A/RES/69/181
The right to development
31. Stresses the need for the integration of the rights of children, girls and
boys alike, in all policies and programmes and for ensuring the promotion and
protection of those rights, especially in areas relating to health, education and the
full development of their capacities;
32. Recalls the Political Declaration on HIV and AIDS: Intensifying Our
Efforts to Eliminate HIV and AIDS, adopted on 10 June 2011 at the high-level
meeting of the General Assembly on HIV and AIDS, 19 stresses that further and
additional measures must be taken at the national and international levels to fight HIV
and AIDS and other communicable diseases, taking into account ongoing efforts and
programmes, and reiterates the need for international assistance in this regard;
33. Welcomes the political declaration of the high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases,
adopted on 19 September 2011,20 with its particular focus on development and other
challenges and social and economic impacts, particularly for developing countries;
34. Recalls the outcome document of the United Nations Conference on
Sustainable Development, entitled “The future we want”;21
35. Also recalls the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities,22
which entered into force on 3 May 2008, and stresses the need to take into
consideration the rights of persons with disabilities and the importance of
international cooperation in support of national efforts in the realization of the right
to development;
36. Stresses its commitment to indigenous peoples in the process of the
realization of the right to development, reaffirms the commitment to promote their
rights in the areas of education, employment, vocational training and retraining,
housing, sanitation, health and social security, in accordance with recognized
international human rights obligations and taking into account, as appropriate, the
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, adopted by the
General Assembly in its resolution 61/295 of 13 September 2007, and in this regard
takes note of the high-level plenary meeting of the General Assembly known as the
World Conference on Indigenous Peoples,5 held in 2014;
37. Recognizes the need for strong partnerships with civil society
organizations and the private sector in pursuit of poverty eradication and
development, as well as for corporate social responsibility;
38. Emphasizes the urgent need for taking concrete and effective measures to
prevent, combat and criminalize all forms of corruption at all levels, to prevent,
detect and deter in a more effective manner international transfers of illicitly
acquired assets and to strengthen international cooperation in asset recovery,
consistent with the principles of the United Nations Convention against
Corruption, 23 particularly chapter V thereof, stresses the importance of a genuine
political commitment on the part of all Governments through a firm legal
framework, and in this context urges States to sign and ratify the Convention as
soon as possible and States parties to implement it effectively;
_______________
19
Resolution 65/277, annex.
Resolution 66/2, annex.
21
Resolution 66/288, annex.
22
United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 2515, No. 44910.
23
Ibid., vol. 2349, No. 42146.
20
8/9