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Outcome Document
1 July 2000
Twenty-fourth special session of
the General Assembly entitled "World Summit for
Social Development and beyond: achieving social
development for all in a globalizing world"
Unedited final outcome document as adopted by the Plenary of
the special session
Contents
Political
Declaration
Overall
review and appraisal of the implementation of the outcome of the World
Summit for Social Development
Poverty
Eradication
Full
Employment
Social
Integration
Africa
and the Least Developed Countries
Mobilization
of Resources for Social Development
Capacity-building
to implement social policies and programmes
Further
actions and initiatives to implement the commitments made at the Summit
Commitment
1
Commitment
2
Commitment
3
Commitment
4
Commitment
5
Commitment
6
Commitment
7
Commitment
8
Commitment
9
Commitment
10
Proposals for further initiatives for social
development
Political Declaration
1. Five years have passed since the United Nations World
Summit for Social Development, which marked the first time in history that
Heads of State and Government had gathered to recognize the significance of
social development and human well-being for all and to give these goals the
highest priority into the twenty-first century. The Copenhagen Declaration
on Social Development and Programme of Action established a new consensus to
place people at the centre of our concerns for sustainable development and
pledged to eradicate poverty, promote full and productive employment, and
foster social integration to achieve stable, safe and just societies for
all.
2. We, the representatives of Governments, meeting at this
special session of the General Assembly in Geneva to assess achievements and
obstacles and to decide on further initiatives to accelerate social
development for all, reaffirm our will and commitment to implement the
Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of Action, including the strategies and
agreed targets contained therein. The Copenhagen Declaration and Programme
of Action will remain the basic framework for social development in the
years to come.
3. Since the Social Summit, recognition of the imperative
of social development requiring an enabling environment has spread and
strengthened. Furthermore, there is a growing awareness of the positive
impact of effective social policies on economic and social development. Our
review and appraisal has shown that Governments, relevant international
organizations as well as actors of civil society have made continued efforts
to improve human well-being and to eradicate poverty. However, further
actions are needed for the full implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration
and Programme of Action. It has also become clear that there is no single
universal path to achieving social development and that all have
experiences, knowledge and information worth sharing.
4. Globalization and continuing rapid technological
advances offer unprecedented opportunities for social and economic
development. At the same time, they continue to present serious challenges,
including widespread financial crises, insecurity, poverty, exclusion and
inequality within and among societies. Considerable obstacles to further
integration and full participation in the global economy remain for
developing countries, in particular the least developed countries, as well
as for some countries with economies in transition. Unless the benefits of
social and economic development are extended to all countries, a growing
number of people in all countries and even entire regions will remain
marginalized from the global economy. We must act now in order to overcome
those obstacles affecting peoples and countries and to realize the full
potentials of opportunities presented for the benefit of all.
5. We therefore reiterate our determination and duty to
eradicate poverty, promote full and productive employment, foster social
integration and create an enabling environment for social development. The
maintenance of peace and security within and among nations, democracy, the
rule of law, the promotion and protection of all human rights and
fundamental freedoms, including the right to development, effective,
transparent and accountable governance, gender equality, full respect for
fundamental principles and rights at work and the rights of migrant workers
are some of the essential elements for the realization of social and
people-centered sustainable development. Social development requires not
only economic activity, but also reduction in the inequality in the
distribution of wealth and more equitable distribution of the benefits of
economic growth within and among nations, including, inter alia, realization
of an open, equitable, secure, non-discriminatory, predictable, transparent
and multilateral rule-based international trading system, maximizing
opportunities and guaranteeing social justice, recognizing the
inter-relationship between social development and economic growth.
6. Full and effective implementation of the Copenhagen
Declaration and Programme of Action is necessary at all levels. We reaffirm
that while social development is a national responsibility, it cannot be
successfully achieved without the collective commitment and efforts of the
international community. We invite Governments, the United Nations and other
relevant international organizations within their respective mandates to
strengthen the quality and consistency of their support for sustainable
development, in particular in Africa and the least developed countries, as
well as in some countries with economies in transition, and to continue
coordinating their efforts in this regard. We also invite them to develop
coordinated and gender sensitive social, economic and environmental
approaches in order to close the gap between goals and achievements. This in
turn requires not only renewed political will but also the mobilization and
allocation of additional resources at both national and international
levels. In this connection, we will strive to fulfill the yet to be attained
internationally agreed target of 0.7% of GNP of developed countries for
overall ODA as soon as possible.
6bis. We recognize that excessive debt-servicing has
severely constrained the capacity of many developing countries, as well as
countries with economies in transition, to promote social development. We
also recognize the efforts being made by indebted developing countries to
fulfill their debt-servicing commitment despite the high social cost
incurred. We reaffirm our pledge to find effective, equitable,
development-oriented and durable solutions to the external debt and
debt-servicing burdens of developing countries.
7. The fight against poverty requires the active
participation of civil society and people living in poverty. We are
convinced that universal access to high quality education, including
opportunities for the acquisition of skills required in the knowledge-based
economy, health and other basic social services and equal opportunities for
active participation and sharing the benefits of the development process are
essential for the achievement of the objectives of the Copenhagen
Declaration and Programme of Action. Recognizing Governments' primary
responsibility in this regard, we acknowledge the importance of
strengthening partnerships, as appropriate, among the public sector, the
private sector and other relevant actors of civil society.
7bis. We reaffirm our pledge to place particular focus on
and give priority attention to the fight against the worldwide conditions
that pose severe threats to the health, safety, peace, security and the
well-being of our people. Among these conditions are: chronic hunger;
malnutrition; illicit drug problems; organized crime; corruption; natural
disasters; foreign occupation; armed conflicts; illicit arms trafficking;
trafficking in persons; terrorism; intolerance and incitement to racial,
ethnic, religious and other hatreds; xenophobia; and endemic, communicable
and chronic diseases, in particular HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis.
8. We reiterate our resolve to reinforce solidarity with
people living in poverty and dedicate ourselves to strengthen policies and
programmes to create inclusive, cohesive societies for all - women and men,
children, young and older persons - particularly those who are vulnerable,
disadvantaged and marginalized. We recognize that their special needs will
require specific targeted measures to empower them to live more productive
and fulfilling lives.
8bis. Although Africa and the Least Developed Countries
have made continued efforts to implement the commitments of Copenhagen,
widespread poverty remains. Recognizing the internal and external
constraints facing these countries, we reiterate our will to continue to
support their efforts by allocating resources, including by fulfilling
internationally agreed commitments, as well as by strengthening initiatives,
in particular in the area of social development.
9. Enhanced international cooperation is essential to
implement the Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of Action as well as the
further actions and initiatives adopted by the special session, and to
address the challenges of globalization. We recognize the need to continue
to work on a wide range of reforms for a strengthened and more stable
international financial system enabling it to deal more effectively and in a
timely manner with new challenges of development. We acknowledge the need
for a coordinated follow-up to all major conferences and summits by
Governments, regional organizations and all of the bodies and organizations
of the United Nations system, within their respective mandates.
10. Determined to give new momentum to our collective
efforts to improve the human condition, we here set out further initiatives
for the full implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of
Action. At the dawn of the new millenium, aware of our responsibilities
towards future generations, we are strongly committed to social development,
including social justice, for all in a globalizing world. We invite all
people in all countries and in all walks of life, as well as the
international community, to join in renewed dedication to our shared vision
for a more just and equitable world.
Overall
review and appraisal of the implementation of the outcome of
the World Summit for Social Development
1. One of the most important developments since the World
Summit for Social Development in March 1995 is the increased priority which
social development has been given in national and international policy
objectives. The Summit also signified a recognition by States of the
importance of making social improvement an integral part of development
strategy at the national and international levels, as well as placing people
at the centre of development efforts. The review and appraisal of the
implementation of the outcome of the Summit shows that many new national
policies and programmes have been initiated. The Summit has clearly also had
an impact on the United Nations system, leading to a refocusing of its
activities and galvanizing action. However, it is equally clear that the
national and international policy responses have been uneven. Despite some
advances, there has been little progress in some key areas, and regress is
evident in others. As noted in one of the key issues of the analytical
report of the Secretary-General, one major development since the Summit is
that inequality within and among States continues to grow. Achieving the
goals agreed at the Summit will require much stronger and more comprehensive
action and new, innovative approaches (to be contained in part III) by all
actors, national and international, governmental and non-governmental,
taking into account the outcomes of the relevant United Nations conferences
and summits.
2. Since the Summit, globalization has presented new
challenges for the fulfilment of the commitments made and the realization of
the goals of the Summit. Globalization and interdependence have provided
many beneficial opportunities but have also involved potential damage and
costs. If anything, these forces have accelerated and often strained the
capacity of Governments and the international community to manage them for
the benefit of all. Economic growth has been impressive in some places and
disappointing in others. Current patterns of globalization have contributed
to a sense of insecurity as some countries, particularly developing
countries, have been marginalized from the global economy. The growing
interdependence of nations, which has caused economic shocks to be
transmitted across national borders, as well as increased inequality,
highlights weaknesses in current international and national institutional
arrangements and economic and social policies and reinforces the importance
of strengthening them through appropriate reforms. There is wide recognition
of the need for collective action to anticipate and offset the negative
social and economic consequences of globalization and to maximize its
benefits for all members of society, including those with special needs. For
most developing countries, the terms of international trade have worsened
and inflows of concessional financial resources have declined. The high debt
burden has weakened many Governments' capacity to service their increasing
external debt and eroded resources available for social development.
Inappropriate design of structural adjustment programmes has weakened the
management capacity of public institutions as well as the ability of
Governments to respond to the social development needs of the weak and
vulnerable in society and to provide adequate social services.
3. Since the Summit, policies and programmes to achieve
social development have been implemented within the context of national
economic, political, social, legal, cultural and historical environments.
There has been an increasing interest in strengthening an enabling
environment for sustainable development through the interaction of economic
and social development and environmental protection. However, these national
environments have been increasingly affected by global influences and forces
beyond the control of individual Governments. Serious impediments to social
development, many of which were identified by the Summit, still persist.
These include: chronic hunger; malnutrition; illicit drug problems;
organized crime; corruption; foreign occupation; armed conflicts; illicit
arms trafficking; terrorism; intolerance and incitement to racial, ethnic,
religious and other hatreds; xenophobia; endemic, communicable and chronic
diseases, in particular HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis; and economic
sanctions and unilateral measures not in accordance with international law
and the Charter of the United Nations.
4. The ultimate goals of development are to improve living
conditions for people and to empower them to participate fully in the
economic, political and social arenas. Some Governments, in partnership with
other actors, have contributed to an enabling environment for social
development through efforts to ensure democracy and transparency in
decision-making; the rule of law; accountability of government institutions;
empowerment of women; and gender equality. Efforts have also been made to
promote peace and security; respect for all human rights and fundamental
freedoms, including the right to development; and tolerance and respect for
cultural and ethnic diversity. However, progress in all these areas has been
uneven and requires further effort.
5. At the Summit, quantitative targets were adopted and
reaffirmed in the area of basic social services and official development
assistance. Out of 13 targets, for 9 the target date set was the year 2000.
These target areas are: education; adult illiteracy rate; improved access to
safe water supply and sanitation; malnutrition among children under 5 years
of age; maternal mortality, infant mortality and the under-five mortality
rate; life expectancy; malaria mortality and morbidity; and affordable and
adequate shelter for all. Available data indicate that progress in these
areas remains unsatisfactory. In the field of education, for example, there
are still 29 countries which have enrolment ratios of less than 50 per cent,
instead of the target of 80 per cent of children attending primary school.
6. Gender mainstreaming is widely accepted but in some
parts of the world the implementation of this concept has often not started.
In many countries, women continue to suffer from discrimination with regard
to the full enjoyment of all human rights.
7. The compilation of broad-based and disaggregated data
by national Governments, both qualitative and quantitative indicators, to
evaluate progress in the areas covered by the targets, has presented an
important challenge. In this regard, Governments may, as appropriate, seek
assistance from international organizations. Since the Summit, efforts have
been made to improve the quality, timeliness and country coverage of data.
8. Given the nature and the broad scope of many of the
goals and targets set in Copenhagen and the inevitable lag between the
initiation of policies and measurable results, a comprehensive evaluation of
the impact of new policies and programmes will take time. However, it is
possible to make the following early assessments.
Poverty eradication
9. One of the most significant outcomes of the Summit has
been placing the goal of eradicating poverty at the centre of national and
international policy agendas. At the international level, development
targets adopted at Copenhagen have increasingly influenced the policies and
planning of bilateral and multilateral development partners. Many
Governments have set national poverty reduction targets and formulated
poverty eradication plans and strategies, including by promoting employment
and developing or reinforcing tools to evaluate progress. Some have further
developed existing poverty eradication plans, programmes and measures.
Microcredit and other financial instruments have received increasing
attention as effective means of empowering the poor and many countries have
expanded access to such programmes. Many countries have achieved
improvements in literacy, life expectancy, school enrolment and the
availability of basic social services, and have enhanced social protection
systems and reduced infant mortality. However, progress has been uneven,
revealing continuing disparities in access to basic social services,
including a lack of access to quality education. Of particular concern in
this regard is the increasing feminization of poverty and the uneven access
to education for girls. For example, while countries in East Asia and the
Pacific have achieved enrolment rates similar to those in developed
countries, almost one third of school-age children in Africa are still
without access to any form of education. In South Asia, it is estimated that
50 million children are out of primary school. Also, enrolment rates in some
economies in transition have been declining. Groups with special needs are
also affected by social exclusion and by poverty in different manners. In
many countries, there are insufficient measures for improving their
situation.
10. Progress in eradicating poverty has been mixed. In
many countries, the number of people living in poverty has increased since
1995. In many developing countries, social service provision has
deteriorated, leaving many without access to basic social services. Lack of
resources, inadequate levels of economic development and, in most cases, the
worsening terms of international trade, as well as weak infrastructures and
inefficient administrative systems have all undermined measures to eradicate
poverty. Demographic changes in many parts of the world have led to new
challenges and caused new obstacles in eradicating poverty. In Africa and
the least developed countries, economic growth has barely resumed. Also, in
some countries with economies in transition, economic reform has been slow
and social security arrangements have weakened. In several developed
countries, economic growth and rising incomes have improved the living
conditions of many people. In some developed countries, however,
unemployment has contributed to situations of inequality, poverty and social
exclusion. Countries affected by the recent international crises have
experienced a sharp increase in poverty, especially among women and groups
with special needs, and unemployment. Although there are now some signs that
growth is resuming, the sharp reverse in this area has pushed back their
progress in poverty reduction and employment by several years.
11. At the Social Summit and the Fourth World Conference
on Women in Beijing, the international community recognized expressly that
women and men experience poverty differently, unequally, and become
impoverished through different processes and that if those differences are
not taken into account, the causes of poverty cannot be understood or dealt
with by public actions. Persistent discrimination against women in the
labour market, the existing gap in their wages, and unequal access to
productive resources and capital as well as education and training and the
sociocultural factors that continue to influence gender relations and
preserve the existing discrimination against women continue to hinder
women's economic empowerment and exacerbate the feminization of poverty.
Equality between women and men is widely accepted as essential for social
development, but its implementation, including by mainstreaming a gender
perspective into all policies and programmes aimed at eradicating poverty
and the empowerment of women, has lagged behind.
Full employment
12. While the overall progress since the Summit in
reducing unemployment has been slow and uneven, there has been increased
attention by Governments as well as civil society, including the private
sector, to the goal of full employment and to policies aimed at employment
growth, as well as a renewed perception that full employment is a feasible
goal. Employment promotion has increasingly been put at the centre of
socio-economic development, in recognition of the central importance of
employment to poverty eradication and social integration.
13. The international community has also recognized the
need to promote employment that meets labour standards as defined by
relevant International Labour Organization (ILO) and other international
instruments, including prohibitions on forced and child labour, guarantees
of the rights of freedom of association and bargaining collectively, equal
remuneration for men and women for work of equal value and
non-discrimination in employment. This is reflected in the ILO's adoption of
the Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work and Its
Follow-up, and in the unanimous adoption of the ILO Convention on the
Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour. While some progress has been
made in this respect, universal ratification of the relevant ILO conventions
has not yet been achieved.
14. Many developed countries have strengthened their
active employment promotion measures, including the introduction of
programmes to create jobs in social services and in the provision of other
public goods. These activities are sometimes relatively labour-intensive and
also meet a growing demand for personal services, particularly for the
elderly. In developing countries and those with economies in transition,
labour-intensive public works programmes, in particular infrastructure
investments in rural access roads, including farm-to-market roads,
environmental rehabilitation, irrigation and urban regeneration schemes,
have proven to be effective means of promoting employment and stimulating
people-centred sustainable development. The important role of education and
of, vocational and skills development training at all levels in promoting
employment, particularly in the long term, is increasingly recognized.
15. While in most countries the employment of women has
increased steadily, gender inequalities, reflected for instance in the wage
gap, and a disproportionate share of family responsibilities, in particular,
have remained obstacles to women's equal access to and participation in the
labour market. Furthermore, in countries experiencing a lack of adequate
employment and/or declining employment rates, women are often
disproportionately affected and forced into the low-paid informal sector and
out of social safety nets. In many parts of the world, this situation has
also led to poverty and social exclusion, with inhuman consequences such as
forced prostitution, trafficking in women and children for purposes of
prostitution and for sexual and other forms of exploitation, as well as the
worst forms of child labour. At the same time, women's unpaid work remains
unrecognized and unaccounted for in the national accounts. To date, no
universal measurement tools have been developed to evaluate women's unpaid
work.
16. There has been an increase in casual and informal
employment since the Summit. Casual employment arrangements have tended to
spread in industrialized economies, with increasingly flexible labour
markets and new mechanisms for subcontracting. In developing countries, the
lack of growth of employment in the formal sector, among other factors, has
led many people, especially women, into informal sector work and has
increased migration to more attractive labour markets in other countries.
While employment growth still remains the most effective means of reducing
poverty, there appears to be a growing number of employed and underemployed
persons, particularly women, with little employment security, low wages and
low levels of social protection. In a number of countries, considerable
attention has been focused on this issue in recent years, including the
development of new initiatives. In some countries with economies in
transition, there has been extensive growth of the shadow economy.
17. As a means of combating social exclusion, there have
been efforts to integrate income support policies with active labour market
policies for those marginalized from the labour market. It is increasingly
being recognized that these policies are an important tool to reduce the
dependency of individuals on social assistance and to reintegrate them into
the world of work and into society.
18. In a number of countries, social dialogue among
employers, employees and Governments has contributed to social and economic
development.
Social integration
19. Social integration is a prerequisite for creating
harmonious, peaceful and inclusive societies. Promotion and protection of
all human rights and fundamental freedoms, promotion of a culture of peace,
tolerance and non-violence, respect for cultural and religious diversity,
elimination of all forms of discrimination, equal opportunities for access
to productive resources and participatory governance are important for
social integration. Governments have developed new policy instruments, set
up institutional arrangements, strengthened participation and dialogue with
all social actors and launched programmes to foster social cohesion and
solidarity. However, lack of access to education, the persistence of poverty
and unemployment, and inequitable access to opportunities and resources have
caused social exclusion and marginalization. A growing number of people are
afflicted by poverty because of the inequitable distribution of
opportunities, resources, incomes and access to employment and to social
services. In many countries, there is a growing schism between those in
high-quality, well-paid employment and those in poorly remunerated, insecure
jobs with low levels of social protection. Owing to continued discrimination
and exclusion, women and girls face particular disadvantages in this regard.
20. Governments have made progress in promoting more
inclusive societies. The adoption of democratic forms of government by an
increasing number of countries offers opportunities for all to participate
in all spheres of public life. The devolution of political power, the
decentralization of administration and the development of local and
municipal authorities have sometimes contributed to the creation of
inclusive and participatory societies. In some countries, there are also
consultative arrangements that enable wider involvement in the planning and
evaluation of policies. In those countries, Governments as well as civil
society, including the private sector, are involved in these processes. An
encouraging development has been the strengthening of civil society,
including non-governmental organizations and volunteers. In many countries,
this provides the means for people to work together through partnerships
with Governments, thereby promoting and protecting common interests and
complementing the action of the public sector. The promotion and protection
of all human rights, including the right to development, is an important
element in the promotion of social integration. In this context, it is noted
that the overall level of ratification of international human rights
instruments has increased considerably since the Summit; however, universal
ratification has not yet been achieved.
21. Governments have implemented a wide range of policies
and programmes to respond to the special needs of vulnerable and
disadvantaged groups and to strengthen their participation in development
processes through the provision of, inter alia, social services, employment
opportunities, credit, skill development and training. However, further
efforts in this area are required.
22. The protection of immigrants and migrant workers
required the adoption of a broad range of targeted policies. Governments
were urged to ensure protection of the human rights and dignity of migrants
irrespective of their legal status. Governments were also urged to intensify
efforts to provide basic social services, facilitate family reunification of
documented migrants, promote social and economic integration of documented
migrants, and ensure their equal treatment before the law. There has not
been enough accession and ratification of the International Convention on
the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their
Families for it to come into force. Since the Summit, progress in
implementing international instruments on the protection of migrants has
been limited and problems concerning the violation of the human rights of
migrants have persisted. In many parts of the world, migrants have been
subjected to discrimination and documented migrants have not received
adequate social protection.
23. Despite attempts to address the causes leading to and
the pressures resulting from the movement of refugees and displaced persons,
many countries, especially those hosting large refugee populations, have
required international support to provide basic social services.
24. While there has been incremental but uneven movement
towards equality and equity between women and men in all regions of the
world, the fact remains that women are the most affected in times of crisis
and economic restructuring. Whereas many countries have adopted national
strategies on the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for
Action, including general policy recommendations and specific plans of
action, concrete progress in improving the status of women and promoting
gender equality has been slow and uneven. All forms of violence against
women and girls remain a persistent problem for all countries and create
obstacles to social integration, hindering the advancement of gender
equality and the full enjoyment of human rights by women.
25. There has been continued recognition that the family
is the basic unit of society and that it plays a key role in social
development and is a strong force of social cohesion and integration. In
different cultural, political and social systems, various forms of the
family exist.
26. The increase in violent conflicts, including those
around issues of local autonomy and ethnic identity, as well as conflicts
over the distribution of resources, have hampered social integration and
diverted attention and resources from social and economic development to
conflict management. This development has underlined the importance of
social integration and access to basic social services as preventive
measures against crises. Access to basic social services in conflict
situations and social integration in post-conflict situations have also been
underlined as important preventive tools.
27. The obstacles to the realization of the right of
peoples to self-determination, in particular of peoples living under
colonial or other forms of alien domination or foreign occupation, have
continued to adversely affect the achievement of their social and economic
development.
28. In some countries, social development is adversely
affected by unilateral measures not in accordance with international law and
the Charter of the United Nations that create obstacles to trade relations
among States, impede the full realization of social and economic development
and hinder the well-being of the population in the affected countries.
Africa
and the least developed countries
29. At the World Summit for Social Development,
Governments committed themselves to accelerating the economic, social and
human resources development of Africa and the least developed countries.
Many of the objectives undertaken at the Summit are yet to be fulfilled by
the countries concerned and their international partners, although, in this
regard, donors continue to support the efforts by Africa and the least
developed countries.
30. The deteriorating social and economic condition of the
least developed countries requires priority attention to the many
international development commitments towards those countries which were not
met. Many least developed countries have seen their share of official
development assistance (ODA) decrease, and progress was not achieved in
fulfilling the agreed target of earmarking 0.15 to 0.2 per cent of GNP as
ODA for the least developed countries. Technical cooperation provided by the
United Nations and its affiliated agencies has been cut back since the
Summit.
31. African countries have made real efforts to implement
the commitments made at Copenhagen, but internal and external constraints
continue to make progress extremely difficult. The mobilization of resources
at the national and international levels to accelerate the economic and
social development of Africa and the least developed countries through a
holistic approach is needed for the full implementation of the commitments.
Equitable access to education and health services, income earning
opportunities, land, credit, infrastructure and technology, as well as
official development assistance and debt reduction are vital to social
development in Africa and the least developed countries.
32. Social indicators in Africa show that the continent
falls dramatically short of the targets set at the Summit five years ago.
About 90 per cent of countries in sub-Saharan Africa will not meet the year
2000 goals on child mortality. Life expectancy remained lower than 60 years
in 41 of the 53 countries during the period 1995-2000. The HIV/AIDS pandemic
is having severe social, economic, political and security impacts in some of
the hardest hit countries.
33. Progress has been achieved in the development of
democratic institutions in a number of countries. Further progress needs to
be made in Africa and the least developed countries in strengthening
institutions which are transparent and accountable in order to achieve
faster economic and social development.
34. In a rapidly globalizing economic world, Africa
continues to be marginalized. A persistent decline in the international
terms of trade for commodities exported from African countries has reduced
real national income and savings to finance investment. The external debt
burden has drastically reduced resources available for social development.
Furthermore, promises made to provide official development assistance to
developing countries in general and the least developed countries in
particular have not been fulfilled. More concerted efforts and an
internationally enabling environment are necessary to integrate Africa as
well as the least developed countries into the world economy.
Mobilization
of resources for social development
35. The mobilization of domestic and international
resources for social development is an essential component for the
implementation of the Copenhagen commitments. Since the Summit, reforms to
promote the effective and efficient utilization of existing resources have
received increasing attention. However, inadequate national revenue
generation and collection, combined with new challenges regarding social
services and social protection systems due, for instance, to demographic
changes and other factors, jeopardize the financing of social services and
social protection systems in many countries. New budgeting and accounting
techniques have been adopted in several countries. The involvement and
cooperation of local authorities, civil society and beneficiary communities
have been found to be valuable in raising efficiency in the delivery of
services.
36. In several countries, and for various reasons, a shift
has been occurring in the modalities for financing social protection away
from universal, publicly provided coverage to income-based, targeted
assistance. Among these reasons are stagnant or declining public revenues or
the need to reduce fiscal deficits as well as changing priorities for public
expenditures. Also, the need to create new employment opportunities and to
provide incentives for the unemployed or underemployed and coverage for new
social problems as well as to address the specific needs of disadvantaged
and marginalized populations has motivated changes in social protection
systems. In some countries, the principle of universal free provision of
services such as health care, education and water supply has been replaced
by user fees and privatization and by more targeted social service
provision. However, in many countries, the impact of such measures,
especially on the poor and vulnerable, remains to be seen.
37. Despite the renewed commitment at the Summit by donor
countries to meet the agreed target of 0.7 per cent of their GNP for
official development assistance, the overall ODA has continued to decline.
Only four countries now meet the agreed target with one more country about
to reach it. In the meantime, the relative role of ODA within various forms
of financing for development has also been declining. As a result of the
Summit, however, earmarking of funds for social development has been
formulated more explicitly in ODA policy. ODA has been found to be more
effective when countries are committed to growth-oriented strategies
combined with poverty eradication goals and strategies. Poverty eradication
through sustainable development is seen by most donor countries as the main
objective of development cooperation. The Bretton Woods institutions have
also begun to pay more focused attention to the social development dimension
in their structural adjustment programmes and lending policies. This process
is currently being further strengthened.
38. The 20/20 initiative has encouraged interested
Governments and donors to increase the amount of resources earmarked for
basic social services and to enhance equity and efficiency in their use. It
has also emphasized the need for additional resources in order to pursue
effectively the social development agenda, while highlighting the
difficulties and limitations of many countries, in particular developing
countries, in raising or reallocating domestic resources.
39. There is greater acceptance that the increasing debt
burden faced by the most indebted developing countries is unsustainable and
constitutes one of the principal obstacles to achieving progress in people-centred
sustainable development and poverty eradication. For many developing
countries, as well as countries with economies in transition, excessive debt
servicing has severely constrained their capacity to promote social
development and provide basic services. Although the Heavily Indebted Poor
Countries (HIPC) Debt Initiative has the potential to reduce debt-servicing
costs significantly for the countries it covers, the fact remains that it
has so far benefited only a few of them. This initiative has recently been
strengthened to provide faster, deeper and broader debt relief. This debt
relief is provided in the context of poverty reduction strategies where
Governments and civil society cooperate to make commitments to utilize the
financial benefits to alleviate poverty. A few lender countries have adopted
bilateral debt cancellation initiatives which go beyond the HIPC Initiative.
40. Microcredit and other financial instruments provide
financial and other services to people who are often overlooked by the
traditional banking sector, thus trying to reach the poorest families. Women
play a very important role in such initiatives. Experience shows that women
are creditworthy, and when they earn an income they are able to contribute
more directly to the economy.
41. Since the Summit, the external debt problems of the
middle-income developing countries have crippled their social development
efforts. A need has arisen for concerted national and international action
to address effectively the debt problems of middle-income developing
countries with a view to resolving their potential long-term
debt-sustainability problems.
Capacity-building
to implement social policies and programmes
42. Capacity-building is an important means of creating a
national political, socio-economic and legal environment conducive to
development and social progress. Member States have taken a number of
actions to enhance their capacities to achieve the goals of the World Summit
for Social Development, including adopting long-term strategies for social
development; conducting national assessments of their institutional
capacities; taking legislative action to create an enabling environment;
establishing partnerships with civil society; involving people in the
management of their local affairs; mainstreaming a gender perspective into
policies and programmes; improving transparent and accountable governance;
strengthening the implementation, monitoring and evaluation of social
policies, programmes and projects; and providing technical cooperation.
However, the years since the Summit have also been marked by growing
constraints on the capacity for public action. In some countries, increased
constraints, including fiscal and political ones on Governments, have
resulted in a reduction of the programmes and activities of the State.
43. The State has an important role in the provision of
basic social services. However, in several countries, the State
is no longer the sole provider of social services but rather the enabler of
an overall favourable environment for social development, with increased
responsibility for ensuring equitable delivery of and access to quality
social services. This development has increased the need for stronger public
institutions to provide an effective framework to ensure an equitable
provision of basic social services for all. It is also recognized that an
effective and accountable public sector is vital to ensuring the provision
of social services.
44. International cooperation has been a critical element
in the efforts of Governments towards capacity-building for social
development. Technical cooperation, including that of the United Nations,
has been supportive of such efforts by Governments, although in many areas
such cooperation should be strengthened and broadened.
Further
actions and initiatives to implement the commitments made at the Summit
1. Governments should adopt an integrated focus in order
to ensure that social development objectives are incorporated in all areas
of governmental decision-making. In this connection, the General Assembly
recommends taking the following further initiatives at the local, national,
regional and international levels for the further implementation of the 10
commitments adopted at the World Summit for Social Development as contained
in the Report of the World Summit for Social Development.
Commitment 1: To create an
economic, political, social, cultural and legal environment that will enable
people to achieve social development:
1bis. Governments, while designing and implementing their
development policies, should ensure that people are placed at the centre of
development. Therefore, people must have the right and the ability to
participate fully in the social, economic and political life of their
societies. Our global drive for social development and the recommendations
for action contained in this document are made in a spirit of consensus and
international cooperation, in full conformity with the purposes and
principles of the Charter of the United Nations, recognizing that the
formulation and implementation of strategies, policies, programmes and
actions for social development are the responsibility of each country and
should take into account the economic, social and environmental diversity of
conditions in each country, with full respect for the various religious and
ethical values, cultural backgrounds and philosophical convictions of its
people, and in conformity with all human rights and fundamental freedoms. In
this context, international cooperation is essential for the full
implementation of social development programmes and actions.
2. Make a renewed commitment to effective, transparent and
accountable governance and democratic institutions responsive to the needs
of people, that enable people to take an active part in decision making
about priorities, policies and strategies.
3. Reaffirm the crucial role of Government in advancing
people-centred sustainable development through actions to develop and
maintain increased equality and equity, including gender equality; markets
which function efficiently within a framework of ethical values; policies to
eradicate poverty and enhance productive employment; universal and equal
access to basic social services; social protection and support for
disadvantaged and vulnerable groups.
5. Reaffirm, promote, and strive to ensure the realization
of the rights set out in relevant international instruments and
declarations, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and the
Declaration on the Right to Development, including those relating to
education, food, shelter, employment, health and information, particularly
in order to assist people living in poverty and to ensure the strengthening
of national and local institutions in charge of their implementation.
5bis. Urge the international community, particularly
creditor and debtor countries and pertinent international financial
institutions, to identify and implement development-oriented and durable
solutions to external debt and debt-servicing problems of developing
countries, which constitute an element affecting the development efforts and
economic growth, inter alia, through debt relief, including the option of
ODA debt cancellation and thereby strengthen the efforts of the Government
of such countries to attain the full realization of the economic, social and
cultural rights of their people.
6. Enhance positive interaction among environmental,
economic and social policies as also being essential for the successful
attainment of the Social Summit goals by promoting the coordinated and
simultaneous consideration of this objective in the process of policy
formulation, and recognizing continuously the impact of social, economic and
financial policies on employment and sustainable livelihoods, poverty and
social development.
6bis. Instituting systems for ensuring the ex ante
assessment and continuous monitoring of the social impact of economic
policies at both the international and national levels, with a particular
focus on the formulation of macroeconomic policies for dealing with
financial crises and the design of economic reform programmes.
6ter. Developing national and, where appropriate, regional
guidelines, taking into account broad definitions of productivity and
efficiency, in order to undertake comprehensive assessments of the social
and economic costs of unemployment and poverty to facilitate appropriate
strategies for employment generation and poverty eradication.
7. Acknowledging that there is no single universal path to
achieving social development and recognizing the importance of sharing
information by Member States on their national experiences and best
practices in social development on the basis of equality and mutual respect,
request the ECOSOC to consider, through the Commission for Social
Development, ways of sharing these experiences and practices, to assist
Member States in the development of policies to promote the goals of the
Summit.
8. Strengthen the capacities of developing countries and
countries with economies in transition to address the obstacles that hinder
their participation in an increasingly globalized economy through:
(a) Stimulating and strengthening the industrialization
process in developing countries;
(b) Facilitating the transfer to developing countries and
countries with economies in transition, of appropriate technology, know-how,
knowledge and information including for social development and capacity
building, complementing efforts of these countries in this regard through
enhanced international cooperation, including technical cooperation and
adequate financial resources;
(c) Increasing and improving access of products and
services of developing countries to international markets through, inter
alia, the negotiated reduction of tariff barriers and the elimination of
non-tariff barriers which unjustifiably hinder trade of developing
countries, according to the multilateral trading system;
(c)bis Increasing and improving access of products and
services of countries with economies in transition to international markets;
(d) Attaining, according to existing multilateral trading
rules, greater universality of the multilateral trading system and
accelerating the process directed towards the further accession to the World
Trade Organization (WTO) of developing countries and countries with
economies in transition;
(e) Providing technical assistance bilaterally and through
the auspices of the WTO, the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD), the International Trade Center (ITC) and other
organizations to developing countries and countries with economies in
transition, for capacity-building and to address the ability to trade, as
well as to participate effectively in international economic fora, and in
international trade negotiations, including the WTO dispute settlement
mechanism.
9. Take steps with a view to the avoidance of, and refrain
from any unilateral measure, not in accordance with international law and
the Charter of the United Nations that impedes the full achievement of
economic and social development by the population of the affected countries,
in particular women, children and persons with special needs, that hinders
their well-being and that creates obstacles to the full enjoyment of their
human rights, including the right of everyone to a standard of living
adequate for their health and well-being and their right to food, medical
care, and the necessary social services. Ensure that food and medicine are
not used as a tool for political pressure.
10. Reduce negative impacts of international financial
turbulence on social and economic development, inter alia, through:
(a) Improving preventive and other measures and early
warning capabilities to address the excessive volatility of short-term
capital flows, including consideration, inter alia, of a temporary debt
standstill;
(b) Enhancing institutional capacities at the national and
international levels to improve transparency of financial flows, and
developing, strengthening and enforcing regulatory frameworks for monitoring
operations, inter alia, to reduce the potential negative impact of financial
operations;
(b)bis Where appropriate, establishing or strengthening at
the regional level intergovernmental coordination mechanisms in economic,
financial and social fields to promote economic and financial stability and
social development at that level;
(c) Providing technical assistance to developing countries
and countries with economies in transition to strengthen their domestic
capital markets and to ensure their proper regulation by national
Government;
(c)bis Taking measures to protect basic social services,
in particular education and health, in the policies and programmes adopted
by countries when dealing with international financial crises;
(d) Acting to strengthen national institutions and
consultative mechanisms for economic policy formulation, involving improved
transparency and consultation with civil society;
(e) Encouraging international financial institutions and
other related mechanisms to be vigilant about potential financial crises in
countries, and assist countries to develop their capacities to forestall and
mitigate crises with a view to providing a timely and effective response.
11. Recommend the High-Level International
Intergovernmental Event on Financing for Development, to be held in 2001, to
consider mobilization of national and international resources for social
development for the implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration and
Programme of Action.
Note: Decision taken to move para. 11 to commitment 9.
13. Ensure the effective involvement of developing
countries and countries with economies in transition in the international
economic decision-making process through, inter alia, greater participation
in the international economic fora, ensuring transparency and accountability
of international financial institutions to accord a central position for
social development in their policies and programmes.
14. Enhance development cooperation in order to augment
the productive potential of people in developing countries, and to build the
capacity, among others, of the private sector to compete more effectively in
the global marketplace in order to create the basis for generating greater
resources for social development.
15. Support the Cologne initiative for the reduction of
debt, particularly the speedy implementation of the enhanced Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries Debt Initiative, and welcome commitments to ensure
that additional financing is mobilized to fully fund HIPC debt relief over
the longer term and the provision that funds saved should be used to support
anti-poverty programmes and social development.
16. Bearing in mind that corporations must abide by
national legislation, encourage corporate social responsibility so that it
contributes to social development goals by, inter alia:
(a) Promoting increased corporate awareness of the
inter-relationship between social development and economic growth;
(b) Providing a legal, economic and social policy
framework that is just and stable to support and stimulate private sector
initiatives aimed at achieving these goals;
(c) Enhancing partnerships with business, trade unions and
civil society at the national level in support of the goals of the Summit.
18. Take further effective measures to remove the
obstacles for the realization of the right of peoples to self determination,
in particular peoples living under colonial and foreign occupation, that
continue to adversely affect their economic and social development, and that
are incompatible with the dignity and worth of the human person and must be
combatted and eliminated.
19. Enhance international cooperation, including
burden-sharing, and coordination of humanitarian assistance to countries
affected by natural disasters and other humanitarian emergencies and
post-conflict situations in ways that will be supportive of recovery and
long-term development.
19bis. Create and improve conditions to allow for the
voluntary repatriation of refugees in safety and dignity to their countries
of origin, and the voluntary and safe return of internally displaced persons
to their places of origin and their smooth reintegration into their
societies.
20. Encourage relevant bodies of the United Nations system
to address the issue of corruption which undermines the efforts made and
efficient use of resources for social development and in that context, take
note of the report of the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal
Justice, which recommended that the General Assembly adopt a resolution to
start the elaboration of an effective international legal instrument against
corruption and encourage relevant bodies of the United Nations system to
give it serious consideration.
21. Encourage the ongoing work on a draft convention
against transnational organized crime and the additional protocols thereto
with a view to the speedy finalization of this work.
22. Give proper consideration to urgent and effective
measures regarding the issue of the social and humanitarian impact of
sanctions, in particular on women and children, with a view to minimizing
social and humanitarian effects of sanctions.
23. Support countries with economies in transition to
establish effective regulatory environments, including adequate legal
frameworks and institutions, to develop progressive and efficient tax
systems to provide adequate resources for social development and to better
utilize existing material and labour resources, through, inter alia,
implementing measures to reduce the social costs of transition, in
particular in order to reverse the trend of cuts in public spending for
social services, and encouraging efforts to integrate non-governmental
organizations, trade unions, employer organizations, and other organizations
of civil society into the operation of social policy.
Commitment 2: To eradicate
poverty in the world, through decisive national actions and international
cooperation, as an ethical, social, political and economic imperative of
humankind:
24. Place poverty eradication at the centre of economic
and social development and build consensus with all relevant actors at all
levels on policies and strategies to reduce the proportion of people living
in extreme poverty by one half by the year 2015, with a view to eradicating
poverty.
27. Urge countries that have not yet done so to
incorporate goals and targets for combating poverty into their national
strategies for socio-economic development and to adjust their national
strategies, as appropriate to the country context, by: striving to establish
or strengthen institutional mechanisms that ensure a multi-sectoral approach
to poverty eradication; and enhancing the capacity of local government to
address poverty while maintaining accountability, both to the central
government for funds allocated by it, and to the constituents concerning the
use of those funds.
27bis. In the context of comprehensive national strategies
on poverty eradication, integrate policies at all levels, including economic
and fiscal policies, capacity building and institution-building, and giving
priority to investments in education and health, social protection and basic
social services, in order to help empower people living in poverty, by:
(a) Promoting coherence between national and international
strategies and programmes to combat poverty at all levels;
(b) Assisting developing countries in improving capacities
for poverty related data collection and analysis which is necessary for
formulation of poverty reduction policies;
(c) Ensuring that macroeconomic policies reflect and fully
integrate, inter alia, employment growth and poverty reduction goals;
(d) Encouraging Governments to re-evaluate, as
appropriate, their national fiscal policies, including progressive tax
mechanisms, with the aim of reducing income inequalities and promoting
social equity;
(e) Restructuring public expenditure policies to make them
more efficient, transparent and with clear lines of accountability to
maximize their impact on poverty eradication;
(f) Improving access for people living in poverty to
productive resources by implementing measures such as skills training and
micro-credit schemes;
(g) Using employment policies, including self-employment,
to reduce poverty;
(h) Encouraging the growth of small and medium-sized
enterprises by formulating a consistent, long-term policy to support such
enterprises; and by, inter alia, furthering access to capital and credit,
promoting training opportunities and appropriate technology, reducing
bureaucratic regulations, promoting gender equality and labour standards and
fostering improved access of small and medium-sized enterprises to
infrastructure project contracts;
(i) Devising ways and means to allow for better
acknowledgement of the nature of the informal sector so as to evaluate its
share in the national economy and, where appropriate, to improve its
productivity by increasing training and access to capital, including
micro-credit, to progressively improve working conditions through respect
for basic workers' rights, to enhance social protection and to facilitate
its eventual integration into the formal economy;
(j) Establishing, strengthening and expanding micro-credit
and other financial instruments adapted to the needs and potentials of
marginalized people and vulnerable groups in order to make micro-credit
available to a greater number of people, particularly women, and
disadvantaged groups, especially people living in poverty, and to make
information and training on its effective operation and benefits widely
available;
(k) Encouraging and facilitating the development of
cooperatives, where appropriate;
(l) Encouraging sustainable rural development, especially
in low agricultural potential areas;
(l bis) Expanding advisory services and technical
assistance in the areas of agriculture, including animal husbandry and
fisheries, and promoting small businesses and self-employment for rural
workers, in particular women, in the light of increasing rural poverty,
landlessness and rural-urban migration; similarly, promoting
industrialization in rural areas for employment generation;
(m) Developing and promoting institutional capacities
(e.g., by management training);
(n) Ensuring a gender equality perspective at all levels,
and taking measures to counteract the feminization of poverty, keeping in
mind the potential role of women and girls in poverty eradication;
(o) Promoting participatory poverty assessments as well as
social impact assessments which include sex, age and relevant socio-economic
categories, defining, inter alia, the extent and localization of poverty and
the groups most severely affected, in order to design anti-poverty
strategies;
(p) Targeting the special needs of vulnerable and
disadvantaged groups;
(q) Supporting initiatives that help empower people living
in poverty, especially female heads of households, and promote their
capacities for self-organization to enable them to better utilize available
opportunities, basic social services and productive resources;
(r) Ensuring community participation in the formulation
and implementation of poverty reduction strategies and programmes with a
view to increasing people's self reliance and promoting a holistic approach
to the various needs of the people. Civil society can play an important role
in cooperation with national Governments in planning, organizing and
providing basic social services;
(s) Ensuring access for all to basic social services, even
during financial crises;
(u) Using health policies as an instrument for poverty
eradication, along the lines of the World Health Organization (WHO) strategy
on poverty and health, develop sustainable and effectively managed pro-poor
health systems which focus on the major diseases and health problems
affecting the poor, achieving greater equity in health financing, and take
also into account the provision of and universal access to high quality
primary health care throughout the life cycle, including sexual and
reproductive health care, not later than 2015, as well as health education
programmes, clean water and safe sanitation, nutrition, food security and
immunization programmes;
(v) Encouraging decentralization in the delivery of basic
social services as a means of responding more efficiently to the needs of
the people.
26. Develop and implement sustainable pro-poor growth
strategies that enhance the potential and increase the ability of women and
men living in poverty to improve their lives; such strategies could include
improving access to productive resources and micro-finance, and establishing
programmes to raise productivity and improve knowledge, skills and
capabilities.
27ter Share best practices on how to establish or improve
social protection systems covering risks that cannot be mastered by the
beneficiaries themselves and trap people into poverty, ensuring access to
social protection, including social safety nets, for people living in
poverty and promoting the role of systems of self-help and mutual benefits,
including small, community-based innovative schemes, thereby supporting
social cohesion and contributing to more universal and comprehensive systems
of protection, taking into account country-specific circumstances, by:
(a) Exploring ways and means, supported by resources,
including, as appropriate, through the reallocation of resources and
financial assistance from donors, to develop social protection systems for
vulnerable, unprotected and uninsured people; and in this context, call upon
the ILO and other relevant international organizations, within their
mandates, to render technical assistance to developing countries and
countries with economies in transition, upon their request;
(b) Developing, as required, new mechanisms to ensure the
sustainability of these systems in the appropriate country context,
especially that of ageing populations and increased unemployment.
27quater. Improve national capacity to address hunger,
malnutrition and food insecurity at the household level, in cooperation with
the World Food Programme (WFP), the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
and other concerned agencies, in particular, by recognizing and supporting
women in their pivotal role in providing food security. In this regard, call
on Governments which have not done so to place food security as an essential
element of their poverty eradication strategies and social policies.
33. Encourage international support to countries with
economies in transition in order to assist them in:
(a) Combining universal coverage of social services with
targeted assistance to the most vulnerable groups to ease the pains of
transition;
(b) Implementing policies to involve those individuals
marginalized by the transition and to overcome exclusion and further
deprivation;
(c) Maintaining adequate social programmes.
Commitment 3: To promote
the goal of full employment as a basic priority of our economic and social
policies, and to enable all men and women to attain secure and sustainable
livelihoods through freely chosen productive employment and work:
34. Re-assess, as appropriate, their macro-economic
policies with the aims of greater employment generation and reduction in the
poverty level while striving for and maintaining low inflation rates.
35. Create an enabling environment for social dialogue by
ensuring effective representation and participation of workers' and
employers' organizations to contribute to the development of policies for
achieving broad based social progress.
36. Expand opportunities for productive employment,
including self-employment, with particular focus on small and medium-sized
enterprises, by investing in the development of human resources,
entrepreneurship and employability, especially through education, vocational
and management training, occupational safety and health and by, inter alia,
strengthening technical cooperation and cooperation with the private sector
in this area.
37. Support the comprehensive ILO programme on decent
work, which includes promoting equal opportunities for all women and men,
including persons with disabilities, to obtain decent and productive work,
with full respect for the basic rights of workers as defined by relevant ILO
and other international instruments, including prohibitions on forced labour
and child labour, safeguarding of the rights of freedom of association and
collective bargaining, equal remuneration for women and men for work of
equal value, and non-discrimination in employment, and improving social
protection and promoting social dialogue.
37bis. Recognize the need to elaborate a coherent and
coordinated international strategy on employment to increase opportunities
for people to achieve sustainable livelihoods and gain access to employment,
and in this connection support the convening of a world employment forum by
the International Labour Organization in 2001.
37ter Invite the International Labour Organization to
facilitate a coordinated exchange of best practices in the field of
employment policies to stimulate and expand employment generation, reduce
unemployment, enhance the quality of work and improve labour market and
employment services.
38. Improve the quality of work and level of employment
by, inter alia:
(a) Making continued efforts towards ratifying - where
they have not done so - and fully implement the ILO conventions concerning
basic workers' rights, namely freedom of association and the effective
recognition of the right to organize and bargain collectively, the
elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labour, the effective
abolition of child labour and the elimination of discrimination in respect
of employment and occupation;
(b) Strongly considering ratification and full
implementation of other ILO conventions concerning the employment rights of
minors, women, youth, persons with disabilities, migrants and indigenous
people;
(b)bis Respecting, promoting and realizing the principles
contained in the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at
Work and Its Follow-up;
(c) Supporting and participating in the global campaign
for the immediate elimination of the worst forms of child labour, including
by promoting universal ratification and implementation of the ILO Worst
Forms of Child Labour Convention, No. 182;
(d) Promoting safe and healthy settings at work in order
to improve working conditions and to reduce the impact on individuals and
health care systems of occupational accidents and diseases.
39bis. Ensure effective and comprehensive action to
eliminate harmful child labour through, inter alia, designing and
implementing national plans of action; ensuring access to basic education;
strengthening employment and income earning opportunities for families of
child workers; giving special attention to the girl child; promoting
cooperation among Governments, employers' and workers' organizations,
families of child workers and civil society; and stressing the need for
close cooperation among the ILO, the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF), the World Bank and other relevant actors.
39ter. Call upon relevant organizations of the United
Nations system to provide national Governments with technical assistance in
a coordinated manner in order to help them in their efforts to promote
social development and achieve the goals of poverty eradication, full
employment and social integration, including, inter alia, gender equality.
40. Encourage the private sector to respect basic worker
rights as reaffirmed in the Declaration on the Fundamental Principles and
Rights at Work.
49. Improve methods for collection and analysis of basic
employment data, disaggregated by, inter alia, age, sex and relevant
socio-economic categories, as appropriate in the country context, including
with regard to the informal, agricultural and service sectors, and new forms
of employment and assess the feasibility of developing and improving
mechanisms to measure unremunerated work.
42. Consider the possibility of a major event on the
informal sector in the year 2002, to be organized by the ILO.
42bis. Invite the International Labour Organization to
help Member States, upon request, extend a range of support measures to
informal sector workers, including legal rights, social protection and
access to credit.
42ter. Devise and strengthen the modalities of coverage of
social protection systems, as appropriate, to meet the needs of people
engaged in flexible forms of employment.
44. Wherever appropriate, adopt and/or strengthen
legislation or other mechanisms for determining minimum wages.
41. Ensure that migrant workers benefit from the
protection provided by relevant national and international instruments, take
concrete and effective measures against the exploitation of migrant workers,
and encourage all countries to consider the ratification and full
implementation of the relevant international instruments on migrant workers,
including the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of
All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families.
45. Undertake appropriate measures, in cooperation with
employers' and workers' organizations, as well as other relevant actors of
civil society, to address the specific employment issues of youth, ageing
workers, persons with disabilities, single parents and long-term unemployed,
with particular regard to women, including, inter alia:
(a) Improving access to new technologies, vocational
training and counselling, implementing programmes for job placement, and
facilitating the acquisition of work experience, including on-the-job
training, as well as by the recognition of work experience acquired through
voluntary activities and unpaid work;
(b) Promoting lifelong learning and access to labour
market information, and tailoring programmes to meet the specific needs of
these groups in the acquisition of skills required in the knowledge-based
economy;
(c) Involving the private sector in skill training
programmes;
(d) Adapting and improving access to technical, secondary
and higher education curricula, with regard to youth, to meet the needs of a
rapidly changing labour market and easing transition between learning and
work;
(e) Enabling older workers to remain and actively
participate in working life.
47. Promote gender equality and eliminate gender
discrimination in the labour market by:
(a) Promoting the principles of equal remuneration and
elimination of discrimination and strongly considering ratifying the ILO
conventions concerning equal remuneration for men and women workers for work
of equal value (No. 100), and concerning discrimination in respect of
employment and occupation (No. 111) and fully implementing them once
ratified;
(b) Ensuring the right to equal pay for equal work or work
of equal value for women and men;
(c) Assisting women and men to reconcile employment and
family responsibilities by, inter alia, flexible working arrangements,
including parental voluntary part-time employment and work-sharing, as well
as accessible and affordable quality child-care and dependent-care
facilities, paying particular attention to the needs of single-parent
households.
Commitment 4: To promote
social integration by fostering societies that are stable, safe and just and
that are based on the promotion and protection of all human rights, as well
as on non-discrimination, tolerance, respect for diversity, equality of
opportunity, solidarity, security, and participation of all people,
including disadvantaged and vulnerable groups and persons:
51. Strengthen mechanisms for participation of all people,
and promoting cooperation and dialogue among all levels of government and
civil society as contributions to social integration.
52. Strengthen support for civil society, including
community organizations working with groups with special needs and
accelerate implementation of United Nations instruments relating to those
groups, encouraging sustained investment in social institutions and social
capital, enhancing social networks, particularly with respect to people
living in poverty and other marginalized groups.
53. Ensure an enabling environment for civil society
organizations, inter alia, to facilitate their participation in the delivery
of social services in a coordinated, democratic, transparent and accountable
manner. Efforts should also be made to facilitate the contribution of civil
society organizations, particularly from developing countries, to relevant
international forums.
53ter. Promote the effective participation and
contribution of disadvantaged and vulnerable groups and persons when drawing
up legislation and programmes for poverty eradication and social inclusion.
54. Promote the contribution that voluntarism can make to
the creation of caring societies as an additional mechanism in the promotion
of social integration. The Commission for Social Development is invited to
consider the issue in 2001, the International Year of Volunteers.
54bis. Recognize that the family is the basic unit of
society and that it plays a key role in social development and is a strong
force of social cohesion and integration. In different cultural, political
and social systems, various forms of the family exist. Further recognize
that equality and equity between women and men and respect for the rights of
all family members are essential for family well-being and for society at
large and promote appropriate actions to meet the needs of families and
their individual members, particularly in the areas of economic support and
provision of social services. Greater attention should be paid to helping
the family in its supporting, educating and nurturing roles, to the causes
and consequences of family disintegration and to the adoption of measures to
reconcile work and family life for women and men.
55. Promote the involvement of volunteers in social
development, inter alia, by encouraging Governments, taking into account the
views of all actors, to develop comprehensive strategies and programmes, by
raising public awareness about the value and opportunities of voluntarism
and by facilitating an enabling environment for individuals and other actors
of civil society to engage in, and the private sector to support, voluntary
activities.
56. Encourage the media, including the Internet and other
forms of information technology, to contribute to the promotion of social
integration by adopting inclusive and participatory approaches in the
production, dissemination and use of information, including by its
accessibility to disadvantaged and marginalized groups.
57. While recognizing the positive role of the media and
information technology, including the Internet, identify and take measures
to counter the increasing dissemination of child pornography and other
obscene materials, intolerance, including religious intolerance, hatred,
racism, discrimination based on sex and age and the incitement to violence
through the media and information technology, including the Internet.
58. Ensure that education at all levels promotes all human
rights and fundamental freedoms, tolerance, peace, understanding of and
respect for cultural diversity and solidarity in a globally interdependent
world, as expressed in the Declaration and Programme of Action for the
Culture of Peace, as well as in the context of the United Nations Year of
Dialogue among Civilizations (2001), the United Nations Decade for Human
Rights Education (1995-2005) and the Third Decade to Combat Racism, Racial
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance.
59. Eliminate all forms of discrimination, including
racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, and in this
context, support the implementation of the United Nations International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination and the
convening of the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination,
Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, to be held in South Africa in 2001.
59bis. Ensure continued and intensified action to combat
all forms of gender-based violence and recognize that violence against
women, whether in private or public life, both violates and impairs or
nullifies the enjoyment by women of their human rights and fundamental
freedoms.
21bis. Recognize the contribution of indigenous people to
society, promote ways of giving them greater responsibility for their own
affairs through, inter alia:
(a) Seeking means of giving them effective voice in
decisions directly affecting them;
(b) Encouraging United Nations agencies within their
respective mandates to take effective programmatic measures for engaging
indigenous people in matters relevant to their interests and concerns.
21ter. Encourage the ongoing work on a draft declaration
on the rights of indigenous people, with the aim of achieving completion
prior to conclusion of the International Decade on the World's Indigenous
People in 2004 and support the establishment of a United Nations permanent
forum to discuss indigenous issues within the mandate of the Economic and
Social Council relating to economic and social development, culture, the
environment, education, health and human rights.
60. Exchange views and information on national experience
and best practices in designing and implementing policies and programmes on
ageing, and in promoting full integration and continued participation of
older persons in society as full actors in the development process, and in
this context support the convening of the Second World Assembly on Ageing,
to be held in Spain in the year 2002.
60bis. Support, on an urgent basis, research on the actual
and projected situation of older persons, particularly in developing
countries, especially on their productive role and contributions to
development, in order to contribute significantly to the revision of the
World Plan of Action at the Second World Assembly on Ageing.
61. Expand the range of policies and measures, inter alia,
by promoting the implementation of the United Nations Standard Rules on the
Equalization of Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities, to empower
persons with disabilities to play their full role in society. Special
attention should be given to women and children with disabilities and to
persons with developmental, mental and psychiatric disabilities.
61bis. Ensure access to employment for persons with
disabilities through the organization and design of the workplace
environment and improve their employability through measures which enhance
education and acquisition of skills; through rehabilitation within the
community wherever possible; and other direct measures, which may include
incentives to enterprises to employ people with disabilities.
63. Intensify efforts to ensure the protection of the
human rights and dignity of migrants, irrespective of their legal status,
and the social and economic integration of documented migrants, the
provision of effective protection for migrants, particularly by implementing
the relevant provisions of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, the
provision of basic social services, the facilitation of family reunification
of documented migrants and their equal treatment under the law.
64. Promote measures, at the national and international
levels, to prevent illegal trafficking and transport of migrants and
trafficking in persons, particularly women and children, for the purposes of
prostitution, economic exploitation as well as any other forms of
exploitation, such as domestic servitude and bonded labour. Develop clear
penalties for trafficking in persons and trafficking and illegal transport
of migrants, backed by effective administrative procedures and laws,
ensuring the punishment of those who have been convicted of such crimes.
64bis. Finalize as soon as possible the trafficking and
smuggling protocols which are currently being negotiated in Vienna by the Ad
Hoc Committee on the Elaboration of a Convention against Transnational
Organized Crime.
65. Support the efforts of the United Nations
International Drug Control Programme to implement its mandate within the
framework of international drug control treaties and the outcome of the
twentieth special session of the General Assembly devoted to combating the
world drug problem in a balanced and comprehensive approach, which includes
reducing demand, fighting trafficking and reducing supply of narcotic drugs
and psychotropic substances.
65bis. Recognize that stable, supportive and nurturing
family relationships, supported by communities and, where available,
professional services, can provide a vital shield against substance abuse,
particularly among minors. Schools and the media including through the use
of information technologies, including the Internet, should be encouraged to
provide young people with information on the dangers of substance abuse and
addiction and on how to seek help.
65ter Recognize that the consumption of tobacco and the
abuse of alcohol, especially by young women and men, pose a major threat to
health; support the development in each country of comprehensive programmes
to reduce the consumption of tobacco, exposure to environmental tobacco
smoke and the abuse of alcohol.
66. Further strengthen the effectiveness of organizations
and mechanisms working for the prevention and peaceful resolution of
conflicts and to address their social roots and consequences.
67. Strengthen the capability of relevant United Nations
bodies, within their respective mandates, to promote measures for social
integration in their post-conflict management strategies and activities,
including in their research, analyses, training and operational activities,
so as to better address trauma recovery, rehabilitation, reconciliation and
reconstruction in post-conflict situations, inter alia, by promoting
participatory development initiatives. Greater attention should be given to
children, including unaccompanied refugee minors, displaced children,
children separated from their families, those acting as soldiers and those
involved in armed conflicts.
Commitment 5: To promote
full respect for human dignity and to achieve equality and equity between
women and men and to recognize and enhance the participation and leadership
roles of women in political, civil, economic, social and cultural life and
in development:
69ter. Promote the full enjoyment of all human rights and
fundamental freedoms by all women and girls as one of the prerequisites for
gender equality. Governments should ensure that the human rights of women
and girls are respected, protected and promoted through the development,
implementation and effective enforcement of gender-sensitive policies and
legislation.
70. The elimination of discrimination against women and
their empowerment and full participation in all areas of life and at all
levels should be priority objectives at the national as well as the
international level, and an intrinsic part of social development. Equitable
social development requires full respect for human dignity, equality and
equity between women and men, the mainstreaming of gender considerations in
all levels of policy-making and in the planning of programmes and projects.
Despite some progress, gender mainstreaming is not yet universal, and
gender-based inequality continues in many areas of most societies.
71. Take fully into account and implement the outcome of
the 23rd special session of the General Assembly entitled "Women 2000:
gender equality, development and peace for the twenty-first century".
72. Ensure gender mainstreaming in the implementation of
each of the further initiatives related to each of the commitments made at
the Summit, considering the specific roles and needs of women in all areas
of social development, by, inter alia, evaluating the gender implications of
proposals and taking action to correct situations in which women are
disadvantaged. The use of positive or affirmative action and empowerment
programmes is commended to both Governments and international organizations.
72bis. Strengthen national efforts, including with
assistance from the international community, to promote the empowerment of
women by, inter alia:
(a) Closing the gender gap in primary and secondary
education by 2005 and ensuring free compulsory and universal primary
education for both girls and boys by 2015;
(b) Increasing women's and girls' access to all levels and
forms of education;
(b)bis Achieving a 50% improvement in levels of adult
literacy by 2015, especially for women;
(c) Increasing women's participation and bringing about a
balanced representation of women and men in all sectors and occupations in
the labour market and closing the gender gap in earnings;
(d) Ensuring the reduction of maternal morbidity and
mortality as a health sector priority;
(e) Eliminating all forms of violence against women, in
the domestic as well as in the public sphere;
(f) Promoting programmes to enable women and men to
reconcile their work and family responsibilities and to encourage men to
share equally with women household and child care responsibilities.
72quater. Promote international cooperation to support
regional and national efforts in the development and use of gender-related
analysis and statistics by, inter alia, providing national statistical
offices, upon their request, with institutional and financial support in
order to enable them to respond to requests for data disaggregated by sex
and age for use by national Governments in the formulation of
gender-sensitive statistical indicators for monitoring and policy and
programme impact assessment, as well as to undertake regular strategic
surveys.
72quin. Support Governments in their efforts to institute
action-oriented programmes and measures to accelerate the full
implementation of the Copenhagen Programme of Action and the Beijing
Platform for Action, with time-bound targets and/or measurable goals and
evaluation methods, including gender-impact assessments, with full
participation of women for measuring and analyzing progress.
73. Consider signing and ratifying the Optional Protocol
to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women.
73bis. Increased efforts are needed to provide equal
access to education, health, and social services and to ensure women's and
girls' rights to education and the enjoyment of the highest attainable
standard of physical and mental health and well-being throughout the life
cycle, as well as adequate, affordable and universally accessible health
care and services including sexual and reproductive health, particularly in
the face of the HIV/AIDS pandemic; they are also necessary with regard to
the growing proportion of older women.
73ter. Ensure that the reduction of maternal morbidity and
mortality is a health sector priority and that women have ready access to
essential obstetric care, well equipped and adequately staffed maternal
health care services, skilled attendants at delivery, emergency obstetric
care, effective referral and transport to higher levels of care when
necessary, post-partum care and family planning in order to, inter alia,
promote safe motherhood, and give priority attention to measures to prevent,
detect and treat breast, cervical and ovarian cancer and osteoporosis, and
sexually-transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS.
Commitment 6: To promote
and attain the goals of universal and equitable access to quality education,
the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, and the
access of all to primary health care, making particular efforts to rectify
inequalities relating to social conditions and without distinction as to
race, national origin, gender, age or disability; respecting and promoting
our common and particular cultures; striving to strengthen the role of
culture in development; preserving the essential bases of people-centred
sustainable development; and contributing to the full development of human
resources and to social development, with the purpose of eradicating
poverty, promoting full and productive employment and fostering social
integration:
74. Recognize Governments' primary responsibility for
providing or ensuring access to basic social services for all; develop
sustainable, pro-poor health and education systems by promoting community
participation in planning and managing basic social services, including
health promotion and disease prevention; diversify approaches to meet local
needs, to the extent possible utilizing local skills and resources.
73bis. Ensure appropriate and effective expenditure of
resources for universal access to basic education and primary health care,
within the country context, in recognition of the positive impact this can
have on economic and social development, with particular efforts to target
the special needs of vulnerable and disadvantaged groups.
74bis. Improve the performance of health care systems, in
particular at the primary health care level, by broadening access to health
care.
74ter. Make basic health services available to all members
of society and, where appropriate, explore the possibility of promoting
non-profit community-based health insurance programmes among possible
methods to support the Government to promote accessible primary health care
for all.
81. Encourage new action at the international level,
including the feasibility of proclaiming a United Nations Literacy Decade,
to support national efforts to achieve universal access to basic education
and primary health services for all by the year 2015.
81bis Invite international organizations, in particular
the international financial institutions, according to their mandates, to
keep in mind the overall objective of facilitating long-term development to
support national health and education programmes.
84. Reaffirm the Framework for Action for education for
all adopted at the World Education Forum in Dakar, to develop or strengthen
national strategies or action plans at the appropriate level to promote its
goals: to ensure that by 2015 all children, with special emphasis on girls
and children in difficult circumstances or with special needs, including
children with disabilities, have access to and complete free and compulsory
primary education of good quality; to improve early childhood care and
education; to ensure access to appropriate learning, life skills, and
citizenship programmes; to achieve a 50 percent improvement in levels of
adult literacy; to improve the quality of education; and to take action to
eliminate gender disparities and to assure girls and women full and equal
access to education.
84bis Recognize that achieving education for all will
require additional financial support by countries and increased development
assistance and debt relief for education by bilateral and multilateral
donors, estimated to cost in the order of $8 billion a year. It is therefore
essential that new, concrete financial commitments be made by national
governments and also by bilateral and multilateral donors including the
World Bank and the regional development banks, by civil society and by
foundations.
85. Take measures to better acknowledge and support the
work of teachers and other educational personnel, including, where
appropriate, improved compensation and benefits, relevant training and
retraining programmes, human resource and career development strategies, and
measures to encourage teachers' sustained contributions to quality
education.
86. Encourage and assist developing countries and others
in need in building capacities for secondary and tertiary education, as well
as training students in the skills and technologies necessary for effective
participation in the modern, knowledge-based global economy, and promote
international exchanges in the field of education so as to foster greater
self-reliance in meeting the challenges of social and economic development
and to increase sensitivity for and better understanding of all cultures and
awareness of global issues.
75. Take all appropriate measures to ensure that
infectious and parasitic diseases, such as malaria, tuberculosis, leprosy
and schistosomiasis, neither continue to take their devastating toll nor
impede economic and social progress; and strengthen national and
international efforts to combat these diseases, inter alia, through capacity
building in the developing countries with the cooperation of the World
Health Organization including support for research centres.
75bis Take multisectoral measures at the national level to
enable all women and men, including young people, to protect themselves and
others against and be protected from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
infection, to counteract the devastating impact of the epidemic on personal,
social and economic development. It is particularly important to protect the
dignity and the human rights of, and to improve the quality of life for,
people living with HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Measures
to enhance prevention and address the consequences of the transmission of
HIV/AIDS and other sexually-transmitted infections may include:
(a) Strengthening health care services, including sexual
and reproductive health;
(b) Strengthening information, education and communication
campaigns to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS and to promote safe and responsible
sexual behaviour, in full partnership with youth, parents, families,
educators and heath care providers;
(c) Training health care providers in all areas of
HIV/AIDS and STI prevention and control and giving special attention to the
avoidance of contaminating equipment and blood products, the need to ensure
safe blood supply and to the avoidance of reusing or sharing needles among
injecting drug users;
(d) Developing and implementing strategies to prevent
mother-to-child transmission;
(e) Promoting analyses of the political, cultural, social,
economic and legal aspects of HIV/AIDS, in order to develop strategies and
measures to address the epidemic and its impact on national development;
(f) Providing social and educational support to
communities, households, orphans and children affected by HIV and AIDS.
76. Strengthen political commitment and efforts at the
international and national levels against HIV/AIDS, with a focus on
developing countries and countries with economies in transition, through
partnership among the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)
and its cosponsors, bilateral donors, Governments and non-governmental
organizations, including youth organizations, and the private sector, based
on a multisectoral approach encompassing, among other things, education and
prevention programmes and services, care, including pre-natal care, access
to affordable medications and other pharmaceutical agents, and support for
people living with HIV/AIDS, including home-based care, family planning
programmes and the empowerment of women.
77. Provide support to countries with economies in
transition to revitalize systems of primary health care and to promote more
vigorous campaigns for health education and the promotion of healthy
lifestyles.
78. Encourage, at all levels, arrangements and incentives
to mobilize commercial enterprises, especially in pharmaceuticals, to invest
in research aimed at finding remedies that can be provided at affordable
prices for diseases that particularly afflict people in developing
countries, and invite the World Health Organization to consider improving
partnerships between the public and private sectors in the area of health
research.
80. Recognize the right of everyone to the enjoyment of
the highest attainable standards of physical and mental health as contained
in relevant international human rights instruments as well as in the WHO
Constitution. Further recognize the critical importance of access to
essential medicines at affordable prices. Acknowledge the contribution of
intellectual property rights to promote further research, development and
distribution of drugs, and that these intellectual property rights should
contribute to the mutual advantage of producers and users of technological
knowledge and in a manner conducive to social and economic welfare. Agree
that Member States may freely exercise, consistent with national laws and
international agreements acceded to, in an unrestricted manner, the options
available to them under international agreements to protect and advance
access to life-saving, essential medicines.
82. Invite the World Health Organization, in collaboration
with UNCTAD, the World Trade Organization and other concerned agencies, to
help strengthen the capacities of developing countries, particularly the
least developed countries to analyze the consequences of agreements on trade
in health services for health equity and the ability to meet the health
needs of people living in poverty, and to develop policies to ensure the
promotion and protection of national health services.
82bis. Invite the World Health Organization to cooperate
with Governments, at their request, and with international organizations in
monitoring and analyzing the pharmaceutical and public health implications
of relevant international agreements, including trade agreements, so that
Governments can effectively assess and subsequently develop pharmaceutical
and health policies and regulatory measures that address their concerns and
priorities, and are able to maximize the positive and mitigate the negative
impact of those agreements.
83. Invite the organizations of the United Nations system
to cooperate with the World Health Organization to integrate the health
dimension into their policies and programmes, in view of the close
interdependence between health and other fields and the fact that solutions
to good health may often be found outside of the health sector itself; such
cooperation may build on initiatives undertaken in one or more of the
following areas: health and employment, health and education, health and
macroeconomic policy, health and environment, health and transport, health
and nutrition, health and food security, health and housing, development of
more equitable health financing systems and trade in health goods and
services.
83bis. Invite the United Nations system to support
national efforts, where appropriate, to build on initiatives undertaken in
one or more of the above-mentioned fields.
Commitment 7: To accelerate
the economic, social and human resource development of Africa and the least
developed countries:
86bis. Encourage concerted national and international
efforts to promote an integrated approach to people-centred sustainable
development.
87. Make concerted national and international efforts for
promoting an enabling environment that will facilitate the integration of
Africa and the LDCs into the global economy and promote their participation
in the multilateral trading system through, inter alia:
(a) Implementing appropriate debt relief initiatives that
can lead to a sustainable solution to their debt burden;
(b) Improving market access for export products of Africa
and LDCs, including through tariff- and quota-free treatment for essentially
all products originating in least developed countries on as broad and
liberal a basis as possible;
(c) Supporting programmes to assist them to take full
advantage of the multilateral trading regime, both on a bilateral basis and
through multilateral efforts, inter alia, through the World Trade
Organization, the ITC, UNCTAD and through other relevant regional and
subregional economic organizations;
(d) Pursuing structural adjustment programmes relevant to
the needs of these countries by supporting growth-enhancing,
poverty-reducing economic reforms;
(e) Supporting, inter alia, initiatives in the development
of venture capital funds for investment in these countries in fields
conducive to sustainable development.
88. Assist Governments in Africa and the least developed
countries in enhancing their countries' productive capacity and
competitiveness through, inter alia, policies and programmes to support
agricultural and industrial diversification, establishment of cooperative
business networks, public and private systems for sharing information,
promoting technology, and encouraging domestic and foreign investment,
especially in the field of technology.
90. Call upon donor Governments and international
organizations to encourage investment in critical infrastructure services,
including reconstruction in post-conflict and natural disaster situations,
and invite Governments in Africa and the least developed countries to
utilize infrastructure investments to also promote employment.
90bis. Encourage interested Governments to consider the
establishment of a World Solidarity Fund to be financed on a voluntary basis
in order to contribute to the eradication of poverty and promote social
development in the poorest regions of the world.
90ter. Call upon the World Food Programme and other
concerned agencies to strengthen food-for-work activities in low-income
food-deficit countries, in particular in Africa, as an important measure to
expand or rehabilitate needed community infrastructure, create employment
and enhance household food security.
92. Strengthen support to South-South cooperation as a
means to promote development in Africa and the least developed countries by
enhancing investment and transfer of appropriate technology through mutually
agreed arrangements, as well as promoting regional human resource
development and development of technology through, inter alia, technology
promotion centres.
93. Support increased efforts of Governments to promote
and strengthen human resource development in Africa and the least developed
countries, in partnership with civil society, to achieve quality basic
education for all, while at the same time continuing to invest in secondary
and tertiary education, and with enhanced cooperation of the international
community.
93bis. Support the efforts of Governments to allocate
additional resources to education and the management capacities of the
educational sector, and improve enrolment ratios, particularly for girls and
women.
93ter. Support steps taken by Governments to encourage
skilled and highly educated Africans to remain in the region and to utilize
and further develop their skills.
93quater. Urge developed countries to strive to fulfill as
soon as possible the agreed target of earmarking 0.15 to 0.2% of GNP as ODA
for the least developed countries.
94. Accord priority to the least developed countries by
the international community, including by the United Nations funds and
programmes as well as international and regional financial institutions, in
the allocation of resources on concessional terms for economic and social
development.
94bis. Encourage the United Nations and its affiliated
agencies to enhance the provision of technical cooperation to the least
developed countries. In this context, call for the strengthening of the
Integrated Framework for Trade Related Technical Assistance to the least
developed countries.
95. Encourage creditor countries to implement bilateral
debt relief arrangements for the African and the least developed countries
and stress that debt relief should contribute to national development
objectives, including poverty eradication.
96. Give special attention to the least developed
countries, in particular those in sub-Saharan Africa, in the implementation
of the 20/20 initiative in cooperation with civil society in order to ensure
access to basic social services for all.
97. Support the recommendations contained in the Report of
the Secretary-General (A/52/871-S/1998/318) and in that context await the
outcome of the open-ended ad hoc working group on the causes of conflict and
promotion of durable peace and sustainable development in Africa.
97bis. Encourage the 25 African countries most affected by
HIV/AIDS to adopt time-bound targets for reducing infection levels, such as
a target of reducing infection levels in young people by 25 per cent by
2005, and invite the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, in
conjunction with its co-sponsoring agencies, to prepare and propose means
for implementing a strategy for achieving this target.
98. Support African Governments in expanding and
strengthening programmes related to young people and HIV/AIDS through
developing a collective strategy with the donor community, international
organizations and non-governmental organizations, facilitated by the
establishment of national young people's task forces, in order to ensure the
necessary multi-sectoral response and the interventions to raise the
awareness and address the needs of young people, as well as the needs of
those living with HIV/AIDS and children orphaned by AIDS.
99. Invite UNAIDS and its cosponsors, as part of the
International Partnership Against AIDS in Africa (IPAA), to support
countries most affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic, upon request, in their
efforts to:
(a) Allocate adequate resources, in particular financial,
as well as wider access to quality medication by ensuring the provision and
affordability of drugs, including a reliable distribution and delivery
system; implementation of a strong generic drug policy; bulk purchasing;
negotiation with pharmaceutical companies; appropriate financing systems;
and encouragement of local manufacturing and import practices consistent
with national laws and international agreements acceded to;
(b) Develop a strategy for resource mobilization for
programmes on young people with their full involvement;
(c) Consolidate resources by creating or strengthening
technical resource networks and identifying best practices at country and
regional levels;
(d) Develop a core set of indicators and tools to monitor
implementation of youth programmes and progress towards achievement of the
target to reduce infection levels in young people by 25 per cent by 2005.
100bis. Support African Governments and civil society
organizations, inter alia, through the International Partnership Against
AIDS in Africa and national programmes, in the provision of key services
linked to social security, care and support, prevention and treatment of
sexually transmitted infections, reduction of mother-to-child transmission,
access to voluntary and confidential counselling and testing, and support of
behavioural change and responsible sexual behaviour, in order to scale up
significantly efforts in Africa to curtail the spread of HIV, reduce the
impact of HIV/AIDS, and halt the further reversal of human, social and
economic development.
101. Support and assist research and development centres
in Africa and the least developed countries in the field of vaccines,
medicine and public health, thereby strengthening training of medical
personnel and counsellors, improving control and treatment of communicable
and infectious diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, as well
as assisting in making vaccines and medicines for the control and treatment
of these diseases widely available at affordable prices.
102. Encourage the international community to give its
full support to an effective and successful outcome of the Third United
Nations Conference of the Least Developed Countries in 2001.
Commitment 8: To ensure
that when structural adjustment programmes are agreed to they
include social development goals, in particular
eradicating poverty, promoting full and productive employment, and enhancing
social integration:
103bis. Encourage international financial institutions and
national Governments to adopt the principle of integration of social as well
as economic aspects in the design of structural adjustment as well as reform
programmes.
103ter. Adjustment programmes to address economic crises,
including those negotiated between national Governments and IMF, should
strive to ensure that this process does not lead to a severe drop in
economic activity or sharp cuts in social spending.
104. Encourage Governments and international financial
institutions to improve the on-going dialogue on the design, implementation
and reform of structural adjustment programmes, ensuring the full
integration of social and economic frameworks for protecting social policies
and programmes so that such programmes are genuinely nationally owned and
driven; such dialogue would benefit from consultations by governments with
relevant actors and organizations of civil society. Encourage the
international financial institutions to take into account the specific
circumstances of countries concerned in providing support to their
structural adjustment programmes.
104bis. Encourage the development of nationally-owned
poverty reduction strategies as a way to facilitate Governments' dialogue
with development partners, and as a tool for the integration of social goals
in national development strategies.
105. Design national policies taking into account concerns
of people living in poverty, by incorporating social development goals in
the formulation of structural adjustment programmes, including poverty
reduction strategies, in consultation with civil society, with a particular
emphasis on:
(a) Designing economic policies for more equitable and
enhanced access to income and resources to promote sustained economic growth
and sustainable development, taking fully into account economic and social
programmes aimed at poverty reduction;
(b) Protecting core social development expenditures
identified by individual Governments from budgetary cuts, especially in
times of crises, and encouraging international development banks to support
national efforts in this regard;
(d) Ensuring that public services reach people living in
poverty and vulnerable groups as a matter of priority, particularly through
strengthening existing social programmes;
(e) Implementing adjustment and stabilization policies in
ways that protect people living in poverty as well as vulnerable groups.
(f) Preserving and enhancing the social capital and
strengthening the social fabric of society;
(i) Taking into account the evolving concept of poverty
reduction strategy papers.
105bis. Ensure transparency and accountability by both
Governments and international financial institutions for improved efficacy
of structural adjustment programmes and fulfillment of social development
goals.
106. Establish participatory mechanisms to undertake
assessment of the social impact of structural adjustment programmes and
reform packages before, during and after the implementation process with a
view to mitigating their negative impact and developing policies to improve
their positive impact on social development goals. Such assessments might
involve the support and cooperation of the United Nations system, including
the Bretton Woods institutions, regional development banks and organizations
of civil society.
107. Improve information-sharing and coordination between
the Economic and Social Council and the relevant organizations of the United
Nations system, including the Bretton Woods institutions, with a view to
promoting social development and exploring ways and means to reduce the
negative effects and improve the positive impact of structural adjustment
programmes.
107bis. Ensure that gender issues are taken into account
in the formulation and implementation of structural adjustment programmes.
Commitment 9: To increase
significantly and/or utilize more efficiently the resources allocated to
social development in order to achieve the goals of the Summit through
national action and regional and international cooperation:
107ter. Recommend the High-Level Intergovernmental Event
on Financing for Development, to be held in 2001, consider the mobilization
of national and international resources for social development for the
implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of Action.
107quater. Strengthen, with the assistance of the
international community, upon request, national information systems to
produce reliable and disaggregated statistics on social development in order
to assess the impact of social policies on economic and social development
as well as to ensure that economic and social resources are used efficiently
and effectively.
108. Undertake efforts to mobilize domestic resources for
social development in accordance with national priorities and policies by,
inter alia:
(a) Reallocating public resources for investment in social
development, inter alia, through the appropriate reduction of excessive
military expenditures, including global military expenditures and the arms
trade, and investments for arms production and acquisition, taking into
consideration national security requirements;
(b) Endeavoring to enhance the cost-effectiveness of
social spending;
(c) Strengthening mechanisms and policies to attract and
manage private investment, thus freeing and also increasing public resources
for social investments;
(d) Facilitating ways and means for the involvement and
active partnership of civil society in the provision of social services.
109. Taking into account the challenges of globalization
facing developing countries, support Governments, at their request, in the
establishment of guidelines for policies aimed at generating domestic
revenue to pay for social services, social protection and other social
programmes; through, inter alia:
(a) Promoting equitable and progressive broadening of the
tax base;
(b) Improving the efficiency of tax administration,
including tax collection;
(c) Seeking new sources of revenue which simultaneously
may discourage public bads;
(d) Undertaking various forms of public borrowing,
including issuance of bonds and other financial instruments to finance
capital works.
110. Promote, through national action, the mobilization of
new and additional resources for social development by, inter alia:
(a) Extending access to microcredit and other financial
instruments to people living in poverty, particularly women;
(b) Supporting community participation in the planning,
provision and maintenance of local infrastructure, through mechanisms such
as community contracting of labour-based works;
(c) Improving and restructuring, as appropriate, national
tax regimes and administration in order to establish an equitable and
efficient system that supports social development policies and programmes
and, inter alia, take measures to reduce tax evasion;
(d) Requesting the international community to support the
efforts of all countries aimed at strengthening institutional capacity for
preventing corruption, bribery, money laundering, and illegal transfer of
funds, as well as repatriating these funds to their countries of origin.
111. Promote, through international action, the
mobilization of new and additional resources for social development by,
inter alia:
new (a) Developing appropriate means of international
cooperation in tax matters;
(a) Exploring methods for dividing the liability of
multi-national corporations to pay taxes on profits among the various
jurisdictions in which they operate;
(b) Exploring ways to combat the use of tax shelters and
tax havens that undermine national tax systems;
(c) Improving the existing mechanisms for helping to
stabilize commodity export earnings so as to respond to the real concerns of
developing country producers, taking into account that commodity price
instability has remained extremely high, with declining trends for a number
of commodities.
(d) Preventing tax avoidance and promoting treaties for
avoiding double taxation;
(e) Exploring ways and means to increase and widen flows
of public and private financial resources to developing countries,
especially least developed countries;
(e)bis Conducting a rigourous analysis of advantages,
disadvantages and other implications of proposals for developing new and
innovative sources of funding, both public and private, for dedication to
social development and poverty eradication programmes;
(e)ter. Exploring ways and means of promoting the micro-
and small enterprise sector whereby it becomes a possible vehicle for a new
development model.
112. Urge international action to support national efforts
to attract additional resources for social development, in several important
areas:
(a) Encouraging creditor countries and institutions to
take action to achieve rapid progress towards faster, broader and deeper
debt relief as agreed under the enhanced HIPC initiative, which already
considers increased flexibility with regard to eligibility criteria and
through other means, to help alleviate the debt burdens of those countries
covered by the initiative, stressing that debt relief should contribute to
development objectives, including poverty reduction and in this regard
urging countries to direct those resources freed through debt relief, in
particular through debt cancellation and reduction, towards these objectives
consistent with General Assembly resolution 54/202;
(b) Strengthening the institutional capacity of developing
countries in debt management, calling upon the international community to
support the efforts towards this end, and in this regard stressing the
importance of such initiatives as the Debt Management and Financial Analysis
System and the debt-management capacity-building programme;
(b bis) Calling for concerted national and international
action to address effectively debt problems of low and middle-income
developing countries with a view to resolving their potential long-term
debt-sustainability problems through various debt-treatment measures,
including, as appropriate, orderly mechanisms for debt reduction, and
encouraging all creditor and debtor countries to utilize to the fullest
extent possible, where appropriate, all existing mechanisms for debt
reduction;
(c) Calling for continued international cooperation
including the reaffirmation to strive to fulfill the yet to be attained
internationally agreed target of 0.7 per cent of the gross national product
of developed countries for overall official development assistance as soon
as possible, thereby increasing the flow of resources for social
development;
(d) Encouraging donor and recipient countries, based on
mutual agreement and commitment, to fully implement the 20/20 initiative, in
line with the Oslo and Hanoi Consensus documents, to ensure universal access
to basic social services;
(e) Providing concessional financing for social
development programmes and projects to support developing countries' efforts
to achieve social development goals and targets;
(f) Providing landlocked countries and transit developing
countries with appropriate technical and financial assistance in their
efforts to implement the outcome of the Summit, particularly in addressing
their special needs and problems;
(g) Implementing the commitments regarding the special
needs and vulnerabilities of the small island developing States, in
particular by providing effective means, including adequate, predictable,
new and additional resources for social development programmes, in
accordance with the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of
Small Island Developing States and the results of the special session of the
General Assembly on the review of the Barbados Programme of Action, and on
the basis of the relevant provisions of the Programme of Action.
114. Promote greater efficiency and effectiveness in the
use of resources for social development.
114bis. Invite Governments to consider sector-wide
approaches for the achievement of social development goals, in accordance
with overall national development goals and priorities.
Commitment 10: To promote
an improved and strengthened framework for international, regional and
subregional cooperation for social development, in a spirit of partnership,
through the United Nations and other multilateral institutions:
115. Develop, strengthen and make more effective
indicators at the national level for assessing and guiding social
development, in collaboration with research institutions and civil society,
as appropriate. These could include quantitative and qualitative indicators
for assessing, inter alia, the social and gender impact of policies. Also
develop and strengthen national information systems to produce reliable
statistics on social and economic development. The relevant bodies of the
United Nations and other relevant institutions should support, upon request,
these national efforts.
116. Invite the Statistical Commission, with the
assistance of the Statistics Division and in close cooperation with other
relevant bodies of the United Nations system, including the Administrative
Committee on Coordination, and, as appropriate, other relevant international
organizations, to review, with a view to facilitating future consideration
by the Council, the work undertaken in harmonizing and rationalizing basic
indicators in the context of follow-up to United Nations conferences and
summits, taking fully into account the decisions taken in other functional
and regional commissions and, in that process, to identify a limited number
of common indicators from among those currently accepted and widely used by
the States Members of the United Nations, in order to lessen the data
provision burden on Member States, bearing in mind the work done so far in
this area.
117. Strengthen cooperation at the regional level, which
might include:
(a) Promoting dialogue among regional and subregional
groups and organizations;
(b) Encouraging regional commissions to initiate or
continue evaluation of the implementation of the Copenhagen Declaration and
Programme of Action and the further initiatives of the General Assembly at
its special session;
(c) Encouraging the implementation of regional social
development agendas where they exist; encouraging recipient countries, donor
Governments and agencies as well as multilateral financial institutions to
take greater account of the regional social development agenda of regional
commissions and regional and sub-regional organizations including in their
funding policies and programmes.
118. Further strengthen the Economic and Social Council as
the body primarily responsible for coordinating international action in
follow-up to the United Nations conferences and summits, which could
include:
(a) Fostering a closer working relationship with the
United Nations funds and programmes and the specialized agencies;
(c) Supporting continuing existing cooperation between the
Economic and Social Council and the Bretton Woods institutions and joint
meetings with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, so that
the objectives and policy approaches of the United Nations conferences and
summits are given due consideration by those institutions;
121. Promote South-South cooperation, particularly in
terms of economic and technical cooperation, and support triangular
mechanisms whereby donors would provide appropriate support.
122. Promote the full realization of the right to
development and the elimination of obstacles to development through, inter
alia, the implementation of the provisions of the Declaration on the Right
to Development as reaffirmed by the Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action.
123. Continue work on a wide range of reforms to create a
strengthened and more stable international financial system, enabling it to
deal more effectively and in a timely manner with the new challenges of
development.
125. Consider the establishment, as appropriate, of
national mechanisms, where they do not already exist, for the implementation
of the Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of Action and the further
initiatives agreed at the special session.
126. Invite parliamentarians to continue to adopt
legislative measures, and to expand awareness-raising, necessary for
implementing the commitments of the World Summit for Social Development and
the further initiatives contained in the present document and encourage the
contribution of the Inter-Parliamentary Union in this effort.
128. Invite the Economic and Social Council to consolidate
the ongoing initiatives and actions established in the Copenhagen
Declaration and Programme of Action, the first United Nations Decade for the
Eradication of Poverty (1997-2006), and the recommendations contained in the
present document with a view to launching a global campaign to eradicate
poverty.
129. Commit ourselves and encourage the United Nations
system and all other relevant actors to take further determined sustained
action to implement the commitments of the Copenhagen Declaration and
Programme of Action and the results of the Geneva special session, and
request the Economic and Social Council to regularly assess, through the
Commission for Social Development, the further implementation of the
Copenhagen commitments and the outcome of the 24th special session of the
General Assembly entitled, "World Summit for Social Development and
beyond: achieving social development for all in a globalizing world",
not excluding the possibility of bringing together, at the appropriate time,
all parties involved to evaluate progress and to consider new initiatives.
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