URGENT NEED FOR AN ALTERNATIVE INTERNATIONAL AGENDA FOR CHANGE (Beyond 2015)

Similar documents
The key building blocks of a successful implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 14 May /12 DEVGEN 110 ACP 66 FIN 306 RELEX 390

16827/14 YML/ik 1 DG C 1

REPORT ITUC STOCKHOLM CONFERENCE October Development is Social Justice!

Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator and Chair UN Development Group, remarks on The Sustainable Development Goals: Building a better future in Myanmar

II BRIC Summit - Joint Statement April 16, 2010

CEEP CONTRIBUTION TO THE UPCOMING WHITE PAPER ON THE FUTURE OF THE EU

The Reality of Aid 2014 Report Theme Statement: Partnerships and the Post-MDGs

Companion for Chapter 14 Sustainable Development Goals

TENTATIVE CHAIR S NOTE POST-MDGS CONTACT GROUP -SUMMARY & FRAMING QUESTIONS- SEPTEMBER 2012

Spanish Parliament Commission for Climate Change Madrid, 25 June 2009

Africa-EU Civil Society Forum Declaration Tunis, 12 July 2017

CLOSING STATEMENT H.E. AMBASSADOR MINELIK ALEMU GETAHUN, CHAIRPERSON- RAPPORTEUR OF THE 2011 SOCIAL FORUM

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL A CITIZENS AGENDA

Development Cooperation Instrument (DCI) Final compromise text reflecting the outcome of the trilogue on 2 December 2013

15th Asia and the Pacific Regional Meeting Kyoto, Japan, 4 7 December 2011

Intergovernmental Negotiations on the Post-2015 Development Agenda

Republic of Korea's Comments on the Zero Draft of the Post-2015 Outcome Document

African Youth Declaration on Post-2015 Agenda.

BRICS Leaders Conclusions on Macroeconomics,

On The Road To Rio+20

Wilson Okaka NAME OF PRESENTER NAMES OF AUTHORS

Major Group Position Paper

Linking Aid Effectiveness to Development Outcomes: A Priority for Busan

Opportunities for participation under the Cotonou Agreement

South-South and Triangular Cooperation in the Development Effectiveness Agenda

To the President of the House of Representatives of the States General Binnenhof 4 Den Haag

Rights. Strategy

11559/13 YML/ik 1 DG C 1

EVERY VOICE COUNTS. Inclusive Governance in Fragile Settings. III.2 Theory of Change

April 2013 final. CARE Danmark Programme Policy

Joint Civil society submission to the 2017 High Level Meeting of the OECD Development Assistance Committee

The Power of. Sri Lankans. For Peace, Justice and Equality

THE WAY FORWARD CHAPTER 11. Contributed by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and the World Trade Organization

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES

Basic Polices on Legal Technical Assistance (Revised) 1

PFM s Role in Meeting Sustainable Development Goals

2 Now with less than three years to 2010 there is still a lot to do to achieve, even partially, the target, adopted by us in Johannesburg, of reducing

SYNOPSIS. Introduction. A vision for change

Diversity of Cultural Expressions

EU ENGAGEMENT WITH CIVIL SOCIETY IN TANZANIA

PARIS AGREEMENT. Being Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, hereinafter referred to as "the Convention",

CONCORD Response to the Communication on the proposed Joint Declaration on the EU Development Policy CONCORD Policy Working Group September 2005

European Neighbourhood Instrument (ENI) Summary of the single support framework TUNISIA

FCCC/CP/2015/10/Add.1 Annex Paris Agreement

Migration in the Post-2015 Development Agenda. Dr. Melissa Siegel WUN Migration Conference, 26 April 2015

Report Template for EU Events at EXPO

Economic and Social Council

STATE OF THE WORLD S VOLUNTEERISM REPORT STATE OF THE WORLD S VOLUNTEERISM REPORT

Whilst few contest the inspirational words of the Millennium Declaration, the same cannot be

Draft ETUC Platform on the Future of Europe (first draft for discussion)

International Trade Union Confederation Statement to UNCTAD XIII

At the meeting on 17 November 2009, the General Affairs and External Relations Council adopted the Conclusions set out in the Annex to this note.

British Columbia First Nations Perspectives on a New Health Governance Arrangement. Consensus

Decent work at the heart of the EU-Africa Strategy

ACCELERATING GLOBAL ACTIONS FOR A WORLD WITHOUT POVERTY

PORTUGAL. Statement by. H.E. Mrs. Teresa Ribeiro. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and Cooperation. Ministry for Foreign Affairs

EU Roadmap for Engagement with Civil Society in Myanmar. Summary

Ireland in the World:

Report on 56th session of the United Nations General Assembly Second Committee

Concluding Remarks of Co- Chairs 6 th Session of Open Working Group on Sustainable Development Goals Friday, 13 December 2013

Rob Vos United Nations

KINGDOM OF BHUTAN. Check against delivery

General Debate Session 2 Ministerial Segment of the 2016 High Level Political Forum

CSOs on the Road to Busan: Key Messages and Proposals. January 2011

EPP Policy Paper 2 A Europe for All: Prosperous and Fair

March for International Campaign to ban landmines, Phnom Penh, Cambodia Photo by Connell Foley. Concern Worldwide s.

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 15 May /07 DEVGEN 91 SOC 205

TST Issue Brief: Global Governance 1. a) The role of the UN and its entities in global governance for sustainable development

(Belgrade City Hall, 26 October 2018) REPORT

DEVE POLICY PAPER FOR DEVELOPMENT AND HUMANITARIAN AID PRIORITIES

Thank you David (Johnstone) for your warm introduction and for inviting me to talk to your spring Conference on managing land in the public interest.

International Conference o n. Social Protection. in contexts of. Fragility & Forced Displacement. Brussels September, 2017.

Ministerial declaration of the 2007 High-level Segment

Oral History Program Series: Civil Service Interview no.: O5

SPEECH. at the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly. St Julian's, 19 June Page 1 of 20

Country programme for Thailand ( )

European Commission contribution to An EU Aid for Trade Strategy Issue paper for consultation February 2007

7517/12 MDL/ach 1 DG I

Closer to people, closer to our mission

Civil Society Declaration 2016

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS

Promoting equality, including social equity, gender equality and women s empowerment. Statement on behalf of France, Germany and Switzerland

THE GASTEIN HEALTH OUTCOMES 2015

The Overarching Post 2015 Agenda - Council conclusions. GE ERAL AFFAIRS Council meeting Luxembourg, 25 June 2013

SERGEI N. MARTYNOV BY HIS EXCELLENCY MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF BELARUS STATEMENT

The Role of Civil Society at the COP 21 Climate Negotiations

CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS OF GOOD GOVERNANCE IN REDUCTION OF POVERTY: A CASE STUDY OF BUEE TOWN 01 KEBELE, ETHIOPIA

EURO LATIN-AMERICAN DIALOGUE ON SOCIAL COHESION AND LOCAL PUBLIC POLICY BOGOTA AGENDA 2012

Council of the European Union Brussels, 14 September 2017 (OR. en)

SELF-DETERMINATION AND CIVIL SOCIETY ADVOCACY

Oxfam believes the following principles should underpin social protection policy:

Women s Leadership for Global Justice

Thematic Workshop on Migration for Development: a roadmap to achieving the SDGs April, 2018

my ranking is better than yours : examining the use of Human Development Reports beyond country ranking

Athens Declaration for Healthy Cities

A/HRC/RES/32/33. General Assembly. United Nations. Resolution adopted by the Human Rights Council on 1 July 2016

Analysis COP19 Gender Balance and Equality Submissions

Statement by Denmark. 73rd Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations. General Debate. 28 September 2018

10 common misunderstandings about the WTO

Transcription:

Olivier Consolo, director of CONCORD Brussels, August 2011 INTRODUCTION URGENT NEED FOR AN ALTERNATIVE INTERNATIONAL AGENDA FOR CHANGE (Beyond 2015) What could be a post-mdg agenda? Option1: The simple extension of the deadline of the same/current MDG agenda? Option2: An improved MDG agenda with a little bit more of the same (few new goals, new technical indicators, etc)? Or, Option3: something radically/structurally new and different? I believe that before answering this question, we need to seriously look at what could/might/should be a real alternative international agenda. We know that the two first options are the easiest and quicker to put in place. An International Agenda for Development is supposed to lead to positive changes in the life of people at local level. I/ WHAT IS THE BASIS / PRE-CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE? Two key elements: 1. The basis and root for change are the millions of local communities, groups of citizens, civil society organizations (CSO) initiatives that stand / mobilize / fight / engage to: o Improve their lives o Solve concrete problems o Claim and defend their rights This is what CSO call = a people-centered agenda, a people-centered approach. The good news is that it is happening everywhere, from the people and communities themselves! Even in the worst situations (i.e. remote areas, countries in conflict, or/and in situations of economic poverty and discrimination) it is happening! Local initiatives are TAKING PLACE EVERYWHERE = this is a positive factor! This is THE main condition for change! This is true for any developing or developed country. Unfortunately the national and international institutions today don t talk about it. Institutions don t build their strategies from those people-led initiatives! 2. The second condition for sustainable changes is the existence of an enabling environment that boosts / supports / incentives initiatives & capabilities at local level, and from local to international. What does it means concretely? o Political space for citizens/ CSO o Legal frameworks that incentive / protect local participation & initiatives o Adequate and timely human, technical & finance resources that are available to people and actors. Meaning demand driven resources, not like Aid today which is mainly offer driven! o Learning processes, dissemination of success-stories, multiplication effect, change of scale and exchanges of experiences among actors and regions. Those are two pre-conditions for change in societies! The first is happening everywhere, so let look at the second one which is supposed to / should be the main responsibility of governments, institutions, local authorities and legislators. II/ WHAT DOES CREATING AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR PEOPLE REQUEST? Creating an enabling environment for people is a complex issue but implies at least two pre-conditions: 1) Creating an enabling environment for people requires a radical change of mindset / mentality within institutions & politicians regarding their roles & responsibilities

We need Institutions & politicians that STOP saying to people what to do, but institutions & politicians that provide enabling environment to people => major paradigm shift for elites, experts and technicians. The approach must consist in starting by looking at people and communities as actors more knowledgeable than ourselves People know more than me What can I do to ease, to enable, to boost what people do? We need an HUMBLE APPROACH from institutions and from the political leadership! CHALLENGE: Today, politicians / States / institutions / international community / academy / experts / and the Aid industry overall are part of the problem not part of the solution as we mainly believe. This is ironic and represents one of the biggest taboos of the international agenda today! 2) Creating an enabling environment for people requires to change / adapt / challenge the rules of the game (here I m not meaning the rules of the international governance), but the rules and values of the living together from local to global: Today RULES are not explicitly set to pursue the common interest, the global goods and to ensure and guarantee Rights of people and nature. Today s rules have been set up under the wrong few assumptions: Consuming more goods and services make lives of people better and happier, Economic growth is the only way to create / secure jobs Jobs / employment are the main conditions for political stability (the latest might be true). Technical and scientific innovations alone will allow the economic system to overcome the scarcely / limits of natural resources. Free markets alone will correct negative effects of any kind, and for-profit private sector must not be regulated. Those paradigms are still running almost all national and international institutions, political parties and private sectors strategies, policies and agendas everywhere around the world. At the core of the new rules we need: The achievement of Common interest ( Intérêt Général ) and global goods Enforceable Human and Environmental Rights Shared responsibilities among all actors, and vis-à-vis the next generations Participation of people, active citizenship and local initiatives Solidarity and Justice Of course it is a MAJOR CHALLENGE for the donor community and national institutions to admit that changes are not only needed elsewhere, over-there, oversea, but also and perhaps firstly, here, in our own minds, in our institutions and own practices This shift must be at the core of any alternative international agenda! III/ WHAT COULD BE AN ALTERNATIVE INTERNATIONAL AGENDA? (See 2 nd Chart ANNEX1) FIVE MAIN ELEMENTS FOR THIS NEW AGENDA: 1- A new international agenda/framework which is people oriented and consists in boosting local communities initiatives and promoting and defending the rights of women, men and nature all over the world. 2- We are not talking anymore about an Agenda for developing countries ONLY (but for ALL the international community). For all countries members of the United Nations! 3- A new International framework for human and environment rights (H&ER) who is enforceable while acknowledging national contexts and history The important element here is a clear & formal commitment from all States (international community) to a process that enforces all H&ER with periodic national review. Meaning an international agreement / framework and a progressive and negotiated

implementation at NATIONAL LEVEL (over 10 to 15 years plans) see specific box on national level ANNEX2. There is no need to develop new Rights in the very short term All those rights already exist in the United Nations (UN) system / international community (Protocols/Conventions/Declarations). There is a NEED for Governments and Nations to ratified and applied them This is the GOAL = to incentive, push, pressure each country to engage in a process of ratification of all those rights but respecting differentiated paths The political ambition should be similar to what happened 60 years ago around the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. 4- This strong Human & Environment Rights framework should be reinforced by three key pillars / approaches: a. Organisation of Jobs, labor markets, rural employment & decent work b. The fight against inequalities, re-distribution of wealth and truly sustainable development c. Adequate, predictable and sustainable finance resources mobilized from domestic to international levels to implement this framework 5- This new agenda breaks / overcomes the boxes and categories of the current agenda (development, environment, human rights, etc.) in which we (CSO as well) are enclosed / trapped. These categories do not reflect the reality of people lives By the way, such a new approach will/would automatically ends with traditional donors approaches on priority sectors (set from donor offices) or development models With this approach, there is no need for a specific DEVELOPMENT AGENDA anymore. It seems to be the right time to stop the Aid industry wrong approaches as it has been set up for decades now! IV/ CONCLUSIONS 1-The advantage of this new agenda framework is that donors work will become much easier and efficient! National governments & donors work will consist mainly in: o supporting the creation of an enabling environment for people initiatives, o supporting & building their capabilities and capacities, o promoting and defending the rights of women, men and nature o providing timely & adequate resources to support their initiatives, letting people, CSO & communities leading and doing, o And finally, donors, institutions working on education, as well as CSO will have to significantly increase (quality & quantity) the advocacy, watchdog, campaigning & global education work to improving (everywhere) citizens understanding of the complex issues of the current international arena and to reinforcing their capacities to control decision makers, while strengthening active citizenship and the sense of responsibilities of each and all partners and actors from local to global. 2-This new approach should also quickly lead to results & impact! This is exactly what the for-profit private sector has been doing for the last 60 years so successfully: requesting, pushing and lobbying from local to global to get an enabling environment for business!! Business sector has been claiming for rules, tools, resources that make their lives easier Private sector did not expect States, Institutions or the International Community to tell them what to do in the markets, or within their firms and fabrics (especially at local level). Business actors asked for an enabling environment and for rules of the game that boost private sectors initiatives and for-profit outcomes This is how business, worldwide - from local to global, has been and is still so efficient in setting the rules and reaching its objectives! This is now the time for people & citizens to set the rules! This is now the time for politicians, institutions & States to deliver on people demands and initiatives!

From an INTERNATIONAL AGENDA TODAY (Set during the 80s & early 90s and responding to XIX and XX century paradigms) Macroeconomic Framework / Model Washington Consensus (World Bank/IMF) Economic Governance G8/G20 Fight against Inequalities Prosperity without Growth Distribution of Wealth Sustainable Development HUMAN RIGHTS In order to MITIGATE Globalization s side effect some global, thematic & social agendas have been set up PUBLIC GOODS GOOD GOVERNANCE SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEMS GENDER EQUALITY & WOMEN RIGHTS ENVIRONMENT (including Rio, Kyoto, Climate ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP, PARTICPATIVE DEMOCRACY & «LAICITE» (Relations States & Religions) DEVELOPMENT led by the MDGs & Aid effectiveness agendas PEOPLE RESISTANCE & RESILIANCE CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY International Finances led by limited ODA and unlimited Loans PEACE & CONFLICT PREVENTION / NON VIOLENCE MAINSTREAMING GENDER APPROACH ------------------------------------------------------------------- To an INTERNATIONAL AGENDA for the XXI Century (Post 2015/MDGs, Post Rio/Kyoto, etc.) Human & Environmental Rights Democracy Framework (international commitments & national ratifications) based on existing protocols, conventions and declarations on Civil & Political rights, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Women rights, Indigenous people rights, right to Food & Environmental rights International Finances based on new international Taxes & Fees, genuine Domestic Resources (not harmed by Tax Havens), Innovative Resources + increased ODA RESPONSIBLE PRIVATE SECTOR THAT DO NOT HARM decent work - Local to Global Security Governance - UN Security Council Markets, rural employment, Organisation of Jobs/ Labor

ANNEX2 WHAT THIS ALTERNATIVE AGENDA WOULD MEAN AT NATIONAL LEVEL? Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP) / National Development Strategies resulted to be wrong approaches: top down approach to people, framed by the International Community and elaborated by central governments and experts. An Alternative National Agenda (for each country member of the United Nations) should be built around 3 pillars/strategies. Each country should report to the UN on advancement on a periodic basis: A Human & Environment Rights (H&ER) framework based on political negotiation and binding/evolving commitments. Each country establishes an inclusive/evolving road map for H&ER Framework Clear commitments, to build the conditions, the mechanisms and an institutional framework that guarantee, promote and boost people ownership / active citizenship / participation, while establishing / setting an Enabling Environment for change, for local initiatives, for people to claim their rights. Mobilization of adequate, sustainable and timely resources from domestic to international levels. This NEW international & national approaches will challenge the current relations & the roles that politicians, States & institutions used to play vis-à-vis society and people (power shift). This means: - more power / legitimacy to secure / defend / promote common interest and global goods - more capacity to adapt / develop new rules of the game - more humble / services delivery / bottom up approach / facilitation role / by Institutions and political leadership - Increased transparency and control by citizens