Poverty: Decisions of the GA and CSD
GA 19th Session
| CSD-4 | CSD-3
United Nations General
Assembly,
19th Special Session
New York, 23-27 June 1997
Resolution Adopted By The General Assembly for
the Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21.
Eradicating poverty
27. Given the severity of poverty, particularly
in developing countries, the eradication of poverty is one of the
fundamental goals of the international community and the entire United
Nations system, as reflected in Commitment 2 of the Copenhagen
Declaration on Social Development, 14/ and is essential for sustainable
development. Poverty eradication is thus an overriding theme of
sustainable development for the coming years. The enormity and
complexity of the poverty issue could very well endanger the social
fabric, undermine economic development and the environment, and threaten
political stability in many countries. To achieve poverty eradication,
efforts of individual Governments and international cooperation and
assistance should be brought together in a complementary way.
Eradication of poverty depends on the full integration of people living
in poverty into economic, social and political life. The empowerment of
women is a critical factor for the eradication of poverty. Policies that
promote such integration to combat poverty, in particular policies for
providing basic social services and broader socio-economic development,
are effective as well since enhancing the productive capacity of poor
people increases both their well-being and that of their communities and
societies, and facilitates their participation in resource conservation
and environmental protection. The provision of basic social services and
food security in an equitable way is a necessary condition for such
integration and empowerment. The 20/20 initiative as referred to in the
Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development 15/ is,
among other things, a useful means for such integration. However, the
five years since the Rio Conference have witnessed an increase in the
number of people living in absolute poverty, particularly in developing
countries. In this context, there is an urgent need for the timely and
full implementation of all the relevant commitments, agreements and
targets already agreed upon since the Rio Conference by the
international community, including the United Nations system and
international financial institutions. Full implementation of the
Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development is
essential.
Priority actions include:
(a) Improving access to sustainable livelihoods,
entrepreneurial opportunities and productive resources, including land,
water, credit, technical and administrative training, and appropriate
technology, with particular efforts to broaden the human and social
capital basis of societies so as to reach the rural poor and the urban
informal sector; (b) Providing universal access to basic social
services, including basic education, health care, nutrition, clean water
and sanitation;
(c) Progressively developing, in accordance with
the financial and administrative capacities of each society, social
protection systems to support those who cannot support themselves,
either temporarily or permanently; the aim of social integration is to
create a "society for all";
(d) Empowering people living in poverty and their
organizations by involving them fully in the formulation, implementation
and evaluation of strategies and programmes for poverty eradication and
community development and by ensuring that these programmes reflect
their priorities;
(e) Addressing the disproportionate impact of
poverty on women, in particular by removing legislative, policy,
administrative and customary barriers to women's equal access to
productive resources and services, including access to and control over
land and other forms of property, credit, including micro-credit,
inheritance, education, information, health care and technology. In this
regard, full implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action 16/is
essential;
(f) Working together of interested donors and
recipients to allocate increased shares of official development
assistance to poverty eradication. The 20/20 initiative is an important
principle in this respect, as it is based on a mutual commitment among
donors and recipients to increasing resources allocated to basic social
services;
(g) Intensifying international cooperation to
support measures being taken in developing countries to eradicate
poverty, to provide basic social protection and services, and to
approach poverty eradication efforts in an integral and multidimensional
manner.
Commission on
Sustainable Development,
4th Session
New York, 18 April – 3 May 1996
Report of the Commission on Sustainable Development on the Fourth
Session (18 April-3 May 1996)
Decision 4/2. Combating poverty*
(* Chapter 3 of Agenda 21. For the discussion,
see chapter III below.)
1. The Commission on Sustainable Development
takes note of the report of the Secretary-General on combating poverty
(E/CN.17/1996/9).
2. The Commission reiterates all the decisions
made at its third session on the issue of combating poverty.
3. In accordance with commitment 2 of the
Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development 6/ adopted by the World
Summit for Social Development, the Commission urges Governments to
formulate or strengthen, as a matter of urgency and preferably by the
end of the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty (1996),
national strategies to eradicate absolute poverty and reduce overall
poverty. Such strategies should be comprehensive in order to address all
aspects of poverty and integrate gender perspectives, and should also be
geared towards substantially and sustainably reducing overall poverty in
the shortest possible time, reducing inequalities, and eradicating
absolute poverty by a target date to be specified by each country in its
national context. In addition, the Commission recommends that
Governments integrate environmental issues in such strategies and ensure
that they are related to national sustainable development strategies,
while recognizing that economic growth is a fundamental element of
sustainable development. Such strategies should be supported by the
international community, which should assist developing countries,
including through international organizations, in their efforts to
achieve the overall goal of eradicating poverty and ensuring basic
social protection.
4. The Commission recognizes that meeting the
basic human needs of all and eradicating absolute poverty is an
objective of the highest priority that has been regarded as such in all
the recent United Nations conferences convened since the World Summit
for Children in 1990. In addition to the relevant conferences and
conventions mentioned in the report on its third session, 5/ the
Commission welcomes the Beijing Platform for Action of the Fourth World
Conference on Women. 7/ The Commission notes, in particular, the
important role played by women in poverty eradication strategies and the
particularly difficult situations that they face, as described in
chapter IV.A of the Platform, as well as the importance of integrating
gender perspectives in policies and programmes. The Commission welcomes
the preparatory work for the forthcoming United Nations Conference on
Human Settlements (Habitat II), which emphasizes the importance of
achieving the eradication of absolute poverty, the reduction of overall
poverty and the creation of sustainable human settlements for ensuring
sustainable development.
5. Since the general problem of poverty in
developing countries, particularly in the least developed countries, is
related to political, economic and social marginalization, all efforts
to eradicate absolute poverty and reduce overall poverty within the
context of sustainable development must be accompanied by mechanisms
that would effectively address those issues.
6. The Commission suggests to the Economic and
Social Council that in its future work the Commission focus its
attention on the interlinkages between poverty and the environment,
taking into account the fact that poverty is a complex multidimensional
problem with origins in both the national and international domains, and
recognizing that economic development, social development and
environmental protection are interdependent and mutually reinforcing
components of sustainable development.
Commission on Sustainable
Development,
3rd Session
New York, 11-28 April 1995
Report of the Commission on Sustainable
Development on the Third Session (11-28 April 1995)
6. Combating poverty
73. The Commission welcomes the Copenhagen
Declaration on Social Development 7/ and Programme of Action of the
World Summit for Social Development. 8/ With reference to combating
poverty, it takes note, in particular, of commitment 2 of the
Declaration 9/ in which Governments commit themselves to the goal of
eradicating poverty in the world, through decisive national actions and
international cooperation. The Commission recalls that the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development 6/ embodies the principle
that eradicating poverty is an indispensable requirement of sustainable
development, and that all States and all people shall cooperate in this
essential task. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change 10/ in its section on commitments, 11/ and the United Nations
Convention to Combat Desertification in those Countries Experiencing
Serious Drought and/or Desertification, particularly in Africa, 12/ in
its preambular section also recognize that economic and social
development and poverty eradication are the first and overriding
priorities of the developing countries and are essential to meeting
sustainability objectives. This was reiterated in the recent decisions
of the first session of the Conference of the Parties to the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change held in Berlin. The
Commission further notes that in all the major United Nations
conferences held since 1990, including the World Summit for Children,
the International Conference on Nutrition, the World Conference on Human
Rights, the International Conference on Population and Development and
the World Summit for Social Development, there has been a recognition of
the need to launch a global attack on poverty and commitments made in
recognition of that need. The forthcoming 1995 World Conference on Women
should similarly emphasize the importance of women in strategies to
eradicate poverty.
74. The Commission stresses that the link between
poverty eradication and sustainable development is complex and must be
clearly understood. People living in poverty, with their meagre
consumption, are also often reduced, by their lack of income and command
over productive resources and their social exclusion, to eking out a
precarious existence on marginal and ecologically fragile ecosystems
where they often live under life- and health-threatening circumstances
as well. The Commission is deeply convinced that economic development,
social development and environmental protection are interdependent and
mutually reinforcing components of sustainable development, which is the
framework for efforts to achieve a higher quality of life for all
people. Equitable social development that recognizes empowering of the
poor to utilize environmental resources sustainably is a necessary
foundation for sustainable development. Broad-based and sustained
economic growth within the context of sustainable development is
necessary to sustain social development and social justice.
75. The Commission affirms that economic growth
will continue to be important to combat poverty in the long run
particularly in developing countries, but reliance cannot be placed on
economic growth alone to combat poverty. There is an urgent need to
formulate or strengthen policies and strategies geared to substantially
reducing overall poverty in the shortest possible time, and reducing
inequalities, and to eradicate absolute poverty by a target date to be
specified by each country within its national context. Such strategies
should also incorporate measures to ensure environmental sustainability.
The essential task of eradicating poverty is an indispensable
requirement for sustainable development. Strategies aimed at poverty
eradication are also necessary to prevent the overexploiting of natural
resources out of sheer survival strategies, which leads to the
degradation of resources required to sustain populations over the long
term.
76. The Commission stresses the need for a
multidimensional and integrated approach towards the goal of poverty
eradication in partnership with all actors of civil society. To this
end, national strategies should be geared towards the implementation of
the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and Programme of Action
of the World Summit for Social Development, in particular commitment 2
of the Declaration and chapter II of the Programme of Action. National
budgets and policies should be oriented, as necessary, to meeting basic
needs, reducing inequalities and targeting poverty as a strategic
objective. The Commission further stresses that the promotion of full
employment and the sustainable use of resources is an essential
requirement for combating poverty and promoting social integration. The
Commission notes that this is the primary responsibility of States
themselves.
Governments must create an enabling economic
environment aimed at promoting more equitable access for all to income,
resources and social services. The Commission recognizes that women, as
constituting the majority of the people living in abject poverty, and
who bear a disproportionate share of the burden of poverty, must be a
central focus of poverty eradication efforts. It also urges the
introduction of programmes that would focus on the specific needs of
children and youth, consistent with the Convention on the Rights of the
Child. 13/ The Commission also recognizes that full participation of
people living in poverty in the design, planning and implementation of
projects aimed at the eradication of poverty would help ensure effective
implementation of such strategies.
77. The Commission urges Governments to reaffirm,
promote and strive to ensure the realization of rights contained in
relevant international instruments and declarations, such as the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 14/ the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 15/ and the Declaration on the
Right to Development, 16/ including those relating to education, food,
shelter, employment, health and information, particularly in order to
assist people living in poverty. The Commission also recognizes the need
to promote, as regards people living in poverty, access to - and
opportunity for - food, water, employment, shelter, education, health,
information, transportation and other essential public services. People
living in poverty must be enabled so as to have access to productive
resources and sustainable livelihoods, including credit, land, education
and training, and technology. They should also be empowered to
participate in the formulation and implementation of the policies and
decisions affecting them.
78. The Commission reaffirms that a favourable
international economic environment, and the critical provision of
financial and technical assistance flows, are essential catalysts
towards poverty eradication. Better terms of trade, better access to
markets, particularly for labour-intensive products, for agricultural
and agro-based products, and for those of medium- and small-scale
enterprises, access to and transfer of environmentally sound technology
on favourable terms, including on concessional and preferential terms,
as mutually agreed, taking into account the need to protect intellectual
property rights as well as the special needs of developing countries are
therefore also important conditions for sustainability. An effective,
equitable, development-oriented and durable solution to the external
debt problems of heavily indebted least developed and other low- income
countries, particularly sub-Saharan countries, would be helpful to free
up resources for programmes aimed at the eradication of poverty.
Transfer of environmentally sound technologies is also indispensable for
the adoption of sustainable production patterns both in industry and in
agriculture. The Commission also stresses that activities geared towards
eradication of poverty should be accompanied by meaningful programmes
that aim to substantially reduce environmentally and socially
unsustainable patterns of production and consumption.
79. The Commission stresses the need for the
public accountability of private businesses.
80. The Commission reiterates the need for full
implementation of the commitments, agreements and targets agreed upon by
the international community aimed at the eradication of poverty. The
Commission calls upon Governments, the international community,
including the United Nations system, and IFIs as well as
non-governmental organizations to pursue implementation in this context
of commitment 2 of the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and
chapters II and V of the Programme of Action of the World Summit for
Social Development, and chapter 3 of Agenda 21.
81. The Commission recommends that the Economic
and Social Council, when considering a common framework for the
implementation of the outcome of United Nations conferences in the
economic and social fields, examine how to ensure synergy and
cooperation between the Commission on Sustainable Development and other
functional Commissions with responsibilities in the area of poverty
eradication, including consideration about the proper division of labour
among them.
82. The Commission suggests to the Economic and
Social Council that in its future work the Commission on Sustainable
Development focus its attention on the linkages between programmes aimed
at poverty eradication and sustainable development deriving from Agenda
21 and the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and Programme of
Action of the World Summit for Social Development.
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