1. 2 “The future we want – a pragmatic and a paradigmatic outcome”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TWO STEP EQUATIONS 1. SOLVE FOR X 2. DO THE ADDITION STEP FIRST
Advertisements

Outcomes of the Africa Regional Preparations for Rio+20 Regional Commissions Side-Event Second Rio+20 Intersessional Meeting New York, USA, 15 December.
STRUMENTI DI SVILUPPO LOCALE E DELLIMPRENDITORIALITA SOCIAL INCLUSION IN THE TIME OF CRISIS Dr Emma Clarence OECD LEED Trento Centre.
OECD International Futures Programme 1 OECD Futures Project The Commercialisation of Space and the Development of Space Infrastructure: The Role of Public.
Integrating the Three Pillars of Sustainable Development:
CBD & National Accounting Systems Opportunities and Challenges 1 Expert meeting on the SEEA revision, May 2011, Copenhagen Didier Babin CBD Secretariat.
Scaling up the global initiative on the implementation of the SNA and supporting statistics Meeting on Scaling up the coordination and resources for the.
System of Environmental-Economic Accounting International policy demand to monitor the effect of economic and other human activity on the environment Ivo.
Disaster Risk Reduction and Governance. Ron Cadribo.
1 Disaster Reduction: A Tool for Sustainable Development Presentation at the Africa Regional Consultation on Disaster Reduction A Preparation for the WCDR.
A strategy for a Secure Information Society –
1 JICA s Capacity Development Concept and Activities in Tanzania March, 2007 Koji Makino JICA Tanzania.
Good governance for water, sanitation and hygiene services
ActionDescription 1Decisions about planning and managing the coast are governed by general legal instruments. 2Sectoral stakeholders meet on an ad hoc.
European Hearing Rio+20 International Governance of Sustainable Development European Hearing Rio+20 International Governance of Sustainable Development.
REALISING BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINAS EUROPEAN POTENTIAL: FROM WAR ECONOMY TO CREDITWORTHINESS AND SUSTAINABILITY MACRO AND FISCAL FRAMEWORK Ljerka Marić,
1 7 th Progress Report: The regional and urban dimension of Europe 2020 Lewis Dijkstra Deputy Head of the Analysis Unit DG for Regional Policy European.
1 The role of macro- regional strategies after 2013 The Commissions view (or rather the view of one official) David Sweet, DG Regional Policy, European.
EURADWASTE 29 March 2004 LOCAL COMMUNITIES IN NUCLEAR WASTE MANAGEMENT THE COWAM EUROPEAN PROJECT EURADWASTE, 29 March 2004.
ENGAGING STRATEGICALLY WITH NON-STATE ACTORS IN NEW AID MODALITIES 7th July 2011 DEVCO-Europeaid – D2 civil Society.
EuropeAid ENGAGING STRATEGICALLY WITH NON-STATE ACTORS IN NEW AID MODALITIES SESSION 1 Why this Focus on Non-State Actors in Budget Support and SPSPs?
0 - 0.
DIVIDING INTEGERS 1. IF THE SIGNS ARE THE SAME THE ANSWER IS POSITIVE 2. IF THE SIGNS ARE DIFFERENT THE ANSWER IS NEGATIVE.
SUBTRACTING INTEGERS 1. CHANGE THE SUBTRACTION SIGN TO ADDITION
Addition Facts
1 8-9/10/8008 STRUCTURED DIALOGUE FOLLOW UP ITUC/DCE/PS
IBM Corporate Environmental Affairs and Product Safety
ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE Global illegal wildlife trade (excl. timber) worth $15-20 billion annually – together recognized as the fourth largest global illegal.
ISSUES FOR DISCUSSION CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT. Fundamental challenge for trade union development cooperation Basket – concept Education and training Advocacy.
Part 3: The Rio+20 Agenda Secure renewed political commitment for sustainable development, 2. Assess the progress to date and the remaining gaps.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Transport Division United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Transport Division ITU - Inland Transport.
The Ottawa Official Plan: Managing Growth to 2021 Hosted by the Ontario Association for Impact Assessment and the Institute of the Environment University.
Addition 1’s to 20.
25 seconds left…...
Week 1.
Multi stakeholder forums and Extractives in Africa Public participation & environmentally and socially responsible natural resource use.
Vision: A strong and capable civil society, cooperating and responsive to Cambodia’s development challenges Host of the 2nd Global Assembly for CSO Development.
Gender in International Water Laws: A challenge
CSOs on the Road to Busan: Key Messages and Proposals March 2011.
Critique/Overview on the Framework for Action and Follow-Up Kirubel Teshome, ETC Group/Africa.
INTERNATIONAL PARLIAMENTARY CONFERENCE ON THE POST-2015 DEVELOPMENT AGENDA Putting Sustainable Development at the Core Farooq Ullah Executive Director.
1 Country Progress Snapshots Outcomes of Rio + 20 & impact on the new development framework Outcomes of Rio + 20 & impact on the new development framework.
Ozone Layer Depletion Resource Depletion Dispersion of Toxic Substances Urban Environmental Problems Waste Water Pollution & Water Resources Marine Environment.
UNECE Workshop on Measuring Sustainable Development – 29 October 2012, Geneva Erol Cavus Project Manager ENPI-SEIS Project Implications from Rio+20 for.
The Post-2015 Development Agenda
Capacity 2015 A Capacity Development Platform UNDP take on Capacity Development CD has been a fundamental component of TC since the Marshal Plan (1951)
Marie-Odile Emond UN Resident Coordinator a.i
“All Roads Lead to Rio” 1.  Session 1:  The UN and the Role of Major Groups  Session 2:  Stakeholder Processes and Participation  Session 3:  The.
UN GLOBAL COMPACT for NGOs
Kingston Outcome of the Caribbean Regional Preparatory Meeting for the Third International Conference on Small Island Developing States Sixteenth Meeting.
Jeju : A Year of Opportunities The 2012 Rio Conference on Sustainable Development.
The shift to programs in the LAC region. What is a program? A program is a coherent set of initiatives by CARE and our allies that involves a long-term.
T he Istanbul Principles and the International Framework Geneva, Switzerland June 2013.
Development and Cooperation - EuropeAid Future directions in EU development policy Françoise Moreau DG Development and Cooperation – Europe Aid European.
WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OVERVIEW.
Presented by: Steve Litke, Fraser Basin Council Winnipeg, Manitoba June 18, 2012 Collaborative Approaches to Watershed Governance – Lessons from BC.
Rosemary Vargas-Lundius Senior Research Coordinator Office of Strategy and Knowledge Management, IFAD CARITAS WORKING GROUP MEETING FOR ANTI-POVERTY CAMPAIGN.
INTEGRATING INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE (IK) INTO UGANDA’S POVERTY ERADICATION ACTION PLAN (PEAP) By Joyce N. Muwanga Assistant Executive Secretary Uganda National.
 Introduction  Local AIDS Governance Barometer (LAGB) Model  LAGB Purpose  LAGB Application – Kabwe district, Zambia  LAGB’s Contribution to the.
World Bank Social Development Strategy, June 2002 A Social Development Strategy for the World Bank Susan Jacobs Matzen Social Development Specialist World.
Dr. Wilson Kipkore, Institute for Security Studies, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 th -30 th October,2009, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. 1 CSD, NGOs and participation in.
Sustainable Energy for All Draft framework for action The Secretary-General's High-Level Group on Sustainable Energy for All Discussion document, Abu Dhabi.
Findings From the National Preparations For Rio + 20 for Select Developing Countries A UNDESA/UNDP partnership International Workshop on Strengthening.
Transforming Our World: An Overview of the Post-2015 Development Agenda and the SDGs Ira Feldman greentrack strategies/GHGMI ISO TC 207 New Delhi, September.
FACULTY OF LAW, UNIVERSITY OF OSLO The principle of integration and its dilemmas Hans Chr. Bugge Professor of Environmental Law University of Oslo.
Understanding the UN post-2015 development agenda process: Opportunities and challenges for health PAULO M. BUSS, MD, MPH The Oswaldo Cruz Foundation,
National Planning, Government Expenditure and Sustainable Development
Sustainable Development Goals
The future we want Sustainable Development re-invented
1st PROG Marine Regions Forum
Presentation transcript:

1

2 “The future we want – a pragmatic and a paradigmatic outcome”

 A prerequisite for making better decisions is a system, or systems based on good governance  IFSD – the Institutional Framework for Sustainable Development - and good governance came out of Rio strengthened. 3

 “We acknowledge that democracy, good governance and the rule of law, at the national and international levels, as well as an enabling environment, are essential for sustainable development, including sustained and inclusive economic growth, social development, environmental protection and the eradication of poverty and hunger. We reaffirm that to achieve our sustainable development goals we need institutions at all levels that are effective, transparent, accountable and democratic.” 4

 We recognize that opportunities for people to influence their lives and future, participate in decision-making and voice their concerns are fundamental for sustainable development. We underscore that sustainable development requires concrete and urgent action. It can only be achieved with a broad alliance of people, governments, civil society and the private sector, all working together to secure the future we want for present and future generations. 5

... has no problem in stating that ‘good governance’ is a necessity in the struggle to establish a world based on sustainable development. 6

 Sustainable development and the integration of the three dimensions (not pillars)of sustainable development in everything we do and will do in our future 7

 Such a process has never taken place before in the history of humanity  A result of an open and interactive process  MGs civil society recognised as players at all levels by the GA resolution calling for Rio + 20  All stakeholders could contribute to the zero draft document 8

 People at the centre  Good governance a necessity  Collaboration with civil society /the major groups at all levels (repeated throughout the document)  Environmental protection  The three dimensions of sustainable development (no longer the three pillars) 9

 Not to achieve sustainable development is a set-back for developing nations (§20)  SD is now an integrated element of poverty eradication (§ 21)  Recognition that poor people depend on ecosystems and SD (§ 30)  Broader measures of progress to complement GDP to better inform policy decisions (§38)  Rights of nature recognized (§39) 10

 Acknowledging the importance of corporate sustainability reporting, §47.  Access to information and communications  The science technology interface –  commit to work together with major groups and other stakeholders in addressing implementation gaps, §55. 11

 Level playing field becoming universal  CBDR not used as a stalling argument  Environment accepted as a major issue  The north south divide on the wane, and a multi-polar world in the ascent  Solutions driven by the south 12

 Became a disappointment to many  Opposed by some  Holds promises for all  Is still unfulfilled, but  Is a process just begun (?)  Lacks a governance structure 13

 High level forum to replace CSD  Strengthening UNEP, with universal membership  Cities  Local communities  Civil society at every level  The understanding of good governance permeates the document 14

 Not capital letters, a placeholder term  From § 84” building on the strengths, experiences, resources and inclusive participation modalities of the Commission on Sustainable Development,…”  Means from two decades of CSD  CSD failed because governments let it fail – what will EU do in the future? 15

 integration of the three dimensions of SD, § 93  GA process on the maritime jurisdiction beyond national boundaries, conservation and resource use of marine resources, §161, 162  Challenges facing Small Island States, § 180  10 Year Programme on Sustainable Consumption and Production, §

 Intergenerational solidarity, the ombudsperson for future generations, § 86  Sustainable Energy for All (SG initiative), § 129  Sustainable agriculture – end hunger (SG), announced in Rio  Outcome of Delivering as One Process, strengthening operational activities, § 95 17

 And because of this – did the delegations listen to the voice of civil society?  And if and when they listened – did we then make sense and provide substantial input?  Will both parties do so in the future? 18

 Premises for better decisions are found throughout the document  We have the opportunities now to deliver on these  If we walk away from these processes, we leave the space open for actors that may take the development into a direction we may strongly disagree with  Preserving and developing governance is of paramount importance. 19

 Sustainable development governance  And about integrating the three dimensions of sustainable development in all our plans and their implementation  About full participation of civil society 20

So let’s govern the future we want! 21