|
Summary of the ICPD Programme of Action
| Introduction |
| Chapter I,
Preamble |
|
Chapter II, Principles
|
| Chapter III,
Interrelationships between Population, Sustained Economic Growth
and Sustainable Development |
| |
A. Integrating population and development
strategies
B. Population, sustained economic growth and poverty
C. Population and environment |
| Chapter IV,
Gender Equality, Equity and Empowerment of Women |
| |
A. Empowerment and status of women
B. The girl child
C. Male responsibilities and participation |
| Chapter V,
The Family, Its Roles, Rights, Composition and Structure |
| |
A. Diversity of family structure and composition
B. Socio-economic support to the family |
| Chapter VI,
Population Growth and Structure |
| |
A. Fertility, mortality and population growth rates
B. Children and youth
C. Elderly people
D. Indigenous people
E. Persons with disabilities
|
|
Chapter VII, Reproductive Rights
and Reproductive Health
|
| |
A. Reproductive rights and reproductive health
B. Family planning
C. STDs and HIV prevention
D. Human sexuality and gender relations
E. Adolescents
|
|
Chapter VIII, Health, Morbidity
and Mortality
|
| |
A. Primary health care and the health-care sector
B. Child survival and health
C. Women's health and safe motherhood
D. HIV/AIDS
|
| Chapter IX,
Population Distribution, Urbanization and Internal Migration |
| |
A. Population distribution and sustainable
development
B. Large urban agglomerations
C. Internally displaced persons |
| Chapter
X, International Migration |
| |
A. International migration and development
B. Documented migrants
C. Undocumented migrants
D. Refugees, asylum-seekers and displaced persons |
| Chapter
XI, Population, Development and Education |
| |
A. Education, population and sustainable
development
B. Population information, education and communication |
| Chapter
XII, Technology, Research and Development |
| |
A. Basic data collection, analysis and dissemination
B. Reproductive health research
C. Social and economic research |
| Chapter
XIII, National Action |
| |
A. National policies and plans of action
B. Programme management and human resource development
C. Resource mobilization and allocation |
| Chapter
XIV, International Cooperation |
|
Chapter XV, Partnership with
the Non-Governmental Sector
|
|
Chapter XVI, Follow-up to the
Conference
|
| |
A. National-level activities
B. Subregional and regional activities
C. Activities at the international level
|
The International Conference on Population
and Development (ICPD) was held in Cairo, Egypt, from 5 to 13 September
1994. Delegations from 179 States took part in negotiations to finalize
a Programme of Action on population and development for the next
20 years.
The 115-page document, adopted by acclamation
on 13 September, endorses a new strategy which emphasizes the numerous
linkages between population and development and focuses on meeting
the needs of individual women and men rather than on achieving demographic
targets.
Key to this new approach is empowering women
and providing them with more choices through expanded access to
education and health services and promoting skill development and
employment. The Programme advocates making family planning universally
available by 2015, or sooner, as part of a broadened approach to
reproductive health and rights, provides estimates of the levels
of national resources and international assistance that will be
required, and calls on Governments to make these resources available.
The Programme of Action includes goals in regard to education,
especially for girls, and for the further reduction of infant, child
and maternal mortality levels. It also addresses issues relating
to population, the environment and consumption patterns; the family;
internal and international migration; prevention and control of
the HIV/AIDS pandemic; information, education and communication;
and technology, research and development.
After a week of intense negotiations, the
Conference reached general agreement on the Programme of Action.
During the two final plenary meetings in which this agreement was
reached, 13 countries (Afghanistan, Brunei Darussalam, El Salvador,
Honduras, Jordan, Kuwait, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Nicaragua, Paraguay,
the Philippines, Syrian Arab Republic, United Arab Emirates and
Yemen) made statements expressing reservations or comments on specific
chapters, paragraphs or phrases in the Programme which they requested
to be recorded in the final report of the Conference (A/CONF.171/13).
Ten States (Argentina, Djibouti, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador,
Egypt, Guatemala, the Holy See, Iran, Malta and Peru) submitted
written statements for inclusion in the report.
The ICPD was a United Nations conference, organized
principally by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the
Population Division of the UN Department for Economic and Social
Information and Policy Analysis.
The UN Economic and Social Council in 1991 explicitly
linked population and development when it decided on the name of
the ICPD. The same year, as preparations for the 1992 UN Conference
on Environment and Development (UNCED) focused attention on how
to achieve sustainable development, the first session of the ICPD
Preparatory Committee resolved that population, sustained economic
growth and sustainable development would be the themes of the Cairo
Conference.
The ICPD draft Programme of Action builds
upon the World Population Plan of Action adopted at the 1974 World
Population Conference in Bucharest, and the 88 recommendations for
its further implementation approved at the International Conference
on Population in Mexico City in 1984.
It also builds on UNCED's outcomes, Agenda 21
and the Rio Declaration, as well as on the agreement reached at
the 1990 World Summit for Children and the 1993 World Conference
on Human Rights. In turn, the ICPD's emphasis on meeting people's
needs and empowering women is influencing preparations for the World
Summit for Social Development, the Fourth World Conference on Women
and the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the United Nations,
all scheduled to take place in 1995.
Of key importance in helping to shape the Programme
of Action were the recommendations made at five regional population
conferences (for Asia and the Pacific, Africa, Europe and North
America, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Arab States) in
1992 and 1993, and a number of subregional preparatory meetings;
expert group meetings on six issues identified by ECOSOC as requiring
the greatest attention; and a series of ad hoc round tables on other
important Conference themes. Important input also came from the
second meeting of the Preparatory Committee, from discussion in
the UN General Assembly in 1993 and from national population reports
prepared in more than 140 countries.
At its forty-eighth session in 1993, the General
Assembly (in resolution 48/186)strongly endorsed the ICPD by deciding
to make the Preparatory Committee a subsidiary body of the Assembly,
giving the ICPD a status comparable to that of UNCED. Debate in
the General Assembly's Second Committee on a proposed annotated
outline of the Programme of Action further guided the Secretariat
in preparing the draft final document for negotiation at the Preparatory
Committee's third session (PrepCom III) in April 1994.
Delegations from 170 States took part in PrepCom
III, held at UN Headquarters in New York. Negotiation of the draft
Programme of Action to be finalized in Cairo was the central activity.
The Conference itself had 10,757 registered
participants--from Governments, intergovernmental organizations,
UN programmes and specialized agencies, non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) and the news media--and received an unprecedented level of
press coverage. Dr. Nafis Sadik, Executive Director of the UNFPA,
was Secretary-General of the ICPD. Egyptian President Mohamed Hosni
Mubarak was President of the Conference; Dr. Maher Mahran, Minister
of Population and Family Welfare of Egypt, was ex officio Vice-Chairman.
Dr. Fred Sai of Ghana was Chairman of the Main Committee, which
negotiated the final Programme of Action.
Some 249 speakers addressed the week long plenary,
including: UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali; Prime Minister
Benazir Bhutto of Pakistan; Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland
of Norway; Prime Minister Tamirat Layne of Ethiopia; Prime Minister
George Cosmas Adyebo of Uganda; Prime Minister Francisque Ravony
of Madagascar; Prince Mbilini, the Prime Minister of Swaziland;
and Vice President Al Gore of the United States.
In addition, more than 4,200 representatives
of over 1,500 non-governmental organizations from 133 countries
attended the NGO Forum '94, an independent gathering held alongside
the Conference.
Other parallel activities were: the International
Youth NGO Consultation on Population and Development, held from
31 August to 4 September and organized by nine youth and youth-related
NGOs; the International Conference of Parliamentarians on Population
and Development, held on 3 and 4 September and organized by five
international organizations of parliamentarians; and the 1994 Parliamentarians'
Day assembly organized by the Inter-Parliamentary Union.
In addition, the Population Division's Population
Information Network provided an electronic communication and reference
centre at the Conference site. Four independent daily newspapers
on the ICPD were produced in Cairo for distribution at the Conference.
In addition, the UN Department of Public Information and the UNFPA
co-sponsored a 3-4 September Encounter for Journalists on ICPD issues.
The Preamble provides an overview of the
main issues covered in the ICPD Programme of Action and sets the
context for action in the field of population and development. It
stresses that the ICPD is not an isolated event and that its Programme
of Action builds on the considerable international consensus that
has developed since the World Population Conference in Bucharest
in 1974 and the International Conference on Population in Mexico
City in 1984.
The 1994 Conference was explicitly given a broader
mandate on development issues than previous population conferences,
reflecting the growing awareness that population, poverty, patterns
of production and consumption and the environment are so closely
interconnected that none of them can be considered in isolation.
The Preamble points out that the ICPD follows
and builds on other important recent international activities, and
that its recommendations should be supportive of, consistent with
and based on agreements reached at a series of earlier conferences.
It further notes that the Conference outcomes are closely related
to and will make significant contributions to other major conferences
in 1995 and 1996, such as the World Summit for Social Development,
the Fourth World Conference on Women, the Second United Nations
Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II), the elaboration of
the Agenda for Development, and the 50th anniversary of the United
Nations.
The Preamble points out that the objectives and
recommended actions of the Programme of Action collectively address
the critical challenges and interrelationships between population
and sustained economic growth in the context of sustainable development.
In order to carry them out, adequate mobilization of resources at
the national level will be required, as well as new and additional
resources to the developing countries from all available funding
mechanisms, including multilateral, bilateral and private sources.
Financial resources are also required to strengthen the capacity
of international institutions to implement the Programme of Action.
The Programme of Action recommends to the international
community a set of important population and development objectives,
including both qualitative and quantitative goals that are mutually
supportive and are of critical importance to these objectives. Among
these objectives and goals are: sustained economic growth in the
context of sustainable development; education, especially for girls;
gender equity and equality; infant, child and maternal mortality
reduction; and the provision of universal access to reproductive
health services, including family planning and sexual health.
The Programme of Action recognizes that over
the next 20 years Governments are not expected to meet the goals
and objectives of the ICPD singlehandedly. All members of and groups
in society have the right, and indeed the responsibility, to play
an active part in efforts to reach those goals.
The set of fifteen principles contained
in this chapter provides a careful balance between the recognition
of individual human rights and the right to development of nations.
The wording of most principles is directly derived from agreed international
language from relevant international declarations, conventions and
covenants.
In the chapeau of this chapter, clear recognition
is given to the fact that the implementation of the recommendations
contained in the Programme of Action is the sovereign right of each
country, consistent with its national laws and development priorities,
with full respect for the various religious and ethical values and
cultural backgrounds of its people, and in conformity with universally
recognized international human rights. International cooperation
and universal solidarity, guided by the principles of the Charter
of the United Nations, and in a spirit of partnership, are regarded
as crucial in order to improve the quality of life of all people.
The principles touch upon the main issues in
the field of population and development, such as: gender equality
and equity and the empowerment of women; the integration of population
into sustainable development policies and programmes; poverty eradication;
access to reproductive health care and family planning; the role
of the family; the right to education; the situation of children;
the rights of migrants and refugees; and the population and development
needs of indigenous people.
The principles reaffirm that human beings are
at the centre of concerns for sustainable development, since people
are the most important and valuable resource of any nation. Consequently,
the right to development must be fulfilled so as to meet equitably
the population, development and environment needs of present and
future generations. In addition, to achieve sustainable development
and a higher quality of life for all people, States should reduce
and eliminate unsustainable patterns of production and consumption
and promote appropriate policies, including population-related policies.
According to the principles, advancing
gender equality and equity and the empowerment of women, the elimination
of all kinds of violence against women and ensuring women's ability
to control their own fertility are cornerstones of population and
development-related programmes. In addition, States should take
all appropriate measures to ensure, on a basis of equality of men
and women, universal access to health-care services, including those
related to reproductive health care, which includes family planning
and sexual health. The principles reaffirm the basic right of all
couples and individuals to decide freely and responsibly the number
and spacing of their children and to have the information, education
and means to do so.
The chapter emphasizes that the family is the
basic unit of society and as such should be strengthened. It also
acknowledges that there are various forms of the family in different
cultural, political and social systems.
A. Integrating population and development
strategies. There is general agreement that persistent widespread
poverty and serious social and gender inequities have significant
influences on, and are in turn influenced by, demographic factors
such as population growth, structure and distribution. There is
also general agreement that unsustainable consumption and production
patterns are contributing to the unsustainable use of natural resources
and to environmental degradation. Section A seeks to integrate population
concerns fully into development strategies and into all aspects
of development planning at all levels. The sustained economic growth
that results will help meet the needs and improve the quality of
life of present and future generations. It will also promote social
justice and help eradicate poverty.
Governments should seek to strengthen political
commitment to such integration in three ways: (a) by undertaking
public education and information programmes; (b) by increasing
resource allocations, in cooperation with NGOs and the private sector;
and (c) by improving the knowledge base through research
and national and local capacity-building. They should also reduce
and eliminate unsustainable patterns of consumption and production
and promote appropriate demographic policies.
B. Population, sustained economic growth and poverty.
Efforts to slow population growth, reduce poverty, achieve economic
progress, improve environmental protection and reduce unsustainable
consumption and production patterns are mutually reinforcing. Sustained
economic growth within the context of sustainable development is
essential to eradicate poverty. Eradicating poverty will contribute
to slowing population growth and to achieving early population stabilization.
Women are generally the poorest of the poor. They are also key actors
in the development process. Eliminating all forms of discrimination
against women is thus a prerequisite for eradicating poverty, promoting
sustained economic growth, ensuring quality family planning and
reproductive health services, and achieving balance between population
and available resources.
The aim of section B is to raise the quality
of life for all people through population and development policies
and programmes that seek to eradicate poverty, sustain economic
growth in the context of sustainable development, achieve sustainable
patterns of consumption and production, develop human resources
and guarantee all human rights, including the right to development.
Governments must give priority to investment
in human resource development in their population and development
strategies and budgets. Programmes should seek to increase people's
access to information, education, skill development, employment
opportunities and high-quality general and reproductive health services,
including family planning. Existing inequities and barriers to women
in the workforce should be eliminated, and women's participation
in all policy-making and policy implementation should be promoted
and strengthened. So should their access to productive resources,
their ability to own land and their right to inherit property.
Governments should invest in, promote, monitor
and evaluate the education and skill development of women and girls
and the legal and economic rights of women. They should do the same
with all aspects of reproductive health, including family planning.
The international community should continue to promote a supportive
economic environment, particularly for developing countries and
countries with economies in transition in their attempt to eradicate
poverty and achieve sustained economic growth within the context
of sustainable development.
C. Population and environment. Meeting
the basic needs of growing populations is dependent on a healthy
environment. Such needs must be addressed when developing comprehensive
policies for sustainable development. The aim of section C is twofold:
(a) to ensure that population, environmental and poverty-eradication
factors are integrated into sustainable development policies, plans
and programmes; and (b) to reduce both unsustainable consumption
and production patterns as well as negative impacts of demographic
factors. Governments should formulate and implement population policies
to support the objectives and actions agreed upon in Agenda 21,
in the outcomes of other conferences and in other international
environmental agreements.
Specifically, Governments should: (a)
integrate demographic factors into environmental impact assessments
and other planning and decision-making processes aimed at achieving
sustainable development; (b) take measures aimed at eradicating
poverty, giving special attention to income-generation and employment
strategies directed at the rural poor and those living within or
on the edge of fragile ecosystems; (c) use demographic data
to promote sustainable resource management, especially of ecologically
fragile systems; (d) modify unsustainable consumption and
production patterns through economic, legislative and administrative
measures aimed at fostering sustainable resource use and preventing
environmental degradation; and (e) implement policies to
address the ecological implications of inevitable future increases
in population numbers and changes in population concentration and
distribution, particularly in ecologically vulnerable areas and
urban agglomerations.
A. Empowerment and status of women. The empowerment
of women and improvement of their status are important ends in themselves
and are essential for the achievement of sustainable development.
The objectives are: to achieve equality and equity between men and
women and enable women to realize their full potential; to involve
women fully in policy and decision-making processes and in all aspects
of economic, political and cultural life as active decision-makers,
participants and beneficiaries; and to ensure that all women, as
well as men, receive the education required to meet their basic
human needs and to exercise their human rights. Recommended actions
include, among others, establishing mechanisms for women's equal
participation and equitable representation at all levels of the
political process and public life; promoting women's education,
skill development and employment; and eliminating all practices
that discriminate against women, including those in the workplace
and those affecting access to credit, control over property and
social security. Countries should take full measures to eliminate
all forms of exploitation, abuse, harassment and violence against
women, adolescents and girls. In addition, development interventions
should take better account of the multiple demands on women's time,
with greater investments made in measures to lessen the burden of
domestic responsibilities, and with attention to laws, programmes
and policies which will enable employees of both sexes to harmonize
their family and work responsibilities.
B. The girl child. The objectives are to eliminate
all forms of discrimination against the girl child, to eliminate
the root causes of son preference, to increase public awareness
of the value of the girl child and to strengthen her self-esteem.
To these ends, leaders at all levels of society should speak out
and act forcefully against gender discrimination within the family
based on preference for sons. There should be special education
and public information efforts to promote equal treatment of girls
and boys with respect to nutrition, health care, education and social,
economic and political activity, as well as equitable inheritance.
Governments should develop an integrated approach to the special
health, education and social needs of girls and young women, and
should strictly enforce laws to ensure that marriage is entered
into only with the free and full consent of the intending spouses.
Governments are urged to prohibit female genital mutilation and
to prevent infanticide, prenatal sex selection, trafficking of girl
children and use of girls in prostitution and pornography.
C. Male responsibilities and participation. Men play
a key role in bringing about gender equality since, in most societies,
they exercise preponderant power in nearly every sphere of life.
The objective is to promote gender equality and to encourage and
enable men to take responsibility for their sexual and reproductive
behaviour and their social and family roles. Governments should
promote equal participation of women and men in all areas of family
and household responsibilities, including, among others, responsible
parenthood, sexual and reproductive behaviour, prevention of sexually
transmitted diseases, and shared control in and contribution to
family income and children's welfare. Governments should take steps
to ensure that children receive appropriate financial support from
their parents and should consider changes in law and policy to ensure
men's support for their children and families. Parents and schools
should ensure that attitudes that are respectful of women and girls
as equals are instilled in boys from the earliest possible age.
The family is the basic unit of society.
The process of rapid demographic and socio-economic change has influenced
patterns of family formation and family life and has generated considerable
change in the composition and structure of families. Traditional
notions of parental and domestic functions do not reflect current
realities and aspirations, as more and more women in all parts of
the world take up paid employment outside the home. At the same
time, various causes of displacement have placed greater strain
on the family, as have social and economic changes.
The objectives are, inter alia : (a)
to develop policies and laws that better support the family, contribute
to its stability and take into account its plurality of forms, particularly
the growing number of single-parent families; (b) to promote
equality of opportunity for family members, especially the rights
of women and children in the family; and (c) to ensure that
all social and development policies provide support and protection
for families and are fully responsive to the diverse and changing
needs of families.
A. Diversity of family structure and composition.
Governments are called upon to cooperate with employers to provide
and promote means to make participation in the labour force more
compatible with parental responsibilities, especially for single-parent
households with young children. Governments should take effective
action to eliminate all forms of coercion and discrimination in
policies and practices.
B. Socio-economic support to the family.
It is recommended that Governments should formulate policies that
are sensitive and supportive of the family and should develop, along
with NGOs and concerned community organizations, innovative ways
to provide more effective assistance to families and individuals
within them who may be affected by such problems as extreme poverty,
chronic unemployment, and domestic and sexual violence, among others.
A. Fertility, mortality and population
growth rates. The objective is to facilitate the demographic
transition as soon as possible in countries where there is an imbalance
between demographic rates and social, economic and environmental
goals. This process will contribute to the stabilization of the
world population. Governments are urged to give greater attention
to the importance of population trends for development. In attempting
to address concerns with population growth, countries should recognize
the interrelationships between fertility and mortality levels and
aim to reduce high levels of infant, child and maternal mortality.
B. Children and youth. Attention is drawn
to the major challenges created by the very large proportions of
children and young people in the populations of a large number of
developing countries. The aims are to promote the health, well-being
and potential of all children, adolescents and youth; to meet their
special needs, including social, family and community support, as
well as access to education, employment, health, counselling and
high-quality reproductive health services; and to encourage them
to continue their education. Countries are urged to give high priority
to the protection, survival and development of children and youth,
and to make every effort to eliminate the adverse effects of poverty
on children and youth. Countries are further called upon to enact
and strictly enforce laws against economic exploitation and the
physical and mental abuse or neglect of children. Countries are
urged to create a socio-economic environment conducive to the elimination
of all child marriages and should also discourage early marriage.
C. Elderly people. Governments are
called upon to develop social security systems that ensure greater
equity and solidarity between and within generations and that provide
support to elderly people through encouragement of multigenerational
families. Governments should also seek to enhance the self-reliance
of elderly people so that they can lead healthy and productive lives
and can benefit society by making full use of the skills and abilities
they have acquired in their lives. Governments should strengthen
formal and informal support systems and safety nets for elderly
people and eliminate all forms of violence and discrimination against
them.
D. Indigenous people. Indigenous people
have a distinct and important perspective on population and development
relationships, frequently quite different from those of the populations
with whom they interrelate within national borders. The specific
needs of indigenous people, including primary health care and reproductive
health services, should be recognized. In full collaboration with
indigenous people, data on their demographic characteristics should
be compiled and integrated into the national data-collection system.
The cultures of indigenous people need to be respected. Indigenous
people should be able to manage their lands, and the natural resources
and ecosystems upon which they depend should be protected and restored.
E. Persons with disabilities. Although
awareness has been raised about disability issues, there remains
a pressing need for continued action to promote effective measures
for prevention and rehabilitation of disabilities. Governments are
called upon to develop the infrastructure to address the needs of
persons with disabilities, in particular with regard to their education,
training and rehabilitation; to recognize their needs concerning,
inter alia, reproductive health, including family planning
and HIV/AIDS; and to eliminate specific forms of discrimination
that persons with disabilities may face with regard to reproductive
rights, household and family formation, and international migration.
A. Reproductive rights and reproductive
health. Reproductive health is a state of complete physical,
mental and social well-being in all matters relating to the reproductive
system and to its functions and processes. It implies that people
have the capability to reproduce and the freedom to decide if, when
and how often to do so. Implicit in this is the right of men and
women to be informed and to have access to safe, effective, affordable
and acceptable methods of family planning of their choice, as well
as other methods of their choice for regulation of fertility, which
are not against the law, and the right of access to health-care
services that will enable women to go safely through pregnancy and
childbirth. Reproductive health care also includes sexual health,
the purpose of which is the enhancement of life and personal relations.
Reproductive rights embrace certain human rights
that are already recognized in national laws, international human
rights documents and other relevant UN consensus documents. These
rights rest on the recognition of the basic right of all couples
and individuals to decide freely and responsibly the number, spacing
and timing of their children and to have the information and means
to do so, and the right to attain the highest standard of sexual
and reproductive health. They also include the right of all to make
decisions concerning reproduction free of discrimination, coercion
and violence. Full attention should be given to promoting mutually
respectful and equitable gender relations and particularly to meeting
the educational and service needs of adolescents to enable them
to deal in a positive and responsible way with their sexuality.
All countries are called upon to strive
to make reproductive health accessible through the primary health-care
system to all individuals of appropriate age as soon as possible
and no later than 2105. Such care should include, inter alia:
family planning counselling, information, education, communication
and services; education and services for prenatal care, safe delivery
and post-natal care, especially breast-feeding and infant and women's
health care; prevention and treatment of infertility; abortion as
specified in paragraph 8.25; treatment of reproductive tract infections,
sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and other reproductive health
conditions; and information, education and counselling on human
sexuality, reproductive health and responsible parenthood.
Reproductive health-care programmes should be
designed to serve the needs of women, including adolescents, and
must involve women in the leadership, planning, decision-making,
management, implementation, organization and evaluation of services.
Innovative programmes must be developed to make information, counselling
and services for reproductive health accessible to adolescents and
adult men. Such programmes must both educate and enable men to share
more equally in family planning, domestic and child-rearing responsibilities
and to accept major responsibility for the prevention of STDs.
B. Family planning. Actions are recommended to help
couples and individuals meet their reproductive goals; to prevent
unwanted pregnancies and reduce the incidence of high-risk pregnancies
and morbidity and mortality; to make quality services affordable,
acceptable and accessible to all who need and want them; to improve
the quality of advice, information, education, communication, counselling
and services; to increase the participation and sharing of responsibility
of men in the actual practice of family planning; and to promote
breast-feeding to enhance birth spacing. The text emphasizes that
Governments and the international community should use the full
means at their disposal to support the principle of voluntary choice
in family planning. As part of the effort to meet unmet needs, all
countries are asked to identify and remove all major remaining barriers
to the use of family planning services. Governments are urged to
provide a climate that is favourable to good-quality public and
private family planning and reproductive health information and
services through all possible channels. The international community
is urged to move, on an immediate basis, to establish an efficient
coordination system and global, regional and subregional facilities
for the procurement of contraceptives and other commodities essential
to reproductive health programmes of developing countries and countries
with economies in transition.
C. STDs and HIV prevention. Section C recommends actions
designed to prevent, reduce the incidence of and provide treatment
for STDs, including HIV/AIDS, and the complications of STDs such
as infertility. Such actions include: increasing efforts in reproductive
health programmes to prevent, detect and treat STDs and other reproductive
tract infections; providing specialized training to all health-care
providers in the prevention and detection of, and counselling on,
STDs, especially infections in women and youth; making information,
counselling for responsible sexual behaviour and effective prevention
of STDs and HIV integral components of all reproductive and sexual
health services; and promoting and distributing high-quality condoms
as integral components of all reproductive health-care services.
D. Human sexuality and gender relations. The objective
is twofold: to promote the adequate development of responsible sexuality
that permits relations of equity and mutual respect between the
genders; and to ensure that women and men have access to information,
education and services needed to achieve good sexual health and
exercise their reproductive rights and responsibilities. Recommended
actions include giving support to integral sexual education and
services for young people, with the support and guidance of their
parents and in line with the Convention on the Rights of the Child,
that stress male responsibility for their own sexual health and
fertility and that help them exercise those responsibilities. Educational
efforts should begin within the family unit, but must also reach
adults, in particular men, through non-formal education and a variety
of community-based activities. Educational programmes should also
encourage and support active and open discussion of the need to
protect women, youth and children from abuse, including sexual abuse,
exploitation, trafficking and violence. Governments and communities
are advised to take steps urgently to stop the practice of female
genital mutilation and protect women and girls from all similar
unnecessary and dangerous practices.
E. Adolescents. Adolescent sexual and reproductive
health issues, including unwanted pregnancy, unsafe abortion (as
defined by the World Health Organization), and STDs and HIV/AIDS,
are addressed through the promotion of responsible and healthy reproductive
and sexual behaviour, including voluntary abstinence, and the provision
of appropriate services and counselling specifically suitable for
that age group. A substantial reduction in all adolescent pregnancies
is also sought. The text stresses that countries must ensure that
programmes and attitudes of health-care providers do not restrict
adolescents' access to the services and information they need. These
services must safeguard the right of adolescents to privacy, confidentiality,
respect and informed consent, while respecting cultural values and
religious beliefs as well as the rights, duties and responsibilities
of parents. Countries, with the support of the international community,
should protect and promote the rights of adolescents to reproductive
health education, information and care, and greatly reduce the number
of adolescent pregnancies. Governments are urged, in collaboration
with NGOs, to establish appropriate mechanisms to respond to the
special needs of adolescents.
A. Primary health care and the health-care sector.
The increases in life expectancy recorded in most regions of the
world in the past half century reflect significant gains in public
health and in access to primary health-care services. Notable achievements
include the vaccination of children and widespread use of low-cost
treatments, such as oral rehydration therapy. Yet these achievements
have not been realized in all countries, and preventable or treatable
illnesses are still the leading killers of young children. Moreover,
large segments of many populations remain at risk of infectious,
parasitic and water-borne diseases. Section A recommends actions
to increase the accessibility, availability, acceptability and affordability
of health-care services and facilities, and to increase the healthy
life-span and improve the quality of life of all people, as well
as to reduce the disparities in life expectancy between and within
countries.
Section A stresses that all countries should
make access to basic health care and health promotion the central
strategies for reducing mortality and morbidity. Sufficient resources
should be assigned so that primary health services cover the entire
population. All countries should reduce mortality and morbidity
and seek to make primary health care, including reproductive health
care, universally available by the end of the current decade. Countries
should aim to achieve by 2005 a life expectancy at birth greater
than 70 years and by 2015 a life expectancy at birth greater than
75 years. Countries with the highest levels of mortality should
aim to achieve by 2005 a life expectancy at birth greater than 65
years and by 2015 a life expectancy at birth greater than 70 years.
Governments should ensure community participation in the planning
of health policies, especially with respect to the long-term care
of the elderly, those with disabilities and those infected with
HIV and other endemic diseases. Access to health-care services for
all people and especially for the most underserved and vulnerable
groups must be ensured. Governments should seek to make basic health-care
services more sustainable financially, while ensuring equitable
access.
B. Child survival and health. Important progress has
been made in reducing infant and child mortality everywhere. However,
the mortality of children under age 5 varies significantly between
and within countries and regions. Poverty, malnutrition, a decline
in breast-feeding, and inadequacy or lack of sanitation and health
facilities are all associated with high infant and child mortality.
Child survival is closely linked to the timing, spacing and number
of births and to the reproductive health of mothers. Early, late,
numerous and closely spaced pregnancies are major contributors to
high infant and child mortality and morbidity, especially where
health-care facilities are scarce. Section B thus recommends actions
to reduce the disparities in mortality rates between and within
developed and developing countries, with particular attention to
eliminating the pattern of excess and preventable mortality among
girl infants and children. Also recommended are actions to improve
the health and nutritional status of infants and children and to
promote breast-feeding as a child survival strategy.
Section B contains the following specific targets: Countries
should strive to reduce their infant and under-5 mortality rates
by one third, or to 50 to 70 per 1,000 live births, respectively,
whichever is less, by the year 2000. By 2005, countries with intermediate
levels should aim to achieve an infant mortality rate below 50 deaths
per 1,000 and an under-5 mortality rate below 60 deaths per 1,000
births. By 2015, all countries should aim to achieve an infant mortality
rate below 35 per 1,000 live births and an under-5 mortality rate
below 45 per 1,000. Countries with indigenous people should achieve
infant and under-5 mortality rates among their indigenous people
that are the same as those of the general population.
Section B calls on all Governments to assess the underlying
causes of high child mortality and to extend, within the framework
of primary health care, integrated reproductive health-care and
child-health services, including safe motherhood (defined in a footnote),
child-survival programmes and family planning services, to all the
population and particularly to the most vulnerable and underserved
groups. All countries should give high priority to efforts to reduce
the major childhood diseases, particularly infectious and parasitic
diseases, and to prevent malnutrition among children, especially
the girl child.
C. Women's health and safe motherhood. Complications
related to pregnancy and childbirth are among the leading causes
of mortality for women of reproductive age in many parts of the
developing world, resulting in the death of about half a million
women each year, 99 per cent of them in developing countries. The
age at which women begin or stop child-bearing, the interval between
each birth, the total number of lifetime pregnancies and the sociocultural
and economic circumstances in which women live all influence maternal
morbidity and mortality. Although approximately 90 per cent of the
countries of the world have policies that permit abortion under
varying legal conditions to save the life of the mother, a significant
proportion of the abortions carried out are self-induced or otherwise
unsafe, leading to a large fraction of maternal deaths or to permanent
injury to the women involved.
The objectives are: to promote women's
health and safe motherhood; to achieve a rapid and substantial reduction
in maternal morbidity and mortality and to reduce the difference
between and within developed and developing countries; and, on the
basis of a commitment to women's health and well-being, to reduce
greatly the number of deaths and morbidity from unsafe abortion.
Actions that improve the health and nutritional status of women,
especially of pregnant and nursing women, are also recommended.
The document calls for a reduction in maternal
mortality by one half of the 1990 levels by the year 2000 and a
further half by 2015. Countries with intermediate levels of mortality
should aim to achieve by the year 2005 a maternal mortality rate
below 100 per 100,000 live births and by 2015 a rate below 60 per
100,000. Countries with the highest levels of mortality should aim
to achieve by 2005 a maternal mortality rate below 125 per 100,000
live births and by 2015 a rate of below 75 per 100,000. All countries
should reduce maternal morbidity and mortality to levels where they
no longer constitute a public health problem. All countries are
called upon, with the support of the international community, to
expand the provision of maternal-health services in the context
of primary health care. All countries should also aim to further
reduce maternal mortality through measures to prevent, detect and
manage high-risk pregnancies and births, particularly those of adolescents
and late-parity women. Programmes and education to engage men's
support for maternal-health and safe motherhood should be developed;
all countries are urged to seek changes in high-risk sexual behaviour
and to devise strategies to ensure that men share responsibility
for sexual and reproductive health.
The full text of paragraph 8.25, dealing with abortion, reads
as follows: "In no case should abortion be promoted as a method
of family planning. All Governments and relevant intergovernmental
and non-governmental organizations are urged to strengthen their
commitment to women's health, to deal with the health impact of
unsafe abortion (defined in a footnote) as a major public health
concern and to reduce the recourse to abortion through expanded
and improved family planning services. Prevention of unwanted pregnancies
must always be given the highest priority and all attempts should
be made to eliminate the need for abortion. Women who have unwanted
pregnancies should have ready access to reliable information and
compassionate counselling. Any measures or changes related to abortion
within the health system can only be determined at the national
or local level according to the national legislative process. In
circumstances in which abortion is not against the law, such abortion
should be safe. In all cases, women should have access to quality
services for the management of complications arising from abortion.
Post-abortion counselling, education and family planning services
should be offered promptly, which will also help to avoid repeat
abortions."
D. HIV/AIDS. The AIDS pandemic is
a major concern in both developed and developing countries. As of
mid-1993, about four-fifths of all persons ever infected with HIV
lived in developing countries where the infection was being transmitted
mainly through heterosexual intercourse and the number of cases
was rising most rapidly among women. The main objectives in section
D are to prevent, reduce the spread of and minimize the impact of
HIV infection, and to ensure that HIV-infected individuals have
adequate medical care and are not discriminated against. A third
objective is to intensify research on methods to control the HIV/AIDS
pandemic and to find an effective treatment for the disease.
Section D calls on Governments to mobilize all
segments of society to control the AIDS pandemic and to give high
priority to IEC campaigns in programmes to reduce the spread of
HIV infection. Sex education and information should be provided
to both those infected and those not infected, and especially to
adolescents. Responsible sexual behaviour, including voluntary sexual
abstinence, should be promoted and included in education and information
programmes. Among the aims are to raise awareness and to emphasize
behaviourial change. The international community is called upon
to mobilize the human and financial resources required to reduce
the rate of transmission of HIV infection.
A. Population distribution and sustainable development.
The process of urbanization is intrinsic to economic and social
development and, in consequence, both developed and developing countries
are in the process of shifting from predominantly rural to predominantly
urban societies. The objective is to foster a more balanced distribution
of population by promoting sustainable development in both major
sending and receiving areas. Such development should be ecologically
sound and promote economic, social and gender equity. A related
aim is to reduce the various factors that push people to migrate.
These include, among others, the inequitable allocation of development
resources, the use of inappropriate technologies, and the lack of
access to available land. Countries should adopt strategies that
encourage the growth of small or medium-sized urban centres and
seek to develop rural areas. In order to develop rural areas, Governments
should actively support access to landownership and to water resources,
especially for family units and should also make or encourage investments
for increased rural productivity.
B. Large urban agglomerations. In many countries,
a single city dominates the urban system. This poses specific economic,
social and environmental challenges. But large urban agglomerations
often also represent the most dynamic centres of economic and cultural
activity. The objective is to help countries better manage these
large urban agglomerations in order to improve the security and
quality of life of both the rural and urban poor. The text calls
on Governments to increase the capacity and competence of city and
municipal authorities to manage urban development and to respond
to the needs of all citizens. It also urges them to give migrants,
especially females, greater access to work, credit, basic education,
health services, child-care centres and vocational training. In
order to finance the needed infrastructure and services in a balanced
manner, it is recommended that government agencies, bearing in mind
the interests of the poor segments of society, consider introducing
equitable cost-recovery schemes and other measures to increase revenues.
C. Internally displaced persons. The objective is
to offer adequate protection and assistance to persons displaced
within their own countries, particularly women, children and the
elderly, and to find solutions to the root causes of their displacement,
with a view to preventing it in the future, and to facilitate their
return or resettlement. The document further seeks to put an end
to all forms of forced migration, including "ethnic cleansing".
Countries are called upon to address the causes of internal displacement,
including environmental degradation, natural disasters, armed conflict
and forced resettlement, and to establish the necessary mechanisms
to protect and assist displaced persons. It further calls for measures
to ensure that internally displaced persons receive basic education,
employment opportunities, vocational training and basic health-care
services, including reproductive health services and family planning.
Measures should also be taken, at the national level with international
cooperation, as appropriate, in accordance with the Charter of the
United Nations, to find lasting solutions to questions related to
internally displaced persons, including their right to voluntary
and safe return to the home of origin.
International economic, political and cultural
interrelations play an important role in determining the flow of
people between countries. In its diverse types, international migration
is linked to such interrelations and both affects and is affected
by the development process. Poverty and environmental degradation,
combined with the absence of peace and security, and human rights
violations are all factors affecting international migration.
A. International migration and development.
Orderly international migration can have positive effects on
both communities of origin and those of destination. Governments
are urged to address the root causes of migration, to make remaining
in one's country a viable option for all people. Inflows of remittances
should be fostered by sound economic policies and adequate banking
facilities. Countries of destination should consider the use of
temporary migration, while countries of origin should collaborate
in promoting voluntary return. The exchange of information on migration
policies and the monitoring of stocks and flows of migrants through
adequate data gathering should be supported.
B. Documented migrants. Governments
of receiving countries are urged to consider extending to documented
migrants who meet appropriate length-of-stay requirements, and to
members of their families, regular treatment equal to that accorded
their own nationals with regard to basic human rights. Women and
children who migrate as family members should be protected from
abuse or denial of their human rights. All Governments, particularly
those of receiving countries, must recognize the vital importance
of family reunification and promote its integration into their national
legislation in order to protect the unity of the families of documented
migrants in a manner consistent with the universally recognized
human rights instruments.
C. Undocumented migrants. The document
recalls the right of every nation State to decide who can enter
and stay in its territory and under what conditions, and urges Governments
to exercise such right taking care to avoid racist or xenophobic
actions and policies. Section C recommends actions to reduce the
number of undocumented migrants; prevent their exploitation and
protect their basic human rights; prevent international trafficking
in migrants; and protect them against racism, ethnocentrism and
xenophobia. These actions include identifying the causes of undocumented
migration and its economic, social and demographic impact; adopting
effective sanctions against those who organize, exploit or traffic
in undocumented migration; deterring undocumented migration by making
potential migrants aware of the legal conditions for entry, stay
and employment in host countries; and trying to find solutions to
the problems of undocumented migrants through bilateral or multilateral
negotiations on, inter alia, readmission agreements that
protect the basic human rights of persons involved in accordance
with relevant international instruments.
D. Refugees, asylum-seekers and displaced persons. Governments
are urged to address the root causes of movements of refugees and
displaced persons by taking appropriate measures with respect to
the resolution of conflict, the promotion of peace and reconciliation,
respect for human rights, and respect for independence, territorial
integrity and the sovereignty of States. Governments should also
address the factors that contribute to forced displacement and strengthen
their support for international activities to protect and assist
refugees and displaced persons. Adequate international support should
be extended to countries of asylum to meet the basic needs of refugees
and to assist in the search for durable solutions. Refugees should
be provided with access to adequate accommodation; education; health
services, including family planning; and other necessary social
services.
A. Education, population and sustainable
development. Education is a key factor in sustainable development.
It is a component of well-being and a means to enable the individual
to gain access to knowledge. It also helps reduce fertility, morbidity
and mortality rates; empower women; improve the quality of the working
population; and promote genuine democracy. The increase in the education
of women and girls contributes to women's empowerment, to postponement
of marriage and to reductions in family size. When mothers are better
educated, their children's survival rate tends to increase.
Section A has four main objectives, each of which
is also a recommended action: (a) to achieve universal access
to quality education, in particular to primary and technical education
and job training; (b) to combat illiteracy (the eradication
of which is one of the prerequisites of human development) and to
eliminate gender disparities in educational opportunities and support;
(c) to promote non-formal education for young people; and
(d) to introduce and improve the content of the curriculum
so as to promote greater responsibility towards, and awareness of,
the interrelationships between population and sustainable development;
health issues, including reproductive health; and gender equity.
Section A stresses that investments in education
and job training should be given high priority in development budgets
and take into account the range and level of future workforce skill
requirements. It also emphasizes that education about population
issues must begin in primary school and continue through all levels
of formal and non-formal education, taking into account the rights
and responsibilities of parents and the needs of children and adolescents.
B. Population information, education
and communication. Greater public knowledge, understanding and
commitment at all levels, from the individual to the international,
are vital to the achievement of the goals and objectives of the
Programme of Action. A primary aim, therefore, is to increase such
knowledge, understanding and commitment. Other aims are: (a)
to encourage attitudes in favour of responsible behaviour in such
areas as the environment, family, sexuality, reproduction, gender
and racial sensitivity; (b) to ensure Governments' commitment
to promote private- and public-sector participation in the design,
implementation and monitoring of population and development policies
and programmes; and (c) to enhance the ability of couples
and individuals to exercise their basic right to decide freely and
responsibly the number and spacing of their children, and to have
the information, education and means to do so.
Countries should seek to raise awareness on priority
issues through public education campaigns. The media should be a
major instrument in such efforts. It is especially important that
IEC strategies are linked to, and complement, national population
and development policies and strategies, as well as a full range
of services in reproductive health, including family planning and
sexual health, in order to enhance the use of such services and
improve the quality of counselling and care. Governments, NGOs and
the private sector should make greater and effective use of the
entertainment media, including radio and television, folk theatre
and other traditional media.
This chapter stresses the importance of
valid, reliable, timely, culturally relevant and internationally
comparable population data for policy and programme development,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation. It also emphasizes that
research, in particular biomedical research, has been instrumental
in giving more and more people access to a greater range of safe
and effective modern methods for regulation of fertility. The chapter
further stresses that social and economic research is also needed
to enable programmes to take into account the views of their intended
beneficiaries, especially women, adolescents and other less empowered
groups.
A. Basic data collection, analysis and dissemination.
Governments should strengthen their national capacity to carry out
sustained and comprehensive programmes to collect, analyse, disseminate
and utilize population and development data. Particular attention
should be given to the monitoring of population trends and the preparation
of demographic projections. Governments should also monitor progress
towards the attainment of the goals and objectives set forth in
the Programme of Action. The data collected should be disaggregated
by gender in order to provide a more accurate picture of women's
current and potential contribution to economic development.
B. Reproductive health research.
Governments, assisted by the international community and others,
including NGOs and the private sector, are called upon to increase
support for basic and applied biomedical, technological, clinical,
epidemiological and social-science research in order to strengthen
reproductive health services. The aim is to improve existing and
develop new methods for regulation of fertility that meet users'
needs and are acceptable, easy to use, safe, free of side-effects,
effective and affordable. Testing and introduction of all new technologies
should be continually monitored to avoid potential abuse. High priority
should be given to the development of new methods for regulation
of fertility for men, as well as to research on sexually transmitted
diseases, including HIV/AIDS, and on infertility. The document calls
for the promotion of research on the determinants of induced abortion,
on the treatment of complications of abortions and post-abortion
care and on the consequences of induced abortion, including its
effects on subsequent fertility, reproductive mental health and
contraceptive practice.
C. Social and economic research. Governments,
funding agencies and research organizations are called upon to encourage
and promote sociocultural and economic research on relevant population
and development policies and programmes. Policy-oriented research,
at the national and international levels, should be undertaken on
areas beset by population problems, poverty, patterns of over-consumption,
and environmental degradation, giving particular attention to the
interactions between those factors. The document urges Governments,
concerned intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations and
others to give priority to research on the linkages between women's
roles and status and demographic and development processes. Women
should be involved at all stages in the planning of research on
gender issues, and efforts should be made to recruit and train more
female researchers.
A. National policies and plans of action. Where leadership
is strongly committed to economic growth, human resource development,
gender equality and equity and meeting the health and in particular
the reproductive health needs of the population, countries have
been able to mobilize sustained national commitment to make population
and development programmes successful. Population and development
are intrinsically interrelated and progress in any area can catalyse
improvement in others. Recognition is given to the need to involve
intended beneficiaries in the design and subsequent implementation
of population-related policies, plans, programmes and projects.
Non-governmental organizations and the private sector are acknowledged
as partners in national policies and programmes. Members of national
legislatures can have a major role to play, especially in enacting
domestic legislation for implementing the Programme of Action, allocating
appropriate financial resources, ensuring accountability of expenditure
and raising public awareness of population issues. The main objectives
are to foster active involvement of elected representatives of people,
particularly parliamentarians and concerned groups and individuals,
especially at the grass-roots level, and to build up the capacity
and self-reliance to undertake concerted national actions.
B. Programme management and human resource
development. The document encourages Governments to increase
the skill level and accountability of managers and others involved
in the implementation, monitoring and evaluation of national population
and development strategies, policies, plans and programmes. The
trend to decentralization of authority in national population and
development programmes is appreciated to require new skills, better
information and communication systems, and strategies to increase
and retain the numbers of trained staff, particularly women. Governments
are called upon to give special attention to client-centred management
information systems for population and development, particularly
for reproductive health programmes, covering both governmental and
non-governmental activities and providing updated data on clientele,
expenditures, infrastructure, service accessibility and output and
quality of services.
C. Resource mobilization and allocation.
The document includes estimates of the funding levels required to
meet developing countries' needs and the needs of countries with
economies in transition in the period 2000-2015 for basic reproductive
health services, including family planning; prevention of sexually
transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS; and population data collection,
analysis and dissemination, policy formulation and research. On
the basis of past experience, experts have estimated that the implementation
of programmes in these areas will cost $17.0 billion in 2000, $18.5
billion in 2005,$20.5 billion in 2010 and $21.7 billion in 2015.It
is tentatively estimated that up to two thirds of the costs will
continue to be met by the countries themselves and in the order
of one third from external sources, with considerable variations
between and within regions. In order to meet and reinforce social
development goals and satisfy previously undertaken intergovernmental
commitments, Governments are urged to devote an increased proportion
of their public-sector expenditures to the social sectors, stressing
in particular poverty eradication in the context of sustainable
development.
This chapter recommends actions to clarify the reciprocal
responsibilities among development partners and to increase the
commitment to, and stability of, international financial assistance
in the field of population and development. It seeks to ensure that
international cooperation in the area of population and development
is consistent with national population and development priorities.
National capacity-building and the transfer of technology and know-how
are held as the core objectives of international cooperation at
the programme level.
The international community should strive for the fulfilment
of the agreed target of 0.7 per cent of GNP for overall official
development assistance (ODA) and endeavour to increase the share
of funding for population and development programmes commensurate
with the scope and scale of activities required to achieve the objectives
and goals of the Programme of Action. A crucially urgent challenge
to the international donor community is therefore the translation
of their commitment to the objectives and quantitative goals of
the Programme of Action into commensurate financial contributions
to population programmes in developing countries and countries with
economies in transition. Given the magnitude of the financial resource
needs for national population and development programmes, and assuming
that recipient countries will be able to generate sufficient increases
in domestically generated resources, the need for complementary
resource flows from donor countries would be (in 1993 US dollars):
in the order of $5.7 billion in 2000; $6.1 billion in 2005; $6.8
billion in 2010; and $7.2 billion in 2015. These figures include
the needs of the countries with economies in transition, which should
receive temporary assistance for population and development activities
in light of the difficult economic and social problems that they
face at present. The international community should urge donor agencies
to facilitate and give higher priority to supporting direct South-South
collaborative arrangements. Recipient countries should ensure that
international assistance for population and development activities
is used effectively to meet population and development objectives
so as to assist donors to secure commitment to further resources
for programmes.
The primary objective of this chapter is
to promote an effective partnership between Governments, non-governmental
organizations, local community groups and the private sector in
the discussion and decisions on the design, implementation, coordination,
monitoring and evaluation of programmes relating to population,
development and environment. Governments and intergovernmental organizations
should integrate NGOs and local community groups into their decision-making
and facilitate the contribution that NGOs can make towards finding
solutions to population and development concerns and, in particular,
to ensure the implementation of the Programme of Action.
Governments should ensure the essential roles
and participation of women's organizations in the design and implementation
of population and development programmes. Involving women at all
levels, especially the managerial level, is critical to meeting
the objectives and implementing the Programme of Action. Governments
and donor countries should ensure that NGOs and their networks are
able to maintain their autonomy and strengthen their capacity through
regular dialogue and consultations, appropriate training and outreach
activities, and thus play a greater role in the partnership.
The private, profit-oriented sector, which is
discussed in section B, plays an important role in social and economic
development, including production and delivery of reproductive health-care
services and commodities, including appropriate education and information
relevant to population and development programmes. The aim is to
strengthen the partnership between Governments, international organizations
and the private sector in identifying new areas of cooperation and
to promote the role of the private sector in service delivery and
in the production and distribution of high-quality reproductive
health and family planning commodities and contraceptives. The profit-oriented
sector should consider how it might better assist non-profit NGOs
in playing a wider role in society by enhancing or creating mechanisms
to channel financial and other support to NGOs and their associations.
A. National-level activities. The
willingness of Governments, local communities, the non-governmental
sector, the international community and others to integrate population
concerns into all aspects of economic and social activity will greatly
assist in improving the quality of life for all individuals and
future generations.
Extensive international, regional, subregional,
national and local preparatory processes have strongly contributed
to the formulation of the Programme of Action. Considerable institutional
development has taken place in many countries in order to steer
the national preparatory process; public information and education
campaigns have fostered greater awareness of population issues,
and comprehensive national reports have been prepared for the Conference.
Conference follow-up should include policy guidance,
including building political support for population and development;
resource mobilization; coordination and mutual accountability of
implementation efforts; problem solving and sharing of experience
within and between countries; and monitoring and reporting of progress
in implementation.
Implementation of the Programme of Action must
be part of an integrated follow-up effort to major international
conferences, including the ICPD, the World Conference on Health
for All, the World Conference on Education for All, the World Summit
for Children, the Conference on Least Developed Countries, the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development, the International
Conference on Nutrition, the World Conference on Human Rights, the
Global Conference on the Sustainable Development of Small Island
Developing States, the World Summit for Social Development, the
Fourth World Conference on Women, and the Second United Nations
Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II).
Governments, UN system organizations and
NGOs are urged to disseminate the Programme of Action widely and
seek public support for its goals, objectives and actions. All countries
should consider making additional contributions for implementation
of the Programme of Action, taking into account the provisions of
chapters XIII and XIV and the economic constraints faced by developing
countries.
All countries are urged to establish appropriate
national follow-up, accountability and monitoring mechanisms, in
partnership with NGOs, organizations, community groups, the media
and the academic community, and with the support of parliamentarians.
The international community should assist Governments in organizing
national-level follow-up, including capacity-building for project
formulation and programme management, and in strengthening coordination
and evaluation mechanisms.
Governments are urged to set up or enhance national
data bases to provide baseline data and information that can be
used to measure or assess progress towards the achievement of the
goals and objectives of the ICPD. All countries are urged to regularly
assess and periodically report their progress, outlining successes,
problems and obstacles.
B. Subregional and regional activities.
Implementation must address specific subregional and regional strategies
and needs. Regional commissions, UN system organizations at the
regional level and other relevant subregional and regional organizations
should be active in coordinated implementation. Governments and
relevant organizations are urged to reinforce existing follow-up
mechanisms. Multidisciplinary expertise should be utilized in implementation
and follow-up. Cooperation in capacity-building, the sharing and
exchange of information and experiences, know-how and technical
expertise should be strengthened with the assistance of the international
community and in partnership with NGOs. Governments are urged to
strengthen training and research in population and development issues,
and widely disseminate research findings.
C. Activities at the international level.
While some of the resources required for implementation could come
from reordering priorities, developing countries, particularly the
least developed, will require new and additional financial resources
from the public and private sectors, NGOs and the international
community, including on concessional and grant terms, according
to sound and equitable indicators, provided through bilateral and
multilateral channels and NGOs. There should be a coordinated approach
and a clearer division of labour in population-relevant policy and
operational aspects of development cooperation, and enhanced coordination
and planning in resource mobilization.
The General Assembly should organize a regular
review of implementation of the Programme of Action. The Economic
and Social Council (ECOSOC) should promote an integrated approach
and provide system-wide coordination and guidance in monitoring
implementation, and should review the UN reporting system.
The Assembly during its forty-ninth session and
ECOSOC in 1995 should review the roles, responsibilities, mandates
and comparative advantages of intergovernmental bodies and UN system
organs addressing population and development, in order to: ensure
effective implementation, monitoring and evaluation of activities
based on the Programme of Action; improve the effectiveness of implementation
and monitoring activities; and ensure recognition of the interrelationships
between policy guidance, research, standard-setting and operations.
ECOSOC should, in the context of Assembly resolution
48/162, consider the respective roles of the UN organs dealing with
population and development, including the United Nations Population
Fund (UNFPA) and the Population Division. The General Assembly at
its forty-ninth session, in accordance with its resolution 48/162,
should consider establishing a separate Executive Board of UNFPA,
bearing in mind the administrative, budgetary and programme implications.
The UN Secretary-General is urged to promote
an exchange of information among the various UN bodies, international
financial institutions and bilateral aid organizations and agencies,
on international assistance required for regularly reviewing countries'
population and development needs, including emergency and temporary
needs, and maximizing the availability and effective utilization
of resources.
UN specialized agencies and related organizations
should strengthen and adjust their activities, programmes and medium-term
strategies as follow-up to the Conference; governing bodies should
review their policies, programmes, budgets and activities in this
regard.
Published by the United Nations Department of Public
Information * DPI/1618/POP--March 1995

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