awareness and the mobilization of resources for social development.
We gather here in Copenhagen for a Summit of hope, commitment and action.
Let us transform hope into action. That is what people expect from us.
I am confident that we can forge a new partnership for social development.
The Copenhagen Summit will make a difference. Because we have decided
so.
Statement by Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Secretary-General of the United Nations
The message of this World Summit for Social Development should be clear.
The international community is today taking a clear stand against social
injustice, exclusion and poverty in the world.
So, as we celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the Organization, we
should ask ourselves some searching questions about our own record.
We should ask how seriously we have taken our Charter commitments. Can
we say that we have fulfilled our solemn undertaking, entered into 50
years ago at San Francisco, to promote "the economic and social advancement
of all peoples"?
Today's global economy affects everyone. We also know that its effects
are not all positive. It erodes traditional ties of solidarity among individuals.
It has marginalized entire countries and regions. The gap between rich
and poor is getting wider.
So the task before us today is nothing more nor less than to rethink
the notion of collective social responsibility.
A new social contract, at the global level, is required, to bring hope
to States and to nations, and to men and women around the world. That
should be the focus of this World Summit. That is how I believe its work
should be seen.
When, in 1992, the General Assembly took the initiative of calling this
World Summit, its aim was to make social development a major priority
for the international community. The agenda for this Summit meeting faithfully
reflects that intention. We will be discussing how to carry forward the
fight against poverty; how to combat social exclusion and disintegration;
how to create productive employment; and how to awaken a new awareness
of social responsibility at the international level.
It is clear from these concerns that this Copenhagen World Summit is
part of a process. It is part of the process of profound reflection and
debate on which the international community has embarked - about itself
and its future, and about the role of the individual human being.
As part of this collective rethinking, the international community has
given a good deal of thought to the position of the individual human being.
At Rio we debated the relationship between the human being and the environment.
At Vienna we looked at the human being as the bearer of rights. The human
person as a collective being was the theme of the Cairo Population Conference.
And once more, the human person - this time through the rights and status
of women - will bring us together next September, at Beijing.
The concept of social development gives coherence and perspective to
the entire process of reflection in which the international community
has been engaged.
Social development says that only within a social order based on justice
can the individual human being reach his or her full potential. Social
development says, too, that real economic progress is impossible without
progress in the social sphere. Social development is also the international
community's political response - political in the fullest sense of the
term - to the global society in which we live. That is why I see it as
part of the task of the United Nations to attempt to provide such a response
- starting now.
Clearly, no one has a ready-made model or answer. But it is possible
for us to define what I would call "priority objectives", which
are basically three in number:
Providing social protection for the individual;
Assisting social integration;
Maintaining social peace.
These are the three priority goals which I would like to consider with
you for a few moments.
Providing social protection for the individual is the ultimate goal of
this Conference and, as we are about to begin our work, I think it is
important not to lose sight of the indissoluble link between the promotion
of social development and the protection of human rights.
In 1948, the Universal Declaration made explicit the social dimension
of human rights. That dimension was to be still more strongly reaffirmed
in the Covenants of 1966, particularly the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights, to whose importance I would call attention.
It was in that context that the basic concept of the right to development
came into being a few years later.
In the name of that concept and its underlying values, we are now under
a compelling obligation to tackle the problem of poverty in the world.
It has to be remembered that 1.3 billion people are currently living
in a state of absolute poverty, and that 1.5 billion have no access to
the most elementary health care. We also know that the principal victims
of poverty are women, since they represent more than 70 per cent of the
disinherited of the Earth.
It should also be emphasized that, although a struggle against social
inequalities must be waged all over the planet, the scale of the problem,
as well as its severity, differ from one region to another.
Only through constant awareness of the realities of the world can we,
here in Copenhagen, truly be the spokesmen of all those who desire improved
social justice, and play a part in creating a new social policy on a global
scale.
The second priority goal I wish to propose is that of assisting social
integration. This is all the more necessary as disturbing situations of
exclusion and marginalization are developing all over the world.
To struggle for social integration, therefore, means condemning selfishness
and indifference first of all. It also means combating all forms of discrimination
throughout the world, whatever their cause. It also means calling upon
all humanity to show tolerance, solidarity, and involvement. Lastly, it
means giving all men, women, and children the education they need in order
to take their place in society.
The World Summit for Social Development has quite rightly emphasized
the connection between the struggle against poverty, the campaign for
social integration and the creation of productive jobs. In fact in the
world of today, employment is an essential factor in integration. On the
other hand, unemployment is a form of exclusion leading to a combination
of social handicaps.
It is primarily the duty of States to implement dynamic social policies.
Social development calls for wide-ranging political action, particularly
in the area of laws and regulations.
But social development is a matter, not only for States, but also for
the entire United Nations system. The latter has long been active in the
service of social progress. Many of its organs, such as the United Nations
Development Programme, and numerous specialized agencies, including the
International Labour Organization and the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, have done pioneering work in this
area.
However, in this social project of ours, we must also take account of
the extraordinary capacity for mobilization of the non-governmental organizations,
and the force for integration represented by private enterprise and investors.
Maintaining social peace is the third priority goal which I invite you
to pursue. In fact, there is a clear interaction between political issues
and social issues.
On the one hand, it is obvious that a stable political environment is
essential to harmonious social development. One of the purposes of political
activity is to give tangible reality to social aspirations.
On the other hand, it is equally clear that a dynamic social environment
is one of the requirements for political stability itself. For a State
in which inequality and privilege prevail is potentially in danger of
suffering the gravest social upheavals. A State which, by not permitting
satisfactory social integration, generates large numbers of marginalized
people has to fear the most unpredictable social explosions. It has to
be clearly stated: political serenity goes hand in hand with social contentment.
Furthermore, it is now well known that most of the armed conflicts facing
the United Nations are internal conflicts taking place within nations.
We also know that most of those conflicts have clear economic and social
causes. Consequently, we can reaffirm once more the indissoluble link
between the promotion of development and the preservation of peace.
I have sought to place the World Summit for Social Development in the
perspective of the major goals of the United Nations because, as Secretary-
General of the Organization, I am conscious of our collective responsibility
towards future generations. I therefore hope that the United Nations may
acquire the necessary means to follow up this Conference, so that the
important recommendations adopted here may have a genuine impact on the
lives of peoples and nations. I sincerely trust that the Bretton Woods
institutions will play a full role in the social action which we are now
redefining and reinventing.
For the social development project is an opportunity for the international
community as a whole to say:
No to the inevitability of crisis!
No to the persistence of inequalities!
No to the division of the world!
Giving social issues the status of universal priorities shows our determination
to accept responsibility for the collective destiny of international society
and to establish a new planet-wide pact of solidarity.
Annex III
CLOSING STATEMENTS
Statement by Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, Prime Minister of Denmark and President
of the World Summit for Social Development
It falls upon me now to bring to a close the World Summit for Social
Development.
What lies ahead of us is a task even more important than the one we have
just successfully completed. For documents, well crafted as they may be,
and commitments, forceful as they may be, must stand the test of time.
It is our duty to ensure that this is done.
I would not want to close this meeting without expressing my profound
appreciation for all those whose personal contribution has made this Summit
possible:
To Ambassador Somavia, whose country proposed the Summit, and on whose
broad shoulders so much of its preparations fell. May I commend his untiring
work on behalf of the Summit; he guided the negotiating process with tenacity,
skill and commitment; his intellect, spirit, constancy of purpose and
optimism were instrumental to our success. Our gratitude also goes to
the talented diplomats who so ably assisted Ambassador Somavia in his
work, both here and in New York: Ambassadors Richard Butler of Australia,
Koos Richelle of the Netherlands, Ismail Razali of Malaysia and Prakesh
Shah of India;
To you, Mr. Secretary-General, for your personal and untiring efforts
on behalf of the Summit which demonstrate your commitment to the role
of the United Nations in development. Many of the heads of State and Government
who have been with us over the past two days know first hand the strength
of your conviction. If this Summit was attended by so many eminent statesmen
and women, it is in no small measure due to you personally, but also to
the entire United Nations Secretariat staff, led by Under-Secretaries-General
Ismat Kittani and Nitin Desai and Conference Coordinator Jacques Baudot,
who were the true backbone of the Summit;
And, finally, to all the other participants of civil society, who have
brought their expertise, their talent and, above all, their imagination
and enthusiasm to this Summit and its preparations. Their spirit and impatience
for change brought much passion and energy to our task.
The Declaration we have just adopted states that the General Assembly
should hold a special session in the year 2000 to appraise how far we
will have gone by then in implementing the results of this meeting. I
would like, when we meet five years hence, to look back to this Summit
of hope, as many have called it, as a Summit of fulfilled expectations.
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