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Documents for Earth Summit II ]
Towards
Earth Summit II, 23-27 June 1997
Recommendations for Actions and Commitments at Earth Summit II
Non-Governmental Organization Revised Draft Background Paper
A Preface
Preamble
1 Access to Earth Summit II and the General Assembly
2 Sectoral Issues
2.1 Climate Change
2.2 Forests
2.3 Chemicals
2.4 Oceans
2.5 Freshwater
2.6 Energy
2.7 Transport
2.8 Sustainable Agriculture and Food Security
2.9 Land
2.10 Desertification
2.11 Biodiversity
2.12 Biotechnology
3 Cross-Sectoral Issues
3.1 Access to Resources
3.1.1 Aid, Private Investment, Subsidies and New Financial Mechanisms
3.1.2 Debt Cancellation
3.1.3 NGO Participation in Economic Development
3.1.4 Small Island Developing States
3.2 Trade
3.2.1 Fair Trade Versus Free Trade
3.2.2 Trade Embargoes
3.2.3 Tourism
3.3 Poverty Eradication
4 Enabling Sustainability
4.1 Sustainable Production and Consumption
4.2 Indicators of Sustainability
4.3 Corporate Accountability
4.4 Information Ecology
4.5 Local Sustainability
4.6 Sustainable Human Settlements
4.7 Social Services
4.8 Education
4.9 Health
4.10 Population
4.11 Culture of Peace
4.12 Human Rights
5 Major Groups and Partnerships
5.1 Dialogue
5.2 New and Additional Partners
5.3 Decision-making Framework for Participation
5.4 Indigenous Peoples
5.5 Women
5.6 Youth
5.7 Older Persons
5.8 Inclusion
5.9 Occupied Peoples
5.10 Media
6 Institutional and Legal Issues
6.1 CSD Agenda and Work Programme
6.1.1 Election and Term of Commission Chairs
6.2 High-Level Coordination of Conference Follow Up
6.3 Integrated Monitoring Frameworks
6.4 Peer-Review Assessment
6.5 Secretary General's High-Level Advisory Board
6.6 Committee on Natural Resources
6.7 United Nations Environment Programme
6.8 United Nations Development Programme
6.9 United Nations Centre for Human Settlements
6.10 World Trade Organization
6.11 Coordination of Governmental Positions
6.12 Earth Summit III
This document is a revised working draft in development by the CSD/NGO Steering
Committee. The document incorporates revisions to the 25 April version -
es2/1997/pc.2/csdngo/1/draft.3 - in sections on Small Island Developing States, Education
and Culture of Peace and continues to build on earlier draft recommendations that were
developed at the Intersessional Ad Hoc Working Group of the Commission on Sustainable
Development.
The document does not claim to speak for all non-governmental organizations, it
does, however, reflect a commitment by the CSD/NGO Steering Committee to set up an open
and transparent process of consultation among NGOs - and to use a variety of mechanisms
for consultation - including online distribution and distribution by fax and conventional
mail of drafts of versions of this document.

A Preface to NGO Recommendations for Actions and
Commitments
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We are a group of local, national, regional and global NGOs who have monitored and
supported the CSD since the first Earth Summit in Rio in 1992, and who are active in
advancing the goals of Agenda 21 and other Rio agreements.
The vision that drew us to Rio continues to guide our efforts and energize our actions:
the earth in all its integral and interdependent life-support systems must be sustained,
and its regenerative powers guaranteed for the present and all future generations. The
true basic needs and life activities of human communities must be fulfilled, in relation
to the carrying capacity of local and global ecosystems.
Despite the progress that has been made since the first Earth Summit, sustainable
development - that overarching framework encompassing ecological protection, social
development and economic equity - has not been achieved. Nor is any systematic means of
monitoring progress in place. Accountability, renewed efforts and increased funding are
urgently needed.
Action, not words should be the rallying cry at the Special Session of the
General Assembly / Earth Summit II.

Protect Ecosystems
Promote Sustainable Communities and Societies
Provide Full Support for Sustainability
Strengthen Participatory Institutions and Decision-Making
Preamble
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Three years before the end of the millennium, representatives of civil society have
come together to assess our current situation, to review progress made since the Earth
Summit agreements, and to put forward our recommendations to the governments of the world
on what actions must be taken if we are to overcome a long legacy of environmental
degradation, poverty, and inequalities and to provide a new legacy for ourselves and
future generations.
Many of us believe Humanity is awakening to the fact that we are a global community,
inextricably linked in the Web of Life, and that we will survive or perish together. This
document is a testament to that awakening, a collective effort to open our eyes to the
pain and the potential, to rise from mere rhetoric to reality, and to take the steps
necessary to create a just and sustainable world for all members of the planet. Such steps
include the process of learning to work together, to understand and draw upon the creative
power of our diversity, to sensitize ourselves to the disparities and the despair around
us, and to build common understanding and partnerships.
The increasing globalization of pollution and wastes, products and services,
information, people, and money forces us to understand the interconnections among issues
from poverty eradication to environmental protection to changing production and
consumption patterns. Because these issues are not simply isolated national issues but
global systemic issues they require systemic solutions and strategies.
Too often, as in the draft report from the co-chairs of the Ad Hoc Intersessional
Working Group, it is assumed that such international problems can be solved through
"trade liberalization ... accompanied by environmental and resource management
policies." This thinking often leads to strategies focusing on ecoefficiency,
voluntary corporate codes, economic growth and free trade, and more rhetoric than concrete
action in making sustainability, poverty eradication, and the internalization of costs and
elimination of destructive subsidies national priorities. Clearly, many governments are
more accountable to the private sector than to civil society. This situation must be
reversed if the goal and principles of sustainable development are to be at the center of
government policy. The evidence of the past five years has demonstrated a lack of
political will by nations in implementing the principles of sustainable development above
the obsession with promoting free trade and corporate rights.
We want to preserve this magnificent, fragile ecosystem for future generations. We want
to ensure that everyone on this planet enjoy the right to food and housing, to clean water
and education, to sustainable livelihoods within sustainable communities. None of us want
to see our children or children in other countries drown in poisonous wastes. None of us
want to be responsible for creating the toxic Earth of our nightmares.
No one individual or group has all the answers to the enormity of questions facing us
today. However, we each have a part to play in the solutions. In the long run, we face the
same reality: that we are children of the same Mother planet and common stewards of this
Earth. We each have a responsibility to change the rules of the game, a game with far too
many losers.
In the following pages, we present a range of recommendations from the NGO community.
As representatives of the governments of the world, you have the power to champion and
implement these strategies. We urge you to give the following document your full
consideration for presentation to the Special Session of the General Assembly/ Earth
Summit II. Let us carry forward the vision together.
1 Access to Earth Summit II and the General Assembly
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We call for: Ensuring that the arrangements for the UN General Assembly Special
Session are based on the newly revised Arrangements for Consultation with Non-Governmental
Organizations - Part VII of Resolution 1996/31 - and that these arrangements should apply
to strengthening NGO access to and participation in the General Assembly and its
committees.
Implementation: As part of the CSD process, Members States, in close
collaboration with the General Assembly President, needs to undertake to expeditiously
achieve agreement on the adoption of NGO arrangements for the Special Session based on the
above-referenced Resolution 1996/31, Part VII.
Rationale: The CSD's Member States agreed at their 1996 session, inter alia,
that the General Assembly should ensure "appropriate arrangements for the most
effective contribution to and active involvement of major groups, including
non-governmental organizations, in the special session of the Assembly in 1997"
(E/CN.17/1996/38).
The 51st Session of the General Assembly adopted Resolution 51/181, which provides,
inter alia, that the General Assembly "Recognizes the important contributions made by
major groups, including non-governmental organizations, at the United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development and in the implementation of its recommendations, and the
need for their effective participation in preparations for the special session, as well as
the need to ensure appropriate arrangements, taking into account the practice and
experience gained at the Conference, for the substantive contributions to and active
involvement in the preparatory meetings and the special session, and in that context
invites the President of the General Assembly, in consultation with Member States, to
propose to Member States appropriate modalities for the effective involvement of major
groups in the special session..." (A/RES/51/181).
As agreed by governments, it is imperative that NGOs be able to participate in the
manner called for in the UNGA resolution. NGOs have a great deal to contribute to the
discussions, not as negotiators, but as consultants on the substantive issues involved.
Therefore, the arrangements for NGOs in consultative status with ECOSOC, as agreed to in
Part VII of Resolution 1996/31, should form the basis for arrangements in the Special
Session.
Beyond the Special Session, those 1996/31 arrangements should also apply
to the General Assembly and its Main Committees. Moreover, we are keenly interested in
ensuring effective NGO arrangements throughout the UN system. But the only issue facing
Member States in this CSD preparatory process, consistent with the GA resolution, is that
of ensuring effective NGO participation in the Special Session. That is the task that we
ask to be accomplished as expeditiously as possible.

2 Sectoral Issues
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2.1 Climate Change
We call for: The endorsement of a legally binding commitment to reduction of CO2
emissions to 20% below 1990 levels by the year 2005, and substantial reductions in other
greenhouse gases, to be agreed at Kyoto, Japan in December 1997.
Implementation: The Special Session makes a declaration on CO2 emissions to go
to the Conference of Parties meeting in Kyoto.
Rationale: In spite of some limited progress most industrial countries will not
meet that target. Earth Summit II will offer the opportunity for a key political message
to be sent to the upcoming Kyoto meeting of the Parties to the Climate Change Convention
in December 1997. (See also sections on Energy and Transport).
2.2 Forests
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We call for: The continuation and enhancement of the intergovernmental policy
dialogue on forests under the CSD. This dialogue would include a high-level component and
should promote in a transparent, participatory manner an action-oriented approach to
solving critical forest-related problems involving all types of forests.
Implementation: This process should work towards the implementation of the
Forest Principles, forest-related sections of Agenda 21, such as Chapter 11, and Proposals
for Action developed under the IPF. Progress on the implementation of this work program
would be reported annually to the CSD. The intergovernmental policy dialogue would also
consider other arrangements and mechanisms, including legal arrangements, covering all
types of forests and report on these matters to the CSD, at a special "Post-Rio"
10-year review.
Rationale: The Intergovernmental Panel on Forests made significant progress and
reached consensus on a large number of Proposals for Action. However the Panel did not
reach a consensus on the need for any new legal instrument on forests. Thus, the primary
rationale for the continuation of the policy dialogue is to focus on implementation and
action with clearly defined targets and timetables. At the risk of repetitiveness, the
focus must be on implementation and action, now. This work should start immediately and
not be distracted by a costly and time consuming debate over the need for a forest
convention. At the same time, all options for exploring the efficacy of existing
instruments and institutions, in relation to sustainable forest management, should be
thoroughly pursued.
2.3 Chemicals
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We call for: the expeditious negotiation of a legally binding instrument on
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) that will focus on 'reducing and eliminating' those
dangerous chemicals, not just controlling them; come to an agreement on Prior Informed
Consent and a global harmonized system for the classification and labeling; and develop a
Framework Chemicals Convention without delaying the expeditious negotiation of a treaty on
POPs.
Implementation: UNEP should be entrusted with overseeing the establishment of an
Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) for POPs, as agreed at UNEP's Governing
Council 19, and the expeditious negotiation of that new, global POPs instrument, the
conclusion of a global PIC instrument, and the development of a framework approach or
convention for integrating chemicals-related actions and activities.
Rationale: We have approximately 100,000 chemicals now in commercial use and
their potential impacts on human health and ecological function represent largely unknown
risks. We have a number of agreements on chemicals moving to completion, such as the
control of the production and use of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)- with
negotiations set to begin in early 1998 and to conclude by 2000; the Prior Informed
Consent procedure for international trade in hazardous chemicals, including a harmonized
systems for classification and labeling of chemicals - with that new global instrument
scheduled to be adopted and opened for ratification in late 1997; and the future
elaboration of a framework approach or arrangement for integrating chemicals-related
initiatives. There are approximately 100,000 chemicals now in commercial use and their
potential impacts on human health and ecological function represent largely unknown risks.
Other chemicals, such as lead (Pb), are elements which often remain on the earth's surface
where its toxic effects expose generation after generation.
2.4 Oceans
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We call for: The setting up of a more effective forum or mechanism for
ocean-related dialogue and action, e.g., an Intergovernmental Panel on Oceans (IPO) or a
sub Commission of the CSD, meetings of States Parties to the Law of the Sea Convention,
and/or other appropriate mechanisms. Such an entity should contribute to the preparation
of a comprehensive scientific assessment of the state of the oceans and the necessary
policy recommendations, taking into account the related activities of UNEP and GESAMP -
the Joint Group of Experts on Scientific Aspects of Marine Pollution. We also request the
Special Session to instruct the FAO to analyze the efficiency of current fishing fleet
decommissioning schemes associated with excess of fishing capacity, on the basis of the
objectives of the UN Fish Stocks agreement, the FAO Code of Conduct on Responsible
Fisheries and related emerging strategies, with a view towards reducing capacity to
sustainable levels, especially in relation to large-scale, industrial class vessels.
Immediate action is also necessary to address problems of wasteful fishing practices,
fisheries and oil platforms, and unsustainable aquaculture.
Implementation: The ocean dialogue and action forum would have close ties with
or be subsidiary to the CSD, reporting annually to the CSD up to the year 2002, at which
time it would make full recommendations to the 10th Anniversary Review of Rio. Given that
the Law of the Sea Treaty is now in force, and agreement also offers possibilities for
forums within which ocean-related dialogue and action can be discussed, with recommended
actions forwarded to the UNGA as well as the CSD. The UN Division on Ocean Affairs and Law
of the Sea, the ACC Subcommittee on Coastal and Ocean Areas (SOCA) and/or a subgroup of
the CSD should be considered for purposes of serving as the Secretariat.
Rationale: There is no question that the present international machinery
regarding Oceans lacks coherence. After all, the oceans are a vital food source, a global
carbon sink and home to some of the most beautiful and diverse species on the planet. We
know that 70% of the world's marine fisheries are being fished at their maximum level of
productivity, are over-fished or are threatened, endangered or commercially extinct.
2.5 Freshwater
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We call for: a negotiated international agreement or arrangement on freshwater
by 2002. In the meantime, all nations must work to make freshwater quality, conservation
and supply a priority of local, national and international policy, implementing the
watershed approach.
Implementation: Agree to discuss freshwater in the CSD session of 1998 and give
UNEP the mandate and funding to provide the international community with examples of best
practice, drawing on relevant expertise such as UNEP's regional seas program.
Rationale: Today 20% of the world's population lacks access to safe water and
50% to safe sanitation with over 5 million people dying each year from the results of
waterborne diseases. The Comprehensive Assessment of the Freshwater Resources of the World
produced for the June meeting by the Stockholm Institute on Environment has raised
freshwater to the top of the international political agenda. The report predicts that if
current trends in water use continue around 2/3 of the world's population will suffer
water shortages in the next 25 years. In developed and developing countries the current
systems for water use are frequently not sustainable. Therefore, nations need to protect
water resources. The watershed approach includes: development of methodology,
establishment of policy, creation of basin teams, improving local capacity to protect
water resources, and sharing responsibility for sustainable watershed and airshed
protection and management through outreach, research, assessment, planning, implementation
and evaluation.
We also call for: Recognition that it is essential to manage the water cycle as
a whole. Development of resources, abstraction for use and treatment of waste water must
be an integrated process.
Rationale: Water management areas must match supply with demand. River basins,
or combinations of river basins, provide ideal boundaries. It is not sufficient just to
recognize the importance freshwater for water supply purposes, it is equally important to
understand the consequences of used water being put back into rivers. The challenge for
the future is to accommodate all stakeholder interests. Water management processes need to
take holistic approach probably across national boundaries.
We also call for: Governments to immediately enact laws to stop industrial use
of water where it puts communities at risk. Through legislation governments should also
force industry to use alternatives to freshwater in their production methods.
2.6 Energy
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We call for: Sustainable energy policies that reflect the true costs of fossil
fuels, including eliminating fossil fuel subsidies by 2005; substantially increased
programs for energy conservation, renewable energy, and energy efficiency; and a phasing
out of nuclear power. Governments to pledge not to develop untapped reserves of fossil
fuels such as coal, oil, and gas, nor pursue new exploration of these fuels.
Implementation: Governments to adopt legislation to remove subsidies for, and
increase taxes on, unsustainable forms of energy - such as fossil fuels, nuclear power,
and large-scale hydropower - and increase funding for energy conservation, including
passive solar design, energy efficiency; and renewable energy programmes - especially to
encourage solar, wind, fuel cells, and small-scale hydropower.
Rationale: Current energy practices in industrialized countries, which rely
heavily on fossil fuels, are wasteful and environmentally harmful. Fossil fuel combustion
contributes to global warming, acid rain and air pollution which threatens human health,
property and the environment. Nuclear energy is also threatening to human health and the
lack of waste disposal methods. Clean renewable power sources are readily available. Since
Rio there has been little movement toward fundamental changes in energy production and
consumption and no significant new investments in promoting renewable energy systems.
Fossil fuel prices do not take into account various other internal costs such as direct
and indirect economic subsidies and incentives for the exploration, generation,
transmission and distribution of fossil fuel-based energy, plus external costs such as
health and environmental costs. When these are calculated, the true costs of fossil fuel
are many times that of current costs of renewable energy.
2.7 Transport
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We call for: Transport to be adopted as a priority area in the five year work
programme for the CSD; increase allocation of road space for public transport and
non-motorized transport modes; measures which implement the polluter pays principle for
transport; support for car-free areas in cities; promotion of land use planning which
reduces the need to travel by car; support local and regional food systems wherever
practical to reduce the need for long-distance transport of foodstuffs.
Implementation: International Development Agencies and governments should:
actively promote public transport and non-motorized travel as the most sustainable forms
of travel and prioritize their access to the street network; amend financial instruments
to benefit people who choose to travel by more energy and cost efficient modes and at the
same time remove subsidies to automobile travel by charging the full social cost of
transport externalities; review existing land use planning policies to ensure that new
development and infrastructure projects reduce car dependency and provide safe access by a
choice of modes of transport; identify both direct and indirect impacts in undertaking
their assessment and economic appraisals of infrastructure projects, ensuring consistent
evaluation criteria between all modes.
Rationale: The sustainability of the Earth is increasingly threatened by the
increasing use of private motor vehicles. Currently transport accounts for 58% of global
oil consumed, and 25% of primary energy use, of which road traffic accounts for some 72%.
CO2 emissions from the transport sector constitute the fastest growing and most
threatening contributors to global warming as these emissions are projected to rise
between 40% and 100% by the year 2025 unless action is taken to prevent this. Agenda 21
already endorses investment in pedestrian facilities, bicycle infrastructure and mass
transit as effective pollution control measures. It further encourages the implementation
of land use planning which reduce car dependency and overall travel. Habitat II reinforces
these measures and specifically called for the polluter pays principle to be applied to
the transport sector thus making the real costs of motorized transport more transparent.
Translating these commitments into strategies for action should be a priority for the CSD.
Reducing transport demand and car dependency also meets a range of cross-sectoral
objectives such as these relating to human health and safety, urban and rural sustainable
settlements and the conservation of natural resources and habitats.
2.8 Sustainable Agriculture and Food Security
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We call for: Implementation of the provisions of Chapter 14 of Agenda 21 that
call for sustainable and ecological food, production and distribution systems to protect
the environment, contribute to the well-being of human and non-human inhabitants of the
earth, and ensure the human right to food, including access to land, for all women, men,
youth and children.
Implementation: Commit to capacity-building opportunities and structures to
support farmers, women and men, especially small- scale producers and peasants, to enable
them to employ agricultural methods that are ecologically sound, socially acceptable, and
sustainable.
Rationale: Long-term food and nutritional security depends upon the ability of
primary food producers to achieve sustainable food systems both now and in the future.
Locally controlled ecologically-based production and distribution systems are better
suited to protect the natural biodiversity, health and well-being of their communities.
The industrial model of agricultural production is contributing, dramatically, to
ecological disruption and the destruction of rural communities . Increasingly the
globalized food system is the root cause of the social and environmental crisis in
agriculture. This kind of energy-intensive and chemical-dependent agriculture degrades the
fertility of soils, intensifies the effects of droughts, pollutes water, causes
salinization and compaction, destroys genetic resources, wastes fossil fuel energy,
contaminates the food supply, and contributes to climate change. (Refer to NGO Working
Group on Sustainable Agriculture paper). As part of these efforts, the FAO/others needs to
promote and ensure that agreement is achieved in relation to implementation of the
Pollutant Transfer Registers, and the reduction of pesticide use by at least 50%.
2.9 Land
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We call for: priority to be given to land use for food production for domestic
consumption rather for export crops; conservation of ecosystems that sustain life; urgent
land reform in developing countries to provide land to the landless; the recognition of
indigenous peoples rights to land; and a participatory approach to land use and land
management.
Implementation: A moratorium on a further conversion of agricultural land or
land containing ecosystems significant to provide for the sustenance for food for people.
Within the context of Agenda 21, Chapter 4, the CSD should initiate an action oriented and
monitored process on the management of land and land based resources. International
development agencies and national governments should encourage studies on the impact of
trade and investment liberalization on land use and land ownership patterns.
Rationale: Agenda 21, Chapter 10, draws attention to the pressure on land as a
"finite resource". Expanding human activities, including urbanisation,
agriculture, transport, mining activities, recreation, military occupation, as well as
desertification, are intensifying these pressures on land, food security and biodiversity.
Land use practices are essentially driven by market forces rather than by the needs of
populations. These need to be regulated. Finally the process of globalisation has added
the danger of shifts in land ownership, especially in development countries, on top of the
risks of conversion of land use for the benefit of the overconsuming 20% of the world's
population.
2.10 Desertification
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We call for: The promotion of continued implementation and global ratification
-- particularly by developed/OECD countries -- of the Convention to Combat Desertification
in Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification, Particularly in Africa.
The promotion of NGO participation in these mechanisms, as well as in the operation of the
"Global Mechanism" now being negotiated under the Convention.
Implementation: The Convention to Combat Desertification (CCD) emerged as a
mandate from UNCED 1992. Several chapters of Agenda 21 are devoted to the problems
affecting drylands and related desertification issues. It should be a high priority issue
under discussion at the Rio+5 Special Session of the General Assembly. The CSD has devoted
much attention to the process surrounding the ratification and implementation of the
Convention. Most recently, the Report of the Ad Hoc Open- ended Inter-Sessional Working
Group of the Commission on Sustainable Development identified desertification and drought
as an issue for urgent action. The Commission should promote the implementation of the
Convention and the facilitation of NGO participation in this process. It is essential that
the Commission monitors the progress of the Convention in its first critical years of
implementation. Specific ODA resources should be earmarked for the Convention's
"Global Mechanism".
Rationale: Desertification is the degradation, through human and natural
factors, of the world's arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid lands to the point where they
can no longer sustain crops or other vegetation. Each year, desertification claims nearly
10 million acres of the world's arable drylands, in countries as diverse as Burkina Faso,
India, and the United States. Every year, 24 billion tons of top soil is lost due to
erosion, which costs the world $ 42 billion. An estimated amount of $ 10-22 billion per
year is required to combat desertification for the next 20 years. Desertification has a
devastating effect on human populations and the physical environment. It threatens the
livelihood of over one billion people, including 35 million who are forced to abandon
their homelands as farming becomes unsustainable and regional conflicts spread.
International migration results from environmental degradation and unsustainable
development practices. The process of desertification dramatically alters plant and animal
habitat, contributes to vegetation loss and soil erosion, and degrades fresh water
supplies. Some 35 million "Environmental refugees" fleeing the effects of
desertification will likely become a major problem of the next century.
2.11 Biodiversity
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We call for: All governments should ratify the Convention on Biological
Diversity (CBD) by the end of 1997; and take immediate action to prevent further
destruction of biodiversity and habitats, while providing for human needs in a sustainable
fashion.
Implementation: The Special Session urge all countries to ratify the CBD; and to
expand protected area networks, ensure adequate funding for their management, and
integrate them into local economic development, enact legislation regulating access to and
use of natural resources, build capacity to manage biological resources on a bioregional
or ecosystem basis.
Rationale: It has been estimated that 40% of the world's species could be
extinct within 25 years. Loss of biodiversity on this scale could have dramatic
consequences. Hundreds of millions of people in developing countries depend directly on
biological resources for their livelihoods. Loss and degradation of forests and wetlands
exacerbates poverty. Genetic diversity provides diversity of agricultural and food
products and increased ability to resist disease. Genetic diversity provides medical
cures. Loss of our genetic resources prejudice the world's ability to feed itself. Genetic
diversity plays a vital part in maintaining the health of global ecosystems: forests help
to regulate climate, wetlands buffer pollution and serve as breeding grounds for
commercially important fish species. It is also morally imperative to prevent extinction
of other living species through human action.
2.12 Biotechnology
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We call for: The CSD to strongly support the immediate adoption and
implementation of an ecologically sound Biosafety protocol within the Convention on
Biological Diversity.
Rationale: The dangers to health and environment posed by the
deliberate release of genetically modified organisms are increasing daily.

3 Cross-Sectoral Issues
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3.1 Access to Resources
3.1.1 Aid, Private Investment, Subsidies and New Financial Mechanisms
We call for: The Global Environment Facility (GEF) to be increased; donors to
meet the 0.7% of GNP target for aid by 2002,; and for all aid to be better targeted to the
objectives of the Rio agreements and post-Rio conferences; linkage of ODA and FDI to
ensure that environmental and social legislation and institutions are strengthened to
ensure that FDI is consistent with sustainable development; ensure that international
investment regimes do not undermine countries' ability to regulate investment on
environmental and social grounds or encourage relaxation of standards to attract
investment; encourage corporate environmental management systems that internalise Rio
agreements into business operations; negotiations to start on an international aviation
fuel charge, the revenue from which should be channelled into mechanisms such as the GEF
and UNDP's Capacity 21; reform of taxation to encourage ecologically and socially
responsible behaviour; elimination of environmentally damaging subsidies in a socially
equitable manner; a stronger focus on ecologically and socially responsible budget
disbursements; stricter scrutiny to prevent abuse of all funds and corrupt practices at
both national and international levels; establishment of a stronger global regulatory
framework for international capital flows, in particular on speculative financial
transactions, which can severely disrupt national economies and societies. States should
act on the commitment made at the UN Conference on Women and Habitat II to ensure that
corporations, including transnationals, comply with national codes, social security, and
international law, including international environmental law. International agreements
should be promoted that address effectively issues of double taxation, as well as
cross-border tax evasion, while improving the efficiency and fairness of tax collection.
We also call for: The establishment of an Intergovernmental and NGO Panel on
Financing (or a Sub-Commission of the CSD) to: identify those costs of the transition to
sustainable development that are best financed by external assistance and how best to
concentrate scarce development assistance funds; analyze and formulate proposals on
options for new financial mechanisms for sustainable development; review the implications
for sustainable development of private international investment, privatization, structural
adjustment and debt; debate and make recommendations on means of delivering finance, such
as micro credit and national environmental funds; The establishment of formal links
between the CSD and key International financial bodies, including the multilateral
development banks, the IMF, the OECD, the G7, the World Economic Forum and the banking
community.
Implementation: The Special Session should express strong support for an
increased GEF. The response of aid to the Rio conventions and post-Rio conferences should
be improved by all donors. The introduction of an aviation fuel charge should be examined
in the context of the expiry at the end of 1997 of the EU exemption of aviation fuel from
excise duties. The Intergovernmental Panel on Finance would be a subsidiary body of the
CSD.
Rationale: Developed countries have failed to meet their commitment under Agenda
21 to provide substantial new and additional resources. External funds are still urgently
needed on a large scale. While official development assistance has declined,
environmentally damaging subsidies are estimated at $500 billion per year worldwide.
Eliminating these subsidies and redirecting part of the savings into supporting
sustainable development in developing countries would be a 'win-win' option. Conversely,
positive incentives should be provided for environmentally and socially desirable
activities. Greater efforts are needed to ensure transparency and to eliminate corruption
in the use of all funds, whether external or domestic.
Eighty percent of international private investment flows to a handful of developing
countries, most of them not among the least developed. Scrutiny of the implications of
this investment for sustainable development is urgently needed: these implications are
frequently negative, or at best unknown. The Intergovernmental Panel on Finance would
involve a diverse range of experts in its work, including representatives of finance
ministries, the banking community, NGOs and the private sector. The Panel should build on
previous work, such as that by the Expert Group on Financial Issues of Agenda 21, and
develop formal proposals for new approaches to financing sustainable development at both
national and international levels. Formalized links between the CSD and key bodies in the
international financial system are needed to make international financial governance more
transparent, participatory and responsive to the objectives of Agenda 21.
3.1.2 Debt Cancellation
We call for: Major debt cancellation announcements at the Special Session, as it
is a critical centrepiece of the Rio formula, and promotion of initiatives for buying debt
and channeling it to effective social and economic capacity building. Explain to the
public the relationship of debt cancellation to stemming environmental degradation and
ending the cycle of poverty.
3.1.3 NGO Participation in Economic Development
We call for: The development of mechanisms and support that enables NGOs and
community organisations to have the opportunity to participate in economic development
work that is environmentally friendly including the establishment of micro and regular
business access to capital, credit, capacity-building and infrastructure, as called for by
the Microcredit Summit.
3.1.4 Small Island Developing States
We call for: The financing and implementation of the Programme of Action of the
1994 Global Conference on Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States
(SIDS).
Implementation: SIDS allows us a unique opportunity to implement new development
models and technologies - not to be used as mere laboratories but rather as master
templates or blueprints. Programs can be implemented, monitored, analyzed and refined in
much shorter time with less variables. The results could be used to develop specific and
appropriate models that will advance sustainable development in real terms. The
opportunity to create millions of soldiers to fight on the side of sustainable development
is no small victory. Act now and save the world.
3.2 Trade
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We call for: Support for a clear understanding that environmental, food and
human rights conventions and other multilateral environmental (MEAs) and human rights
agreements, norms and standards that fall outside the direct mandate and purview of the
World Trade Organization (WTO) shall not be bound by WTO-related requirements; Trade and
Environment Ministers to meet together before the next meeting of the WTO; an
Intergovernmental Panel on Trade (or a sub-Commission of the CSD) to be set up which
would: Explore, and make recommendations on, potential cross-sectoral mechanisms to
reconcile trade and sustainable economic, environmental, and social development
objectives; Explore and make recommendations in regards to the implications of free trade
vs. fair trade on the impact on food security, rural communities, farmers, and peasants in
developing countries, developed countries, and countries in transition, and on the
migration of people in vulnerable rural communities to urban ghettoes; As part of a
transition to a long-term environmentally sustainable agriculture, we advocate the
development of policy instruments to secure commodity prices which reflect the true
environmental and social cost of their production, and recommend the withdrawal of
escalating tariffs on primary commodities exported from developing countries; Develop
policy instruments to ensure that world trade rules do not undermine, but reinforce, food
security, especially in net food importing food deficit countries; Develop recommendations
on meeting the needs of developing countries for technical and financial assistance in the
design, utilization and response to, trade measures and technical regulations; Research,
and make proposals on, the criteria under which trade measures may be taken, including
development of the concept of 'green tariffication', whereby if tariffs are deployed to
protect industries meeting higher environmental standards, the revenue generated could be
repatriated to developing countries - possibly in the form of an environment fund
administered by a multilateral body for investment in cleaner technologies.
We also call for: Governments to pledge to create an effective new
process/mechanism/strategy to strengthen links between the World Bank, IMF, WTO and
post-Rio accountability which includes examination of sovereignty and foreign investment
issues; To commit to expand efforts to eliminate negative effects on developing countries
by reconciling WTO rule-making and global trade practices with the post-Rio agenda to
include all the UN Conference agendas; To explore negotiation of a Food Security
Convention that would encourage sustainable agriculture as part of a broader international
agenda to advance food security; To re-commit to implement the Habitat II agenda which
calls for governments to create "regulatory and legal frameworks ... to promote
socially and environmentally responsible corporate investment and reinvestment in and
partnership with local communities"; To pledge to work for international codes of
conduct for corporations and to govern weapons trade and export subsidies; To commit to
ensure that the code aims to enforce compliance with ILO agreements and promote an
international code of conduct to protect the human rights of workers in developing
countries, countries in transition and developed countries, and prevent their gender-based
and economic exploitation by transnational corporations.
Developing countries should be assured of continued access to the expertise of UNCTAD
in trade and investment issues. UNCTAD's role for the past 20 years in supporting the
least developed countries on trade negotiations issues should not be relegated to the
World Trade Organization in such a short period of time.
Implementation: The Special Session should declare that measures taken to
implement global and other multilateral environmental agreements cannot be challenged in
the WTO, and it should agree to the setting up of a new subsidiary body of the CSD to
address these issues.
Rationale: Since the first Earth Summit, we have had the completion of the
Uruguay Round of GATT and the setting up of the World Trade Organization. Serious concerns
have been raised by NGOs and governments that deregulated global trade is creating
increasing inequality, environmental degradation and social dislocation.
3.2.1 Fair Trade Versus Free Trade
We call for: Explore and make recommendations in regards to the implications of
free trade vs. fair trade on the impact on rural communities and farmers in developing and
developed countries, and countries in transition, and on the migration of people in
vulnerable rural communities to urban ghettoes;
Develop policy instruments to secure commodity prices which reflect the true
environmental and social cost of their production, and recommend the withdrawal of
escalating tariffs on primary commodities exported from developing countries; Develop
recommendations on meeting the needs of developing countries for technical and financial
assistance in the design, utilization and response to, trade measures and technical
regulations;
3.2.2 Trade Embargoes
We call for: the creation of mechanisms to offset the effect of trade embargoes
not sanctioned by the United Nations on the sustainable economic and environmental
development of affected countries.
3.2.3 Tourism
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We call for: The CSD to include tourism in its next 5 year programme of work;
strengthen and adequately fund the sustainable tourism office within the UNEP industry
office that would gather a set of best practices and create a database for all groups to
access.
Implementation: The Special Session to include tourism within its next work
programme and that UNEP should be entrusted with adequate new and additional funds
sufficient for this task. Governments to establish sustainable tourism policies and
regulations, ensuring: responsibly zoned development; conservation and protection of
natural and cultural heritage and resource;
Rationale: Tourism is the largest industry in the world, surpassing auto, steel,
petroleum and weaponry. By the year 2010, it is expected there will be 935 million
international travelers annually. The tourism industry can positively or negatively impact
the global environment, and it is the responsibility of the CSD and UNEP to influence the
course of the tourism industry toward sustainability.
3.3 Poverty Eradication
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We call for: A renewed commitment to the eradication of poverty, and to
fostering the prosperity of all people, and for governments to complete their poverty
eradication strategies by the year 2001 as called for at the World Summit for Social
Development in Copenhagen, including the setting of time bound targets for the
implementation of these commitments by national governments. Countries should publish
their progress on poverty eradication annually as part of their update on the development
of sustainability to the CSD. These should be integrated with their sustainable
development strategies. Progress reports based on poverty indicators should be published
annually, taking into account both sustainable development and poverty eradication
strategies.
Implementation: Governments should involve the people living in poverty in the
making of the decisions which affect them, including the development of gender
disaggregated indicators. Definitions of both absolute and overall poverty should reflect
stakeholders access to certain basic services such as health, food security, education,
water and sanitation. The relationship between poverty and war, plus the fact that a huge
proportion of development aid is being replaced by or being directed to humanitarian aid,
urgently needs to be addressed.
Rationale: Agenda 21 recognizes the significant impact that poverty
and overconsumption have on environmental degradation and the impact that environmental
degradation has on the achievement of prosperity and suggests that governments fulfill
commitments made at the World Summit for Social Development at the earliest possible time.

4 Enabling Sustainability
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4.1 Sustainable Production and Consumption
We call for: governments to place sustainable production and consumption at the heart
of economic policy. Sustainable production and consumption needs to move beyond its
currently marginalized status as a secondary "environmental" consideration and
become the framework for national and international economic policy decisions. Social and
economic development should be measured by the good returned to all of society, not the
size of profits to a cluster of influential companies. Responsibility for achieving
sustainable production and consumption must extend beyond that of environment ministers to
become the mandate for all ministers, including trade and finance, as well as the
responsibility of the heads of state.
Such a major shift in national policy should result in governmental actions which:
*seek to overcome the gap between rich and poor and improve the quality of life of all
current and future generations, nationally and internationally,
*move towards equitable access to resources, while maintaining the carrying capacity of
the environment and accounting for ecological limits, locally and globally;
*convince companies to identify and report on production costs externalized to and
subsidized by communities and the environment;
*encourage recognition and respect for indigenous cultures already practicing
sustainable lifestyles and livelihoods and helps protect rather than jeopardize their
communities and ancestral lands;
*institute clean production as a required standard, ensuring that products and
production processes will not harm human health or the environment;
*move beyond the current emphasis on efficiency to sufficiency, promoting sustainable
lifestyles and livelihoods for everyone;
*encourage and promote corporate responsibility for sustainable production and
marketing practices, and at the same time establish mechanisms for holding corporations
accountable for unsustainable practices;
*provide a sustainable and just response to the negative social and environmental
impacts of economic globalization, particularly with the trend towards increasing
corporate rights above human, labor and community rights.
Implementation: The CSD should initiate a process of consultations with governments and
major groups leading to the definition of time-bound, measurable global production and
consumption targets by sector, to be followed by regular monitoring, evaluating and
reporting on international progress in reaching those targets.
Governments should also initiate national public dialogues on the goals and strategies
for achieving sustainable production and consumption, leading to the development and
adoption of national sustainable production and consumption plans establishing time-bound,
measurable targets for energy, transportation, food, chemicals, weapons and other areas,
as well as government (e.g., environmentally sound purchasing).
However, dialogue and goals are not enough; action programs are necessary; examples
include instituting or supporting:
*the right and means to knowledge about products and production processes, especially
about social and ecological impacts;
*Extended Producer Responsibility;
*ecological tax reform and elimination of destructive subsidies (including those for
commercial advertising);
*youth initiatives promoting sustainable lifestyles;
*identifying and developing model programs to address industrial "hot spots"
in communities suffering the consequences of unsustainable practices and policies;
*microcredit initiatives to promote sustainable livelihoods;
*inclusion of information about externalized costs on product labels.
Rationale: Agenda 21 states that "...the major cause of the continued
deterioration of the global environment is unsustainable patterns of consumption and
production, particularly in industrialized countries." While efforts emerging from
the 1994 Oslo Roundtable, particularly those advancing ecoefficiency, represent positive
steps towards changing these patterns, we have yet to see a significant reduction in the
large share of resources consumed by industrial countries or in the shameful gap between
the overconsumers in those countries and the underconsuming poor throughout the world.
Much greater political will, commitment and accountability is required by governments
and industry. Without major intergovernmental action to end economic and fiscal policies
which reward unsustainable practices by producers and consumers, individual companies
cannot and will not internalize the costs they have traditionally externalized to the
environment and society, nor will the advertising industry be weaned away from its
celebration of the joys of overconsumption, nor will the underconsumers of the world be
welcomed from the margins of consumer society into the security and dignity of living in a
sustainable society.
4.2 Indicators of Sustainability
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We call for: Recognition of the need to use indicators appropriately as a tool
for community decision making. Data must be objective as possible, and all 'interests'
must be involved (everyone who is impacted). As governments we commit to promote grass
roots women's participation, particularly those involved in the Habitat process, and
gender training for local Agenda 21 groups.
Implementation: The involvement of the stakeholder in the choice of indicators
at the local, national and international level is fundamentally important, and top down,
non-representative processes should not be tolerated. The CSD should, with governments and
others, ensure many processes continue in the next five years of work of the CSD.
Rationale: The indicators that are measured should evoke happiness when they are
improving and unhappiness when they are getting worse. If the change doesn't matter to the
community, then you are not monitoring the right thing. If the process of developing the
shared knowledge, shared understanding and shared vision for the future of your community
isn't enjoyable, then you should figure out a different way to do it. In assessing
progress toward the goals in Chapter 40 of Agenda 21, it will be much easier to measure
activity than to evaluate results. There have been many important and well-conducted
international, national and local initiatives dedicated to producing better and more
relevant data. No one process represents any major groups or communities nor speaks for
them. In developing information and indicators there is no one right way for a community
to proceed. There are a variety of models from which one might choose, and there are more
models all the time. Communities all over the world in vastly different economic,
political, social and environmental circumstances, are experimenting with ways and means
to develop information and indicators for neighborhoods, communities or nations. Through
the process they are also building consensus on what actually matters to the future of the
groups involved.
4.3 Corporate Accountability
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We call for: The Special Session to effectively address the issue of corporate
accountability, moving beyond simply the discussion of corporate responsibility. We
recommend the following steps to accomplish this task:
* Acknowledge the need for greater corporate accountability to society;
* Establish mechanisms to monitor and assess corporate practices (e.g., to examine
claims to best and worst practices);
* Strengthen public access to information (e.g., right-to-know legislation; information
on externalized social and environmental costs);
* Reform current economic incentives (e.g., eliminate unsustainable subsidies and tax
breaks) and improve liability instruments to discourage corporate wrongdoing;
* Create mechanisms which empower local communities rather than large corporations
(e.g., reforming international trade agreements which undermine rather than enhance the
sustainability of local production and consumption systems; encouraging "good
neighbor practices" which require corporations to establish meaningful dialogues and
negotiations with the communities in which they locate);
* Make clean production a required standard (e.g., adopt and implement the
Precautionary Principle as part of industrial policy; adopt and implement the principle of
Extended Producer Responsibility); and
* Reduce political influence of corporations on governments (e.g., implement
appropriate reforms to end financial contributions to political campaigns and lobbying of
public representatives).
Implementation: The CSD should set up a Sub-Commission on Corporate
Accountability for governments to examine and define their role and responsibilities to
ensure corporate accountability to society. Such responsibilities to be examined should
include but not be limited to the above recommendations. This Sub-Commission should
provide mechanisms for consultation with and active participation by NGOs and community
organizations, allowing for valuable inputs from populations and communities directly
affected by various corporate policies and practices.
Rationale: Corporate accountability is an intrinsic but neglected element of
Agenda 21. The Habitat II agenda calls for governments to create "regulatory and
legal frameworks" to promote socially and environmentally responsible corporate
investment and reinvestment in and partnership with local communities." With economic
globalization, privatization, and the replacement of foreign assistance with an emphasis
on private investment, there is a growing need for governments to ensure that
corporations, especially TNCs, are accountable to society and the communities which they
impact.
4.4 Information Ecology
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We call for: A major commitment to analyze and explore the opportunities and
implications of the rapidly evolving "information and communication ecosystem"
and to identify critical information ecology issues relating to sustainability. We call
for the design and establishment of, and support for participatory enabling environments -
from community and interlocal networks to national and global frameworks - within which
information and communications technologies, systems and processes - including traditional
and non-electronic forms - can facilitate a transition to more open, equitable and
sustainable communities and society.
Implementation: The Commission on Sustainable Development - CSD - should convene
an Ad Hoc, Open-Ended Working Group on Information Ecology - with participation of
non-governmental organizations as well as of member states and from within United Nations
agencies, programmes and centres. The mandate of the Working Group should include the
following:
* to conduct a systematic review of the opportunities and implications for
sustainability and equity of an ecologically sound approach to information flow;
* to identify and address critical sustainability issues from a whole systems, full
life-cycle costs, perspective regarding the transition from a predominantly material to an
increasingly digital economy - including resource and capital cost implications.
* to examine the development of effective mechanisms to support access to and transfer
of ecologically and socially sound technologies;
* to identify and address actual and prospective, direct and indirect economic,
cultural, social and environmental impacts of the introduction of information technology;
* to consider how information and communication technology can be used to strengthen
effective community-based, participatory planning, decision-making and implementation
processes relating to sustainability and equitable development, focussing on the use of
information exchange mechanisms that are accessible at a grassroots level;
* to examine the destabilizing potentials of modern information, communication and
automation technologies, and to develop provisions to prevent the undermining of
traditional and sustainable cultures and practices, or the jeopardizing of human,
economic, social cultural and political rights;
* to undertake an examination of the evolving information ecosystem in terms of
equitable access to information in the North and the South, addressing intellectual
property rights, trends towards concentration of ownership and control in information and
communication technology and electronic media, access to information and communication
infrastructure, and democratic, participatory processes, rights and freedoms;
* to review, in the light of the rapidly increasing proportion of capital formation
that is in the realm of intellectual property, and the need for development strategies
that enable access to information and communication infrastructure as a critical means of
enabling access to resources;
* to set in process the design of a comprehensive sustainability information and
communication environment. This should be designed to facilitate partnership-based
integrative coordination of monitoring and implementation of the agreements of the
"Rio cluster" series of global conferences;
Rationale: The evolution of information and communication technology - the
progressive emergence of an "information age" - has been dramatic in the five
years since the first Earth Summit. The integrative power of information technology is
increasingly clear, as is its progressively growing capacity to model and map the
properties of whole systems, however, the pursuit of a specific trend in technology can
become unsustainable. Meanwhile, the increasing scale and role of information and
communication technology in the global economy and the increasing impact of automation,
the rapid growth in both access and inequities in access confirm that the implications of
information technology extend far beyond the role envisioned in Chapter 40 of Agenda 21 as
a support system for decision-makers and require comprehensive re-assessment by the CSD.
4.5 Local Sustainability
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We call for: A recognition of the progress made by over 2,000 local authorities
worldwide, in concert with their local communities, in developing Local Agenda 21s and to
give further impetus to the initiative by encouraging national governments to support
national associations of local governments NGOs and other major groups to establish
national Local Agenda 21 campaigns.
Implementation: The CSD should work with ICLEI and the international
associations of local government to prepare a review of possible measures by national
governments to provide a supportive policy and fiscal framework for successful
implementation of Local Agenda 21s.
Rationale: One of the most successful and meaningful outcomes since Rio has been
action at the local level to prepare local plans for sustainable development, notably
through the Local Agenda 21 initiative (Chapter 28 of Agenda 21 encourages local
authorities to prepare local action plans - Local Agenda 21 - in consensus with their
local communities). Progress has been most widespread in countries which have national
Local Agenda 21 campaigns organized and supported by national associations of local
government.
4.6 Sustainable Human Settlements
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We call for: The Commission on Sustainable Development to support the
implementation of the agreements reached at the Second United Nations Conference on Human
Settlements (Habitat II) for the development of policies and programmes for sustainable
human settlements in both urban and rural areas.
Implementation: These policies and programmes should be carried out by
Governments working in partnership with non-governmental organizations, local authorities,
the private sector and other partners and major groups. Such policies should be based on a
regional and cross-sectoral approach which treats villages and cities as two ends of a
human settlements continuum in a common ecosystem.
By the year 2005 the majority of the world's population will live in urban areas which
are also the largest consumers of national resources. While urban settlements hold a
promise for sustainable human development by their ability to support large numbers of
people, most cities - as well as their surrounding rural areas -are witnessing harmful and
often uncontrolled patterns of growth creating soil, water and air pollution, waste and
destruction of natural resources. Therefore sustainable human settlements require
programmes to ensure the planning and management of production and consumption patterns,
mobilization of local human resources and the establishment of the transport, information
and communications infrastructure, and waste disposal systems needed to sustain their
ecosystems.
Rationale: Appropriate social policies are required and should be implemented
through the provision of social services for individual and community needs, taking into
account economic, social and cultural as well as civil and political human rights and
fundamental freedoms.
4.7 Social Services
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We call for: More adequate provision for the role of social service
organizations, a new provision is needed which would enable such organizations - both
governmental and non-governmental - to participate directly in the development and
monitoring of the implementation of an enabling social framework for sustainability and
equitable development.
Implementation: There should be a clarification of the different nature and use
of physical services and social services. The confusion on this issue is particularly
evident in the current provisions concerning the eradication of poverty.
Provision should be made for social impact assessments in addition to the mostly health
issues that tend to be addressed in environmental impact assessments.
Another limitation in the existing texts is that they only refer to urban areas and
sustainable human cities.
Social services are equally required in rural areas and it is that the phrase
"sustainable human settlements" or sustainable communities" should be used
rather that "sustainable cities". Another issue is related to capacity building:
we feel that social services are needed and should be developed as a tool for increasing
the capacity building of individuals as well as communities.
Finally in developing information tools to measure progress emphasis should be placed
on the use of social indicators and the role of non-governmental organizations in the
development of such indicators.
Rationale: More adequate provisions for integrating the conclusions of the World
Summit for Social Development into the work of the Commission on Sustainable Development.
A holistic approach to the need for, and provision of, social services needs to be
reflected in the documents.
There is also a need to distinguish between basic services - eg water, sanitation,
road, and transportation, etc, and "social services" - eg welfare, social
security, community organization, community services. The existing provisions in the text
focus on categorical social areas such as health, mental health, family, education,
housing, children, the aging, etc. and do not cover the role of social service
organizations and the social services they provide to individuals and communities through
integrated programs and projects which are developed by governments as well as private
institutions at every level.
4.8 Education
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We call for:
Rationale: Chapter 36 is in many ways the most crucial chapter of Agenda 21.
Education, awareness and training are referred to throughout Agenda 21 and also appear in
the recommendations of the five follow-up Global United Nations conferences, a reminder
that their successful implementation depends on the ability of people to carry them out.
Without public understanding and support, governments are hindered in their attempts to
introduce and implement enlightened policies. Sustainable livelihoods require both people
capable of engaging in sustainable production and knowledgeable consumers; the ability of
nations to attract Overseas Development Aid or more importantly, Direct Foreign Investment
is greatly affected by the education levels of the workforce. Alternative models of
sustainable living should be recognised, such as those represented in the traditional
wisdom of indigenous peoples.
The pursuit of sustainable development is unthinkable without active involvement of the
Education Community, a group including teachers, lecturers, curriculum developers,
administrators, adult and community educators, youth leaders, industrial trainers,
countryside rangers and interpretative staff, environmental health and planning officers,
education officers with NGOs, media people and representatives of learners in all
contexts.
The learning which is thus facilitated covers many different aspects of human
environmental relationships but subscribes to a unifying concept and to shared objectives.
4.9 Health
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We call for: Insuring human health globally, for current and future generations,
governments need to address the following environmental issues: treatment and prevention
of: global warming; hazardous waste, including nuclear, chemical and biological materials;
contamination of fresh water supplies; ocean pollution; contamination of air quality;
deforestation; and desertification.
Rationale: There is clear evidence of rising rates, globally, of cancers,
tuberculosis, lung diseases, lead poisoning, all of which are associated with various
forms of environmental degradation. The most important consequence of environmental
sustainability is the health and productive capacity of human beings. Healthy, productive
people sustain healthy societies and economies.
4.10 Population
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We call for: insuring universal access to quality primary health care, including
the full range of reproductive health care and family planning services as well as to
basic education, which includes educational strategies for responsible parenthood and
sexual education.
Rationale: The current decline in population growth rates must continue in order
to reach the goal of improvement of quality of life for present and future generations.
4.11 Culture of Peace
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We call for: Governments to move from a culture of violence and war to a culture
of peace by structuring their economies so that they are not dependent on the military.
The UN should encourage transparency in arms transfers by expanding its register and
should facilitate in non-violent prevention and resolution of conflicts.
Implementation: The Special Session should acknowledge the need to reduce
military production, spending and arms trafficking in order to provide funds for
development. Reduce military expenditures significantly, redirecting a portion of those
funds to sustainable development; Shift research and development from defense-based
industries to equitable development and socially responsible production to rectify
environmental degradation and human rights violations; Respect the rule of law by acting
upon the recent decision of the International Court of Justice on the use and threat of
use of nuclear weapons; Embark immediately and conclude by the year 2000 negotiations on a
nuclear weapons abolition convention that requires the phased elimination of all nuclear
weapons within a timebound framework with provisions for effective verification and
enforcement; Clean up and dispose of all toxic military waste in an environmentally sound
manner; Implement an immediate ban on the production, use, stockpiling and transfer of
antipersonnel landmines; Allocate funds and technology for removal of the more than 110
million mines already planted in 68 countries; Promote an international voluntary military
force under Chapter 7 of the United Nations Charter to be used when absolutely necessary
and promote environmentally friendly non-violent resolution to conflict whenever possible;
Make non-violent conflict prevention and resolution training and human rights education a
part of all formal and informal curricula in all sectors of society as mandated in the
Plan of Action of the UN Decade for Human Rights Education; End obligatory military
service; Promote community planning to prevent conflicts; Develop a new science
"Public Peace" based on the model of "Public Health." This would
involve keeping track throughout the world of where manmade violence was breaking out.
Analysis of the data would show how it might be controlled. Early intervention would
alleviate the need for military solutions and the resulting environmental degradation;
Report responsibly to the UN Register of Conventional Weapons and adopt a Code of Conduct
for Arms Transfers in order to restrain weapons proliferation. Require compensation to be
paid by the military for past environmental degradation and human rights violations
including harm to human health. Enter into a moratorium to cease all military activities
that could cause environmental degradation (General Assembly Resolution - UN Charter of
Nature) and human rights violations; Involve young people in the peace process and
encourage volunteer youth task forces to assist in the processes of preventive citizen
diplomacy, peace enforcement and peace-building.
Rationale: In keeping with the UN Agenda for Development, we believe that peace
and development are indivisible and development cannot proceed easily in societies where
military concerns are at or near the center of life. Societies whose economic effort in
substantial part is devoted to military production inevitably diminish the prospect of
their people for development.
4.12 Human Rights
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We call for:
The CSD's continued consideration and recognition of the relationship and linkages
between serious environmental degradation and human rights violations;
Governments to recognize and act on the recognition that all human rights are
universal, indivisible, interdependent, and interrelated and that human rights, peace and
the right to development are essential components for sustainable development, as
reiterated in the Rio, Vienna, Beijing, Cairo, Istanbul and Rome Agendas;
The private sector be held accountable as a major actor in both the realization and
violations of human rights within the context of sustainable human development;
Women's human rights to be realized such that women can fully affect their role in
environmental management and development.
Implementation: The CSD should work with the Secretary General to assure proper
implementation of the UN Commission on Human Right's decision which calls for the CSD to
consider human rights and environment issues and to prepare a report based on the
deliberations of these bodies.
States should ratify all existing international human rights conventions and covenants
that have not been ratified and implement provisions of conventions and covenants that
have been ratified, to include enacting and enforcing domestic legislation, administrative
measure and judicial remedies so that all basic human rights can be effectively enjoyed by
all women, men, youth and children, including marginalized groups of society.
States, UN Agencies, World Bank, IMF and the WTO should ensure that all corporations,
including transnational corporations, be required to comply with national laws and codes
protecting human and environmental rights and applicable international instruments and
conventions.
States implement their commitment to the creation of national committees and centers
for human rights education, in accordance with GA Resolution 49/184 such that human rights
education can be effective and participatory means for ensuring sustainable development.
Rationale: A human rights framework is a prerequisite to an
enabling approach to sustainable development. All human rights and fundamental freedoms
are essential for sustainable human and social development. The 1994 Final Report of the
Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and The Environment for the Sub-Commission on the
Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities concluded that there was
widespread legal recognition of the linkage between human rights and the environment.
Issues such as the eradication of poverty and hunger, ensuring adequate shelter for all,
ensuring access to health care, education, freely chosen work or social security all
address basic human rights recognized in international law. The international community
has too often affirmed these human rights issues merely as goals or objectives without
taking any action to regulate the new economic structures of globalization and
liberalization which are leading to increased homelessness, poverty and environmental
degradation. These issues should be addressed in the CSD+5 process as human rights issues,
not merely as "objectives" or "goals". The exercise of and
strengthening of respect for human rights can take place only when those in authority, as
well as all stakeholders affected, are aware of those rights. Human rights education
enhances the process of democratizing access to decision-making and political structures
which is one of the key components of sustainable development.

5 Major Groups and Partnerships
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5.1 Dialogue
We call for: Continuing the formal Dialogue Sessions between major groups and
Governments through the next five year programme of the CSD and convene Major Group
Dialogue Sessions at the CSD Intersessional Meetings beginning in 1998. The formal
Dialogue Sessions would, inter alia, assist Major Groups to focus on the issues being
discussed that year.
5.2 New and Additional Partners
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We call for: Extending the concept of major groups to a partnership model as
developed in the Habitat Agenda and grant partner / major group status to
parliamentarians, older persons, and the education community.
5.3 Decision-making Framework for Participation
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We call for: Decision making structures to be changed to enable a transition to
sustainable production and consumption. The structures need to assure the following:
access to information and participation in decision making of consumers and citizens in
health and environmental impacts of products and production processes; the right to know
and to participate in decision making by local communities whose livelihoods are affected
by global trade and investment patterns; effective mechanisms to ensure that abuse of
corporate power is countered; democratization of decision making within corporations
The new projected stakeholder models of governance or major group participation must
take into account the disparities in economic and political power among different
constituencies.
Rationale: While a lot is at stake with interlinking the debates on changing
production and consumption patterns, on trade and sustainable development, and on finance,
the common thread in all these debates is the challenge to develop new models of
governance. Sustainable development will not be achieved without institutional change.
Decision-makers are only judged upon the consequences of their policies for a limited
group of people. The effects of globalization, of which we only see now the beginning,
will further increase the distance between decision makers in corporations and finance
institutions on the one hand, and even governments and ordinary citizens whose lives are
affected by these decisions on the other.
5.4 Indigenous Peoples
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We call for: The application of the principles contained in the UN Draft
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. This declaration should be adopted in its
present form. The recognition of the Indigenous Peoples' human rights, territorial rights,
cultural rights, their knowledge systems, their sustainable land use systems and their
rights to self-determination is a necessary pre-condition to their playing a meaningful
role in global sustainability. This includes the recognition of the right of Indigenous
Peoples to identify themselves and be recognized as Indigenous Peoples. The CSD should
examine how these rights are being undermined by international finance and financial
institutions and trade liberalization within the WTO framework. The CSD should monitor the
Human Genome Diversity Project.
Implementation: The CSD to more effectively review Indigenous Peoples'
contributions to global sustainability. The CSD should develop comprehensive impact
reports for each of its sessions in order to review the consequences of national
governments' actions in relations to Indigenous Peoples. Earth Summit II should reinforce
the call for the involvement of Indigenous Peoples at the highest levels within the UN
structure, including the creation of a permanent forum for Indigenous Peoples.
We also call for: Indigenous Peoples rights to their ancestral lands to be
ensured above any consideration for national, private or other economic activities such as
mining and logging.
Rationale: Forced evictions and displacement of Indigenous people creates a high
risk of impoverishment both economically and culturally including; land loss,
marginalisation, food insecurity, morbidity, unemployment and continuation of language.
The preservation of Indigenous Peoples land base is essential to the existence and
perpetuation of tribal society and culture.
5.5 Women
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We call for: A pledge to enhance all governance structures, global and national,
through the next century by adhering to the fundamental principles of equal representation
and accountability; a pledge to achieve gender balance in governance, expanding, enhancing
and improving affirmative action programs or other incentives that will encourage and
support the leadership and involvement of women in political decision-making; a pledge to
apply a gender perspective in all aspects of the implementation of Agenda 21; a commitment
to promote grass roots women's participation, particularly those involved in the Habitat
process, and gender training for local Agenda 21 groups.
We call for: The removal of legislative, policy, administrative, and customary
barriers to women's equal rights to natural resources, including access to and control
over land and other forms of property, credit, inheritance, information and appropriate
new technology.
Implementation: Recognition of the pervasive and systemic violation of women's
human rights, that women are significant agents for local and global change, and that
gender equality is essential to achieving sustainable and equitable development.
5.6 Youth
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We call for: Governments to implement Earth Summit commitments by ensuring the
involvement of youth in all levels of decision-making; recognition of youth NGO
initiatives towards social justice, economic equity, micro-enterprise development and
ecosustainability; establishment of mechanisms and increased funding for North-South
grassroots youth partnership; governments to ensure that youth have increased access to
information and documentation; youth to be allowed to initiate and develop their own ways
of working towards sustainable development.
Implementation objective: Increased support on all levels for awareness,
skill-sharing and empowerment of youth as present and future leaders and agents of change.
Implementation activities: The Special Session must support and be open to new
and innovative ways of actively involving youth NGOs in the Sustainable Development
process and debate. Therefore we strongly urge the establishment of a system to ensure
regular, democratic and balanced representation of young people at the CSD. Each National
Delegation should include an NGO Youth Representative to facilitate the exchange of
information to and from youth. The host country should ensure the widest possible
representation of youth NGOs, in particular southern youth NGOs, in the process. If
continued youth participation in the implementation of Agenda 21 is to be assured, firm
governmental financial commitments must be made and adhered to. Young people should be
partners in the development of educational curricula around all aspects of sustainable
development. Young people should be encouraged to promote Agenda 21 through peer
education. Further youth participation in the Agenda 21 process can be achieved through
open dialogue sessions between youth and government at all levels. At a Local Agenda 21
level, youth should be enabled to take an active role in the auditing processes.
Rationale: Too few governments have taken strong steps to work with youth in
recent years and achieving good intergenerational partnership. More remains to be done,
and governments must find financial mechanisms to support youth involvement and
empowerment in all regions.
5.7 Older Persons
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We call for: Recognition of the critical importance of the growing global aging
population in relation to sustainability and include older persons as a major group.
Implementation - Goals: Identify and utilize the skills of the older person at
the local, national, and international level; Promote older person involvement in the
activities of civil society; Ensure that each country supports, practices and enforces the
United Nations Principles for Older Persons, in pursuance of the International Plan of
Action on Ageing.
Implementation - Activities: Involve older persons in the education process as
"visiting experts," especially with youth, on assorted environment and
development activities; Both in the developing and developed countries, utilize the
knowledge of and skills of the older person in areas of technology, management,
agriculture, family care, medicine, and cultural heritage; Encourage the involvement and
participation of older persons in the decision-making processes for a sustainable future;
Develop materials for the older population, appropriate to their cultural heritage and
values, that address issues for the older person as both consumer and producer.
Implementation - Means: Strengthen the Ageing Unit of the Social Policy and
Development Division of the Department for Policy Coordination and Sustainable Development
(DPCSD), which acts as a focal point for interagency cooperation in the United Nations;
Disseminate and apply the United Nations Principles for Older Persons, many of the
principles having application to sustainable development; Provide and enhance
accessibility and mobility for the older population; Launch information, education and
communication campaigns on ageing and sustainable development to promote positive images
of the ageing as a subject of general social relevance in which everyone participates;
Provide key roles for older persons as voluntary or paid resource persons in public
awareness campaigns on cultural traditions and heritage in the environment; Promote the
expansion or establishment of intergenerational policies and programs; Institute national
programs to promote productive ageing; Strengthen or establish national coordinating
mechanisms on ageing; Promote the establishment and effective functioning of organizations
of older persons.
Rationale: Older persons, although receiving recognition during World Summits on
population, social concerns, women, and the city, were overlooked in Section 3 of Agenda
21. Their contributions to a sustainable future as a "major group" must be
considered a priority. The growth of the global older population, citizens who are living
longer productive lives, is one of the most challenging demographic trends of the
twenty-first century. A steady stream of one million persons a month now crosses the
threshold of age 60, and 80% of these are in the south. The total number of those age 60
and above is projected to reach 600 million by the year 2001 and go on to reach 1.2
billion by the 2025, over 70% in the south. This snapshot serves as a small illustration
of a far-reaching, if quiet, demographic revolution now affecting the social and economic
structures of societies. Clearly, the challenge is great. Responses have been guided by
the "International Plan of Action on Ageing," A/37/51. In resolution A/45/106,
the General Assembly designated "1 October the International Day for the
Elderly." By its resolution A/46/91, the Assembly adopted the "United Nations
Principles for Older Persons" with five major themes: independence, participation,
self-fulfillment, dignity and care. In 1995, by resolution A/50/141, the Assembly
established "1999 as the International Year of Older Persons." The framework for
the year contains four major themes: situation of older persons; life-long individual
development; multi generational relationships; and development and the ageing population.
"The Framework" is outlined in the report of the Secretary General, A/50/114.
Additional sources of information are available from the Web site
http:/www.un.org/dpcsd/dspd/iyop.htm -- International Year of Older Persons.
The Habitat Agenda, Chapter 1, Art. 17, reflects the member states' awareness of an
ageing global population: "Older persons are entitled to lead fulfilling and
productive lives and should have opportunities for full participation in their communities
and society, and all decision making regarding their well-being, especially their shelter
needs. Their many contributions to the political, social and economic processes of human
settlements should be recognized and valued. Special attention should be given to meeting
the evolving housing and mobility needs in order to enable them to continue to lead
rewarding lives in their communities." The importance of Older Persons as a major
group is found in the wealth of information, history, energy, and experience accumulated
through their collective lifetimes. Given the size and potential force of this population,
we cannot afford to ignore their needs. In a multigenerational society, older persons
offer a generational link for humanity. They are vested with the responsibility of passing
on a legacy. We must capitalize on the great human resource potential this major group
offers. It is an exceedingly diversified pool of experienced and talented men and women
with skills in environmental management, public policy, conservation, technology,
prevention and leadership at every level, who can contribute expertise to every aspect of
environment and development. Their knowledge, wisdom and prestige can be vital to
educating, organizing, and mobilizing people and communities to ensure that
environmentally sustainable development is practiced.
5.8 Inclusion
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We call for: Recognition that discrimination on the basis of race, gender,
economic status, ethnic background, religion, political belief, sexual orientation, age
and disability continue to prevent the full participation of many social groups in
developing and implementing strategies for sustainable development. Address these
obstacles by implementing measures inter alia: to confront prejudice, hatred, and human
rights violations through educational programmes and relevant changes in national
curricula; invest in the empowerment and capacity building of marginalized groups; remove
structural and legal impediments to the fully inclusive participation of all social
groups.
Rationale: A human rights framework is a prerequisite to an enabling approach to
sustainable development. One of the legacies of the Rio Conference was the concept of
"stakeholders", connoting both responsibility and participation of all those
affected by any policy or action. Making human rights paramount in sustainable development
enables stakeholders to claim their basic rights and to become full participants in
decision-making.
5.9 Occupied Peoples
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We call for: Empowerment of ethno-cultural groups currently subsisting under
occupation by foreign national powers. Provisions must be made for access to and
utilization of natural resources central to social and cultural autonomy and economic
sustainable development.
5.10 Media
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We call for: the CSD to recognize the importance of local, national and
international media participation in support of this process and encourage them to
thoroughly communicate information about all levels of implementation of Agenda 21 and the
work of the CSD.
Rationale: Media is a major force in the civil society and it could
be useful in promoting the implementation of the Earth Summit agreements and the work of
the CSD.

Institutional and Legal Issues
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The Special Session of the General Assembly offers the opportunity to deal with some of
the institutional issues that have developed since the Rio Summit.
6.1 CSD Agenda and Work Programme
The Special Session should continue to be the high-level policy forum and a forum for
sharing experiences. The next 5 years should see a more focussed agenda for the CSD. Such
a focussed agenda should include oceans, forests, freshwater, tourism, chemicals and cross
sectoral issues such as finance, capacity building, sustainable agriculture/food systems,
technological transfer, poverty, education, production and consumption patterns, trade and
sustainable development and transport - as well as continuing to address emerging issues.
The CSD should include a public education and dissemination of information strategy in
each aspect of its work programme to heighten awareness on critical issues and
governmental compliance in achieving the goals of Rio.
6.1.1 Election and Term of Commission Chairs
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The Chair of the CSD and other UN Commissions should be elected at the beginning of
Commission sessions and assume office from the conclusion of the session through to the
end of the next session of the CSD (or other Commissions).
6.2 High-Level Coordination of Conference Follow
Up
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Ensure effective coordination and create a dynamic exchange between the follow up from
the different UN Conferences and Summits. There should be joint high-level sessions of
Commissions dealing with similar issues each year. For example if poverty is being
discussed the Commission for Social Development with the Commission on Sustainable
Development should be arranged at Ministerial level. The High-level Session of the
Economic and Social Council should convene regular joint High-level segments of the
Commission on Sustainable Development with other relevant Commissions (e.g. Social
Development).
6.3 Integrated Monitoring Frameworks
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We call for: The establishment through DPCSD of an integrated comprehensive
framework - making effective use of modern information and communications technology - for
systematic monitoring of the implementation of all the Rio agreements as well as the
agreements of the other recent global conferences.
Information that the UN has available at web-sites and other new information
technologies should be made accessible to the public on a no-cost basis
The development of indicators and criteria shall in no way undermine obligations
incurred under treaties, covenants conventions or commitments made in conference action
plans.
Implementation: Develop a comprehensive framework - to be accessible online - to
enable the systematic monitoring and implementation of the agreements of the "Rio
cluster" of United Nations conferences and proceedings; develop an integrated, fully
searchable database that incorporates the text of all these agreements, that documents
initiatives - including best practices - taken by intergovernmental agencies, governments
and major groups, and that incorporates data and indicators that can help show current
status and trends towards sustainability; the use of geographic information systems as a
tool to assist in organizing and integrating information on measures; and measures to
support capacity building in the use of information and communications technology -
including the strengthening of information and communications infrastructure in developing
countries
Rationale: There is currently no systematic framework in place by which it is
possible to assess and monitor the extent and specifics of implementation of the Rio
agreements. Modern information and communications technology offers a range of powerful
tools to organize and integrate a broad base of diverse information, and to make it widely
accessible. There are many areas of overlap between the Rio agreements and the other
"Rio cluster" agreements - all of which, in one way or another relate to the
attainment of a sustainable common future - so there is a need for an integrated process
of monitoring implementation of the whole set of agreements.
6.4 Peer-Review Assessment
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The CSD should establish a process of peer-reviewed assessment of each country's
performance on the implementation of sustainable development building on the model on work
done by OECD. NGO and national networks at a country level should be encouraged to develop
parallel national reports. The CSD secretariat is urged to make available at an
international level these national NGO reports.
6.5 Secretary General's High-Level Advisory Board
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The High-Level Advisory Board should be closed down. It does not appear to have
contributed anything substantial to the CSD process nor has there been evidence of a
meaningful relationship between it and the partners / major groups that are involved in
the follow-up process for the Rio agreements.
6.6 Committee on Natural Resources
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Streamline the relationship between the Committee on Natural Resources and the CSD.
6.7 United Nations Environment Programme
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We call for: Adopt further reforms to ensure a UNEP that is strong, effective,
adequately funded and sharply focused, building on the decisions agreed at the nineteenth
session of UNEP's Governing Council with respect to governance (in early April) and the
Nairobi Declaration (in early February); submit regular reports to the CSD on priority
activities and future program plans; and implement innovative measures to ensure the
effective participation of NGOs and other major groups within civil society in UNEP
decision making, information delivery and programme implementation.
Implementation: In the context of broader UN reforms, Environment Ministers,
pursuant to the new governance mechanisms agreed at Governing Council, and the
Nairobi-based Committee on Permanent Representatives, need to work with UNEP staff, other
UN agencies, NGOs and other major groups in order to ensure that further reforms,
including an effectively focused and implemented mission, are carried out. Proposals from
this reform process should be agreed with a view to their being forwarded for adoption to
the 52nd and 53rd sessions of the UN General Assembly in 1997-98 and the 20th session of
UNEP's Governing Council in 1999.
Rationale: The recent governance decisions provide an important framework for
examining and agreeing measures to further reform UNEP in ways that will ensure that its
mission is effectively carried out. Toward this end, the Nairobi Declaration provides a
constructive way of focusing UNEP's mission, for now, and further reforms should consider
appropriate ways to advance such tasks as a) analysis of the state of the global
environment and assessment of global and regional environmental trends, providing policy
advice, early warning information and catalyzing and promoting international cooperation
and action; b) furthering the development of international environmental law, including
coherent linkages among existing international environmental conventions; c) strengthening
its role in the coordination of environmental activities in the UN system; and d)
promoting greater awareness and facilitating far more effective cooperation among all
sectors of society and actors involved in the implementation of the international
environmental agenda.
As part of such further reforms, participants in such decision making should consider
seriously the possibility, at the appropriate time in the next few years, of building on
the UNEP base by establishing a broader World Environment Organisation or some such
similar structure that is authorized to address matters such as compliance and enforcement
with respect to international environmental issues. Such an entity should be similar in
authority and status to other international organizations, such as the World Trade
Organization.
In its leadership role, UNEP also must assist states in ensuring that corporations
including transnational corporations comply with national codes, social security, and
international law, including international environmental law as was undertaken in the
platform of action and Habitat II. In this role UNEP should act to establish mandatory
international normative standards/regulations based on international law, and continually
incorporate more stringent regulations as they appear in different states so as to
continually move international law toward upward harmonization. In addition, UNEP should
be encouraged to not support voluntary conformance to self-initiated standards of ISO
14000.
6.8 United Nations Development Programme
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We call for: The work of UNDP's Capacity 21 programme to focus in the next five
year phase of CSD to; Help countries produce their National Sustainable Development
Strategies; Help work out programmes that would see those strategies enacted; and support
the development of Local Agenda 21s.
6.9 United Nations Centre for Human Settlements
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We call for: The General Assembly should recommend a review of the work being
carried out in the UN system on human settlement issues with the intention of
strengthening the Centre for Human Settlements as the UN coordinator of all work on human
settlement issues through the partnership concept for implementation of the Habitat
Agenda.
Implementation: A holistic, integrated approach, acknowledging the
interconnectedness and interdependence of all people with the natural environment, and
encompassing a regional urban-to-rural view is necessary. Universal engagement of the
population, participation by the user groups and stakeholders in all phases of the
process, forging of public and private partnerships, and conscious efforts at community
building as a vital force must become key elements of all national action plans.
Enlightened, innovative science and appropriate technology, adjusted to local human and
natural conditions and resources, mindful of the accumulated wisdom of traditional
knowledge, and employing the proper materials and methods of construction for optimal
environmental and human health are critical for the social, economic, environmental and
cultural sustainability of settlements. The close coordination of the work of the CSD and
UNCHS, as well as the other pertinent UN agencies with programs on settlements, especially
UNEP and UNDP is imperative. In addition to monitoring progress towards the implementation
of the Habitat Agenda, holding a 5-year Habitat Review would help to re-focus world
attention on this multifactorial issue.
Rationale: Few other human activities have greater impact on the natural world
than human settlements. If the cumulative effect of land development, use of material
resources, infrastructure, energy and industry is antagonistic to the survival of the
planet, it is ultimately antagonistic to the survival of the human species itself.
6.10 World Trade Organization
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There should be a formalization of the relationship between the United Nations and the
World Trade Organization - in particular, between the CSD and the WTO's Committee on Trade
and Environment - (this could take the form of a Memorandum of Understanding).
6.11 Coordination of Governmental Positions
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There should be a clear commitment to facilitating effective coordination of
governmental positions in each of the different fora they are involved with.
6.12 Earth Summit III
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Convene a Special Session of the General Assembly in 2002 to review the progress and
roadblocks to sustainable development. This Special session should be held at the highest
level.

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