Implementation of the outcome of the World Summit for Social
Development and of the twenty-fourth special session of the General Assembly
A/RES/67/141
4.
Reaffirms that the Commission for Social Development continues to have
the primary responsibility for the follow-up to and review of the World Summit for
Social Development and the outcome of the twenty-fourth special session of the
General Assembly and that it serves as the main United Nations forum for an
intensified global dialogue on social development issues, and calls upon Member
States, the relevant specialized agencies, funds and programmes of the United
Nations system and civil society to enhance their support for its work;
Expresses deep concern that the ongoing adverse impact of the world
5.
financial and economic crisis, volatile energy and food prices and food insecurity and
the challenges posed by climate change, as well as the lack of results so far in the
multilateral trade negotiations, have negative implications for social development;
Stresses the importance of the policy space of national Governments, in
6.
particular in the areas of social expenditure and social protection programmes, and
calls upon international financial institutions and donors to support developing
countries in achieving their social development, in line with their national priorities
and strategies by, among other things, providing debt relief;
Recognizes that the broad concept of social development affirmed by the
7.
World Summit for Social Development and the twenty-fourth special session of the
General Assembly has not been fully implemented in national and international
policymaking and that, although poverty eradication is a central part of development
policy and discourse, further attention should be given to the other commitments
agreed to at the Summit, in particular those concerning employment and decent
work for all and social integration, which have also suffered from a general
disconnect between economic and social policymaking;
Acknowledges that the first United Nations Decade for the Eradication of
8.
Poverty (1997–2006), launched after the World Summit for Social Development, has
provided the long-term vision for sustained and concerted efforts at the national and
international levels to eradicate poverty;
Recognizes that the implementation of the commitments made by
9.
Governments during the first Decade has fallen short of expectations, and welcomes
the proclamation of the Second United Nations Decade for the Eradication of
Poverty (2008–2017) by the General Assembly in its resolution 62/205 of
19 December 2007 in order to support, in an efficient and coordinated manner, the
internationally agreed development goals related to poverty eradication, including
the Millennium Development Goals;
10. Emphasizes that the major United Nations conferences and summits,
including the Millennium Summit, the 2005 World Summit, the high-level plenary
meeting of the General Assembly on the Millennium Development Goals, the
International Conference on Financing for Development, in its Monterrey
Consensus, 10 and the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, held
in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from 20 to 22 June 2012, have reinforced the priority and
urgency of poverty eradication within the United Nations development agenda;
11. Also emphasizes that poverty eradication policies should tackle poverty
by addressing its root and structural causes and manifestations, and that equity, the
reduction of inequalities and the empowerment of the poor need to be incorporated
into those policies;
_______________
10
Report of the International Conference on Financing for Development, Monterrey, Mexico,
18–22 March 2002 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.02.II.A.7), chap. I, resolution 1, annex.
4/11