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PROMOTING AND PROTECTING MINORITY RIGHTS
CHAPTER VI
THE UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME
Summary: The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) is the global development
network of the United Nations, whose goal it is to assist countries in acquiring knowledge,
experience and resources to help people build a better life. UNDP works on the ground in 177
countries and territories, collaborating with Governments and people to find their own solutions
to global and national development challenges. This chapter describes how the work of UNDP
affects members of minorities and suggests several ways in which minorities might increase their
participation in and better influence development processes and outcomes.
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) supports States Members of the United
Nations in developing national and local capacities for human development and in achieving the
Millennium Development Goals, which world leaders have pledged to do by 2015.70 Capacity
development cuts across its four key focus areas: democratic governance; poverty reduction
and achievement of the Millennium Development Goals; crisis prevention and recovery; and
environment and energy for sustainable development. In each of these areas, UNDP advocates
for the advancement of human rights and the empowerment of women. It also promotes the
efficiency and effectiveness of the United Nations system as a whole at the country level.
Minorities in development programming
There are ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities in all UNDP countries of operation and a strong
link between minority issues and each of its key focus areas. Minorities are often poorer than
other segments of a country’s population, are regularly affected by conflict, have less access
to governance mechanisms, have higher HIV prevalence, and may suffer from higher levels of
environmental degradation than exist elsewhere in the country. Increased attention to minority
rights can help overcome obstacles to achieving the Millennium Development Goals. UNDP
strives to strengthen national development plans by drawing attention to the negative impact of
excluding minorities and the benefits of working to include minorities.
UNDP recognizes that minority-based civil society organizations and its own employees who
belong to minority groups bring valuable experiences, skills and knowledge to its work. UNDP
thus strives to build diversity among its employees and invites minorities to become strategic
partners and support it in achieving its development goals.
Minorities and the UNDP focus areas
Poverty reduction and achievement of the Millennium Development Goals
UNDP supports Governments to ensure that minorities overcome poverty. It does this through
improving capacity to monitor poverty reduction among minorities, facilitating the participation
of minorities in designing poverty reduction strategies and advocating for improved human
development among minority groups. It assists Governments to understand the particular
challenges faced by minorities in reaching the Millennium Development Goals, and to put in
place sound strategies – linked to minority rights protection – for overcoming such challenges.71
Democratic governance
Mainstreaming minority issues strengthens the work of UNDP on democratic governance, since
democratic institutions are less effective at ensuring equality in the absence of special protection
See www.undp.org/mdg.
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In the Republic of Moldova, for example, UNDP is working on human rights issues within the Millennium
Development Goals through supporting Roma inclusion, reflected in the adoption of the 2012 Roma Inclusion
Strategy.
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