A/RES/62/126
12. Urges Member States to involve young people and youth-led
organizations in the development of national policies that affect them, where
appropriate, including poverty reduction strategy papers where they exist, bearing in
mind that girls, boys, young women and young men have the same rights;
13. Calls upon Member States to consider using the proposed goals and
targets, as contained in the report of the Secretary-General entitled “Goals and
targets for monitoring the progress of youth in the global economy”,5 at the national
level as a means of facilitating the monitoring of the progress of youth in the global
economy and the implementation of the World Programme of Action;
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14. Also calls upon Member States to ensure the full participation of young
people and youth-led organizations in the development of policies designed to meet
national youth goals and targets, taking into account the proposed goals and targets
contained in the report of the Secretary-General entitled “Goals and targets for
monitoring the progress of youth in the global economy”, and to collaborate with
the United Nations system, young people, youth-led organizations, the private sector
and other relevant stakeholders in all efforts to achieve such goals and targets;
15. Encourages Member States to collect, on a continuous basis, youthspecific data disaggregated by age and sex, whenever possible, in order to create
comprehensive databases within youth ministries or similar offices to assist in
measuring progress in implementing the priority areas of the World Programme of
Action, and requests the Secretary-General to devise means to disseminate such data
widely so as to ensure that the global interest in youth development is informed by
sound and adequate data;
16. Takes note of the process of collaboration and consultation between
Member States, the organizations, programmes, regional commissions and
specialized agencies of the United Nations system and non-governmental
organizations in identifying the proposed goals and targets for measuring youth and
the global economy, and recommends continued collaboration, including in the form
of high-level training cooperation, between those actors in the implementation of
the World Programme of Action and the monitoring of the progress of such
implementation;
17. Stresses that progress in achieving the internationally agreed target of full
and productive employment and decent work for young people should be a central
objective of national and international efforts to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals, and requests the United Nations agencies, and invites the
international community and civil society as well as the private sector, to promote
the broader youth development agenda and to strengthen international cooperation
in order to support Member States in their efforts to achieve such progress, taking
into account that the primary responsibility for ensuring youth development lies
with States;
18. Stresses also the importance of ensuring that young people are
recognized as active agents in decision-making processes and for positive change
and development in society, urges Member States, in this regard, to consider
including youth representatives in their delegations to all relevant discussions in the
General Assembly and the Economic and Social Council and its functional
commissions, bearing in mind the principles of gender balance and
non-discrimination, and emphasizes that such youth representatives should be
selected through a transparent process which ensures that they have a suitable
mandate to represent young people in their countries;
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