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I - Preamble
1. We recognize the imperative need to improve the quality of human
settlements, which profoundly affects the daily lives and well-being of our peoples. There
is a sense of great opportunity and hope that a new world can be built, in which economic
development, social development and environmental protection as interdependent and
mutually reinforcing components of sustainable development can be realized through
solidarity and cooperation within and between countries and through effective partnerships
at all levels. International cooperation and universal solidarity, guided by the purposes
and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, and in a spirit of partnership, are
crucial to improving the quality of life of the peoples of the world.
2. The purpose of the second United Nations Conference on Human
Settlements (Habitat II) is to address two themes of equal global importance:
"Adequate shelter for all" and "Sustainable human settlements development
in an urbanizing world". Human beings are at the centre of concerns for sustainable
development, including adequate shelter for all and sustainable human settlements, and
they are entitled to a healthy and productive life in harmony with nature.
3. As to the first theme, a large segment of the world's population
lacks shelter and sanitation, particularly in developing countries. We recognize that
access to safe and healthy shelter and basic services is essential to a person's physical,
psychological, social and economic well-being and should be a fundamental part of our
urgent actions for the more than one billion people without decent living conditions. Our
objective is to achieve adequate shelter for all, especially the deprived urban and rural
poor, through an enabling approach to the development and improvement of shelter that is
environmentally sound.
4. As to the second theme, sustainable development of human settlements
combines economic development, social development and environmental protection, with full
respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the right to development,
and offers a means of achieving a world of greater stability and peace, built on ethical
and spiritual vision. Democracy, respect for human rights, transparent, representative and
accountable government and administration in all sectors of society, as well as effective
participation by civil society, are indispensable foundations for the realization of
sustainable development. The lack of development and the existence of widespread absolute
poverty can inhibit the full and effective enjoyment of human rights and undermine fragile
democracy and popular participation. Neither of them, however, can be invoked to justify
violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms.
5. Recognizing the global nature of these issues, the international
community, in convening Habitat II, has decided that a concerted global approach could
greatly enhance progress towards achieving these goals. Unsustainable patterns of
production and consumption, particularly in industrialized countries, environmental
degradation, demographic changes, widespread and persistent poverty, and social and
economic inequality can have local, cross-national and global impacts. The sooner
communities, local governments and partnerships among the public, private and community
sectors join efforts to create comprehensive, bold and innovative strategies for shelter
and human settlements, the better the prospects will be for the safety, health and
well-being of people and the brighter the outlook for solutions to global environment and
social problems.
6. Having considered the experience since the first United Nations
Conference on Human Settlements, held at Vancouver, Canada, in 1976, Habitat II reaffirms
the results from relevant recent world conferences and has developed them into an agenda
for human settlements: the Habitat Agenda. The United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development - the Earth Summit - held at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992, produced
Agenda 21. At that Conference, the international community agreed on a framework for the
sustainable development of human settlements. Each of the other conferences, including the
Fourth World Conference on Women (Beijing, 1995), World Summit for Social Development
(Copenhagen, 1995), the International Conference on Population and Development (Cairo,
1994), the Global Conference on the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing
States (Barbados, 1994), the World Conference on Natural Disaster Reduction (Yokohama,
1994) and the World Conference on Human Rights (Vienna, 1993), as well as the World Summit
for Children (New York, 1990) and the World Conference on Education for All (Jomtien,
Thailand, 1990), also addressed important social, economic and environmental issues,
including components of the sustainable development agenda, for which successful
implementation requires action at the local, national and international levels. The Global
Strategy for Shelter to the Year 2000, adopted in 1988, which emphasizes the need for
improved production and delivery of shelter, revised national housing policies and an
enabling strategy, offers useful guidelines for the realization of adequate shelter for
all in the next century.
7. During the course of history, urbanization has been associated with
economic and social progress, the promotion of literacy and education, the improvement of
the general state of health, greater access to social services, and cultural, political
and religious participation. Democratization has enhanced such access and meaningful
participation and involvement for civil society actors, for public-private partnerships,
and for decentralized, participatory planning and management, which are important features
of a successful urban future. Cities and towns have been engines of growth and incubators
of civilization and have facilitated the evolution of knowledge, culture and tradition, as
well as of industry and commerce. Urban settlements, properly planned and managed, hold
the promise for human development and the protection of the world's natural resources
through their ability to support large numbers of people while limiting their impact on
the natural environment. The growth of cities and towns causes social, economic and
environmental changes that go beyond city boundaries. Habitat II deals with all
settlements - large, medium and small - and reaffirms the need for universal improvements
in living and working conditions.
8. To overcome current problems and to ensure future progress in the
improvement of economic, social and environmental conditions in human settlements, we must
begin with a recognition of the challenges facing cities and towns. According to current
projections, by the turn of the century, more than three billion people - one half of the
world's population - will live and work in urban areas. The most serious problems
confronting cities and towns and their inhabitants include inadequate financial resources,
lack of employment opportunities, spreading homelessness and expansion of squatter
settlements, increased poverty and a widening gap between rich and poor, growing
insecurity and rising crime rates, inadequate and deteriorating building stock, services
and infrastructure, lack of health and educational facilities, improper land use, insecure
land tenure, rising traffic congestion, increasing pollution, lack of green spaces,
inadequate water supply and sanitation, uncoordinated urban development and an increasing
vulnerability to disaster. All of these have seriously challenged the capacities of
Governments, particularly those of developing countries, at all levels to realize economic
development, social development and environmental protection, which are interdependent and
mutually reinforcing components of sustainable development - the framework for our efforts
to achieve a higher quality of life for all people. Rapid rates of international and
internal migration, as well as population growth in cities and towns, and unsustainable
patterns of production and consumption raise these problems in especially acute forms. In
these cities and towns, large sections of the world's urban population live in inadequate
conditions and are confronted with serious problems, including environmental problems,
that are exacerbated by inadequate planning and managerial capacities, lack of investment
and technology, and insufficient mobilization and inappropriate allocation of financial
resources, as well as by a lack of social and economic opportunities. In the case of
international migration, migrants have needs for housing and basic services, education,
employment and social integration without a loss of cultural identity, and they are to be
given adequate protection and attention within host countries.
9. In the process of globalization and growing interdependence, rural
settlements represent a great challenge and opportunity for renewed developmental
initiatives at all levels and in all fields. Many rural settlements, however, are facing a
lack or an inadequacy of economic opportunities, especially employment, and of
infrastructure and services, particularly those related to water, sanitation, health,
education, communication, transportation and energy. Appropriate efforts and technologies
for rural development can help to reduce, inter alia, imbalances, unsustainable practices,
poverty, isolation, environmental pollution and insecure land tenure. Such efforts can
contribute to improving the linkage of rural settlements with the mainstream of economic,
social and cultural life, to assuring sustainable communities and safe environments, and
to reducing pressures on urban growth.
10. Cities, towns and rural settlements are linked through the
movements of goods, resources and people. Urban-rural linkages are of crucial importance
for the sustainability of human settlements. As rural population growth has outpaced the
generation of employment and economic opportunities, rural-to-urban migration has steadily
increased, particularly in developing countries, which has put enormous pressure on urban
infrastructure and services already under serious stress. It is urgent to eradicate rural
poverty and to improve the quality of living conditions, as well as to create employment
and educational opportunities in rural settlements, regional centres and secondary cities.
Full advantage must be taken of the complementary contributions and linkages of rural and
urban areas by balancing their different economic, social and environmental requirements.
11. More people than ever are living in absolute poverty and without
adequate shelter. Inadequate shelter and homelessness are growing plights in many
countries, threatening standards of health, security and even life itself. Everyone has
the right to an adequate standard of living for themselves and their families, including
adequate food, clothing, housing, water and sanitation, and to the continuous improvement
of living conditions.
12. The rapidly increasing number of displaced persons, including
refugees, other displaced persons in need of international protection and internally
displaced persons, as a result of natural and human-made disasters in many regions of the
world, is aggravating the shelter crisis, highlighting the need for a speedy solution to
the problem on a durable basis.
13. The needs of children and youth, particularly with regard to their
living environment, have to be taken fully into account. Special attention needs to be
paid to the participatory processes dealing with the shaping of cities, towns and
neighbourhoods; this is in order to secure the living conditions of children and of youth
and to make use of their insight, creativity and thoughts on the environment. Special
attention must be paid to the shelter needs of vulnerable children, such as street
children, refugee children and children who are victims of sexual exploitation. Parents
and other persons legally responsible for children have responsibilities, rights and
duties, consistent with the Convention on the Rights of the Child, to address these needs.
14. In shelter and urban development and management policies,
particular attention should be given to the needs and participation of indigenous people.
These policies should fully respect their identity and culture and provide an appropriate
environment that enables them to participate in political, social and economic life.
15. Women have an important role to play in the attainment of
sustainable human settlements. Nevertheless, as a result of a number of factors, including
the persistent and increasing burden of poverty on women and discrimination against women,
women face particular constraints in obtaining adequate shelter and in fully participating
in decision-making related to sustainable human settlements. The empowerment of women and
their full and equal participation in political, social and economic life, the improvement
of health and the eradication of poverty are essential to achieving sustainable human
settlements.
16. Encountering disabilities is a part of normal life. Persons with
disabilities have not always had the opportunity to participate fully and equally in human
settlements development and management, including decision-making, often owing to social,
economic, attitudinal and physical barriers, and discrimination. Such barriers should be
removed and the needs and concerns of persons with disabilities should be fully integrated
into shelter and sustainable human settlement plans and policies to create access for all.
17. Older persons are entitled to lead fulfilling and productive lives
and should have opportunities for full participation in their communities and society, and
in all decision-making regarding their well-being, especially their shelter needs. Their
many contributions to the political, social and economic processes of human settlements
should be recognized and valued. Special attention should be given to meeting the evolving
housing and mobility needs in order to enable them to continue to lead rewarding lives in
their communities.
18. Although many countries, particularly developing countries, lack
the legal, institutional, financial, technological and human resources to respond
adequately to rapid urbanization, many local authorities are taking on these challenges
with open, accountable and effective leadership and are eager to bring people into the
sustainable development process. Enabling structures that facilitate independent
initiative and creativity, and that encourage a wide range of partnerships, including
partnership with the private sector, and within and between countries, should be promoted.
Furthermore, empowering all people, especially those belonging to vulnerable and
disadvantaged groups, in particular people living in poverty, to participate equally and
effectively in all activities related to human settlements is the basis for civic
engagement and should be facilitated by national authorities. Indeed, the Habitat Agenda
provides a framework to enable people to take responsibility for the promotion and
creation of sustainable human settlements.
19. Human settlements problems are of a multidimensional nature. It is
recognized that adequate shelter for all and sustainable human settlements development are
not isolated from the broader social and economic development of countries and that they
cannot be set apart from the need for favourable national and international frameworks for
economic development, social development and environmental protection, which are
indispensable and mutually reinforcing components of sustainable development.
20. There are critical differences regarding human settlements in
different regions and countries and within countries. The differences, specific situations
and varying capacities of each community and country need to be taken into account in the
implementation of the Habitat Agenda. In this context, international, regional,
subregional, national and local cooperation and partnerships, institutions such as the
Commission on Human Settlements and the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements
(Habitat), as well as resources, are central to the implementation of the Habitat Agenda.
21. The Habitat Agenda is a global call to action at all levels. It
offers, within a framework of goals and principles and commitments, a positive vision of
sustainable human settlements - where all have adequate shelter, a healthy and safe
environment, basic services, and productive and freely chosen employment. The Habitat
Agenda will guide all efforts to turn this vision into reality.
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