A/RES/69/141
Literacy for life: shaping future agendas
Deeply concerned that, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization, 781 million adults do not have basic literacy skills and
58 million children of primary and 63 million children of secondary school age
remain out of school, that an estimated 250 million children of primary school age
are failing to acquire basic literacy skills, that millions more young people leave
school without a level of literacy adequate for productive and active participation in
their societies, that the issue of literacy may not be sufficiently high on national
agendas to generate the kind of political and economic support required to address
global literacy challenges and that the world is unlikely to meet those challenges if
present trends continue,
Recognizing that literacy is a foundation for lifelong learning, a building block
for achieving human rights and fundamental freedoms and a driver of sustainable
development and that the United Nations Literacy Decade (2003–2012) had a
catalytic effect as a global framework for sustained and focused efforts for the
promotion of literacy and literate environments,
Welcoming the convening of the International Conference on Girls’ and
Women’s Literacy and Education: Foundations for Sustainable Development, held
in Dhaka and co-hosted by the Government of Bangladesh and the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, in support of the Global
Education First Initiative and on the occasion of International Literacy Day, on 8
September 2014, and taking note with appreciation of the adoption of the Dhaka
Declaration,
Taking note of the report of the Open Working Group on Sustainable
Development Goals, 4 which shall be the main basis for integrating sustainable
development goals into the post-2015 development agenda, while recognizing that
other inputs will also be considered, in the intergovernmental negotiation process at
the sixty-ninth session of the General Assembly, and acknowledging that it includes
a goal on ensuring inclusive and equitable quality education and promoting lifelong
learning opportunities for all with a stand-alone target on literacy,
Affirming that the realization of the right to education, especially for girls,
contributes to the promotion of human rights, gender equality and the eradication of
poverty, as well as to development,
Recognizing the importance of continuing to implement national programmes
and measures to eliminate illiteracy worldwide as reflected in the Dakar Framework
for Action on Education for All, adopted on 28 April 2000 at the World Education
Forum, 5 and in the Millennium Development Goals, and in this regard also
recognizing the important contribution of South-South and triangular cooperation
through, inter alia, innovative pedagogical methods in literacy,
Deeply concerned about the persistence of the gender gap in education, which
is reflected by the fact that, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization, nearly two thirds of the world’s non-literate adults are
women,
Concerned that, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization, one third of the children not attending school are children
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A/68/970 and Corr.1.
See United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Final Report of the World
Education Forum, Dakar, Senegal, 26–28 April 2000 (Paris, 2000).
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