A/RES/62/126
19. Recognizes the positive contribution that youth representatives make to
the General Assembly and other United Nations bodies and their role as an
important channel of communication between young people and the United Nations,
and in this regard requests the Secretary-General to support adequately the United
Nations Programme on Youth of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of
the Secretariat so that it can continue to facilitate their effective participation in
meetings;
20. Recognizes also the need for a greater geographical balance of youth
representation, and encourages Member States and intergovernmental and
non-governmental organizations to contribute to the United Nations Youth Fund in
order to facilitate the participation of youth representatives from developing
countries;
21. Recognizes further that national youth councils or their equivalent bodies
are effective channels of cooperation and information exchange between young
people, their national Governments and other decision makers and that strong youth
councils can provide opportunities for more young people to become active in
decision-making and in shaping their societies, welcomes in this regard the political
and financial support provided by Member States to their creation and sustained
development, and invites all States to continue and to increase such support, where
appropriate;
22. Requests the Commission for Social Development, at its forty-sixth
session, to include youth employment in the discussions on its priority theme
“Promoting full employment and decent work for all”, taking into account, inter
alia, the recommendations on youth employment contained in the report of the
Secretary-General on the follow-up to the World Programme of Action,3 and invites
young people and youth-led organizations to contribute to those discussions;
2H
23. Requests the Secretary-General to report to the General Assembly at its
sixty-fourth session, through the Commission for Social Development at its
forty-seventh session, on the implementation of the World Programme of Action in
the clusters on youth in civil society and youth and their well-being and to include
in that report a comprehensive set of goals and targets for those clusters based on
consultations with Member States as well as the organizations, programmes,
regional commissions and specialized agencies of the United Nations system, young
people, youth-led organizations and other non-governmental organizations.
76th plenary meeting
18 December 2007
Annex
Supplement to the World Programme of Action for Youth to the
Year 2000 and Beyond
I.
Globalization
1.
Globalization has opened new opportunities for sustained economic growth
and the development of the world economy. Globalization has also permitted
countries to share experiences and to learn from one another’s achievements and
difficulties and has promoted a cross-fertilization of ideas, cultural values and
aspirations. Globalization has thus helped to connect youth not only to the rest of
the world, but also with each other.
6