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About
UNFF
History and Milestones of International Forest Policy
The
issue of forests has been a priority on the international
policy and political agendas for the past 15 years. At the
1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
(UNCED) the forest issue was among the most controversial,
polarizing developing and developed countries. In Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, intense negotiations among governments
at UNCED resulted in the Non-legally Binding Authoritative
Statement of Principles for a Global Consensus on the Management,
Conservation and Sustainable Development of all Types of
Forests, also known as the Forest
Principles, as well as Chapter
11 of Agenda 21: Combating Deforestation.
Significant
progress has been made since UNCED. Throughout this last
decade, the main focus within the United Nations has been
to develop coherent policies to promote the management,
conservation and sustainable development of all types of
forests. The Intergovernmental Panel
on Forests (IPF), from 1995 - 1997, and the Intergovernmental
Forum on Forests (IFF) from 1997 - 2000, both under
the auspices of the United Nations Commission on Sustainable
Development, were the main intergovernmental fora for international
forest policy development. An informal, high level Interagency
Task Force on Forests (ITFF) was set up in July 1995 to
coordinate the inputs of international organizations to
the forest policy process.
IPF
and IFF examined a wide range of forest-related topics over
a five-year period. Key outcomes of the deliberations under
these processes are presented in the final reports of these
processes, IPF4
and IFF4,
in the form of more than 270 proposals for action towards
sustainable forest management and are considered collectively
as the IPF/IFF
Proposals for Action. Although the IPF/IFF proposals
for action are not legally binding, participants of these
processes are under a political obligation to implement
the agreed proposals for action and each country is expected
to conduct a systematic national assessment of the IPF/IFF
proposals for action and to plan for their implementation.
The
UNFF was established by ECOSOC
Resolution/2000/35 as part of a new international arrangement
on forests, to carry on the work building on the IPF
and IFF processes. The UNFF1
Report outlined the UNFF Plan
of Action and the first Multi-Year
Programme of Work (MYPOW) from 2001-2005. The Forum feeds into
broader global environment and development processes with
inputs such as the UNFF2
Ministerial Declaration to the World Summit on Sustainable
Development.
ECOSOC resolution 2006/49, based on the outcome of UNFF6, contained a package of measures that greatly strengthened the international arrangement on forests, and provided clear guidance on the future work of the Forum. In particular, the resolution included the adoption of the four shared Global Objectives on Forests, and the addition of three principal functions for the UNFF (in addition to the six already contained in ECOSOC resolution 2000/35).
Following nearly 3 years of intense negotiations, starting from UNFF5 and culminating at UNFF7, the Non-Legally Binding Instrument on All types of Forests was adopted on 28 April 2007. The Instrument was adopted by the UN General Assembly (Resolution 62/98) on 17 December 2007. The purpose of this instrument is:
(a) To strengthen political commitment and action at all levels to implement effectively sustainable management of all types of forests and to achieve the shared global objectives on forests;
(b) To enhance the contribution of forests to the achievement of the internationally agreed development goals, including the Millennium Development Goals, in particular with respect to poverty eradication and environmental sustainability;
(c) To provide a framework for national action and international cooperation;

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