A/RES/50/81
Page 5
(g) Places and facilities for cultural, recreational and sports
activities to improve the living standards of young people in both rural and
urban areas.
6.
While the peoples of the United Nations, through their Governments,
international organizations and voluntary associations, have done much to
ensure that these aspirations may be achieved, including efforts to implement
the guidelines for further planning and suitable follow-up in the field of
youth endorsed by the General Assembly in 1985, 2/ it is apparent that the
changing world social, economic and political situation has created the
following conditions that have made this goal more difficult to achieve in
many countries:
(a) Claims on the physical and financial resources of States, which have
reduced the resources available for youth programmes and activities,
particularly in heavily indebted countries;
(b) Inequities in social, economic and political conditions, including
racism and xenophobia, which lead to increasing hunger, deterioration in
living conditions and poverty among youth and to their marginalization as
refugees, displaced persons and migrants;
(c) Increasing difficulty for young people returning from armed conflict
and confrontation in integrating into the community and gaining access to
education and employment;
(d) Continuing discrimination against young women and insufficient
access for young women to equal opportunities in employment and education;
(e)
High levels of youth unemployment, including long-term unemployment;
(f) Continuing deterioration of the global environment resulting from
unsustainable patterns of consumption and production, particularly in
industrialized countries, which is a matter of grave concern, aggravating
poverty and imbalances;
(g) Increasing incidence of diseases, such as malaria, the human
immunodeficiency virus and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS),
and other threats to health, such as substance abuse and psychotropic
substance addiction, smoking and alcoholism;
(h) Inadequate opportunities for vocational education and training,
especially for persons with disabilities;
(i) Changes in the role of the family as a vehicle for shared
responsibility and socialization of youth;
(j) Lack of opportunity for young people to participate in the life of
society and contribute to its development and well-being;
(k) Prevalence of debilitating disease, hunger and malnutrition that
engulfs the life of many young people;
(l) Increasing difficulty for young people to receive family life
education as a basis for forming healthy families that foster sharing of
responsibilities.
2/
See A/40/256, annex.
/...