International cooperation to address and counter the world drug problem
A/RES/73/192
contributing to the scientific assessment of drug demand and supply reduction
policies, drug markets and drug-related crime;
11. Recognizes that transit States continue to face multifaceted challenges, and
reaffirms the continuing need for cooperation and support, including the provision of
technical assistance, to, inter alia, enhance their capacities to effectively address and
counter the world drug problem, in conformity with the United Nations Convention
against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances of 1988; 8
12. Urges Member States to address the relevant socioeconomic factors that
relate to the world drug problem through a comprehensive, integrated and balanced
approach that incorporates drug policies into a broader socioeconomic development
agenda, in compliance with the three international drug control conventions;
13. Invites Member States to consider strengthening a development
perspective as part of comprehensive, integrated and balanced national drug policies
and programmes so as to tackle the related causes and consequences of the illicit
cultivation, manufacture and production of and trafficking in drugs by, inter alia,
addressing risk factors affecting individuals, communities and society, which may
include a lack of services, infrastructure needs, drug-related violence, exclusion,
marginalization and social disintegration, in order to contribute to the promotion of
peaceful and inclusive societies;
14. Encourages the development of viable economic alternatives, particularly
for communities affected by or at risk of illicit cultivation of drug crops and other
illicit drug-related activities in urban and rural areas, including through
comprehensive alternative development programmes, and to this end encourages
Member States to consider development-oriented interventions, while ensuring that
both men and women benefit equally from them, including through job opportunities,
improved infrastructure and basic public services and, as appropriate, access and legal
titles to land for farmers and local communities, which will also contribute to
preventing, reducing or eliminating illicit cultivation and other drug-related activities;
15. Emphasizes the need to strengthen, including through the Commission on
Narcotic Drugs and, as appropriate, its subsidiary bodies, the regular exchange of
information, good practices and lessons learned among national practitioners from
different fields and at all levels to effectively implement an integrated and balanced
approach to the world drug problem and its various aspects and the need to consider
additional measures to further facilitate meaningful discussion among those
practitioners;
16. Reiterates its call to mainstream a gender perspective into and ensure the
involvement of women in all stages of the development, implementation, monitoring
and evaluation of drug policies and programmes, to develop and disseminate gendersensitive and age-appropriate measures that take into account the specific needs and
circumstances faced by women and girls with regard to the world drug problem and,
as States parties, implement the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women; 12
17. Requests the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to continue to
support Member States, upon request, in mainstreaming a gender perspective in to
their policies and programmes related to the world drug problem, and invites the
United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women
(UN-Women) and other relevant United Nations entities, within their mandates, to
cooperate with the Office in this regard;
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