A/RES/80/178 GA
Implementation of the outcome of the World Summit for Social Development and of the 24th special session of the General Assembly : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
80
Session
180
Yes
3
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.3/80/L.12/Rev.1 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/80/178 |
| Category | SOCIAL CONDITIONS AND EQUITY |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/80/178 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/80/PV.62
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Albania
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Angola
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Antigua and Barbuda
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Armenia
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Australia
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Austria
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Azerbaijan
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Bahamas
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Bahrain
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Bangladesh
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Barbados
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Belgium
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Belize
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Benin
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Botswana
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Brazil
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Brunei Darussalam
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Bulgaria
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Burkina Faso
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Burundi
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Cabo Verde
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Cambodia
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Cameroon
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Canada
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Central African Republic
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Chad
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Chile
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China
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Colombia
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Comoros
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Congo
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Costa Rica
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Côte d'Ivoire
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Croatia
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Cuba
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Cyprus
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Czechia
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Democratic People's Republic of Korea
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Denmark
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Djibouti
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Dominica
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Dominican Republic
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Ecuador
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Egypt
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El Salvador
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Equatorial Guinea
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Eritrea
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Estonia
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Eswatini
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Ethiopia
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Fiji
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Finland
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France
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Gabon
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Gambia
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Georgia
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Germany
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Ghana
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Greece
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Grenada
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Guatemala
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Guinea
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Guinea-Bissau
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Guyana
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Haiti
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Honduras
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Hungary
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Iceland
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India
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Indonesia
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Islamic Republic of Iran
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Iraq
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Ireland
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Italy
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Jamaica
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Japan
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Jordan
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Kazakhstan
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Kenya
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Kuwait
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Kyrgyzstan
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Lao People's Democratic Republic
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Latvia
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Lebanon
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Lesotho
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Liberia
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Libya
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Liechtenstein
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Lithuania
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Luxembourg
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Malawi
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Maldives
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Mali
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Malta
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Mauritius
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Mexico
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Micronesia (Federated States of)
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Monaco
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Mongolia
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Montenegro
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Morocco
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Myanmar
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Nepal
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Netherlands
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New Zealand
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Nicaragua
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Niger
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Nigeria
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North Macedonia
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Norway
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Oman
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Pakistan
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Palau
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Panama
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Papua New Guinea
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Paraguay
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Peru
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Philippines
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Poland
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Portugal
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Qatar
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Republic of Korea
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Moldova
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Romania
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Russian Federation
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Rwanda
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Saint Kitts and Nevis
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Saint Lucia
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Samoa
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San Marino
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Saudi Arabia
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Senegal
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Serbia
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Seychelles
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Sierra Leone
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Singapore
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Slovakia
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Slovenia
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Solomon Islands
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Somalia
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South Africa
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South Sudan
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Spain
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Sudan
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Suriname
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Sweden
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Switzerland
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Thailand
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Timor-Leste
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Togo
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Tonga
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Trinidad and Tobago
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Tunisia
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Türkiye
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Turkmenistan
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Tuvalu
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Uganda
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Ukraine
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United Arab Emirates
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United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
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United Republic of Tanzania
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Uruguay
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Uzbekistan
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Vanuatu
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Viet Nam
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Yemen
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Zambia
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Zimbabwe
Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/80/178
General Assembly
Distr.: General
22 December 2025
25-20977 (E)
*2520977*
Eightieth session
Agenda item 25 (a)
Social development: implementation of the outcome of the
World Summit for Social Development and of the
twenty‑fourth special session of the General Assembly
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 15 December 2025
[on the report of the Third Committee (A/80/545, para. 5)]
80/178. Implementation of the outcome of the World Summit for Social
Development and of the twenty-fourth special session of the
General Assembly
The General Assembly,
Reaffirming all previous resolutions on the implementation of the outcome of
the World Summit for Social Development and of the twenty-fourth special session
of the General Assembly, including resolution 79/146 of 17 December 2024,
Recalling the World Summit for Social Development, held in Copenhagen from
6 to 12 March 1995, and the twenty-fourth special session of the General Assembly,
entitled “World Summit for Social Development and beyond: achieving social
development for all in a globalizing world”, held in Geneva from 26 June to 1 July
2000,
Reaffirming that the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and the
Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development 1 and the further
initiatives for social development adopted by the General Assembly at its twenty-
fourth special session,2 as well as a continued global dialogue on social development
issues, constitute the basic framework for the promotion of social development for all
at the national and international levels,
Welcoming the progress made towards the full implementation of the
Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme of Action through concerted action at
the national, regional and global levels, and expressing its deep concern that, 30 years
_______________
1 Report of the World Summit for Social Development, Copenhagen, 6–12 March 1995 (United
Nations publication, Sales No. E.96.IV.8), chap. I, resolution 1, annexes I and II.
2 Resolution S-24/2, annex.
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after the convening of the World Summit for Social Development, progress has been
slow and uneven, and major gaps remain,
Welcoming also the adoption, in its entirety, of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development,3 in which it is recognized that eradicating poverty in all its forms and
dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest global challenge and an
indispensable requirement for sustainable development,
Welcoming further the convening of the Second World Summit for Social
Development in Doha from 4 to 6 November 2025, to build a more just, inclusive,
equitable and sustainable world, by addressing the gaps, assessing progress and
recommitting to the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and Programme
of Action and their implementation, and give momentum towards the implementation
of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, as well as the adoption of its
political declaration, entitled “Doha Political Declaration of the ‘World Social
Summit’ under the title ‘the Second World Summit for Social Development’”, 4
Welcoming the adoption of the political declaration of the 2023 high-level
political forum on sustainable development convened under the auspices of the
General Assembly at the Sustainable Development Goals Summit, 5 in which Heads
of State and Government emphasized that eradicating poverty in all its forms and
dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest global challenge and an
indispensable requirement for sustainable development,
Noting the Transforming Education Summit, convened and organized under the
auspices of the Secretary-General in New York on 19 September 2022,
Welcoming the adoption of the political declaration of the General Assembly
high-level meeting on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response, held in New
York on 20 September 2023,6 the political declaration of the high-level meeting on
universal health coverage, held in New York on 21 September 2023,7 the political
declaration of the high-level meeting on the fight against tuberculosis, held in New
York on 22 September 2023,8 and the political declaration of the high-level meeting
on antimicrobial resistance, held in New York on 26 September 2024,9
Reaffirming the need to achieve sustainable development by promoting
sustained, inclusive and equitable economic growth, reducing inequalities within and
among countries, creating greater opportunities for all, including by achieving gender
equality and the empowerment of all women and girls, and by raising basic standards
of living and fostering equitable and inclusive social development and the sustainable
management of natural resources,
Recognizing that the three core themes of social development, namely, poverty
eradication, full and productive employment and decent work for all and social
integration, are interrelated and mutually reinforcing, and that an enabling
environment therefore needs to be created so that all three objectives can be pursued
simultaneously,
Recognizing also that social justice for all is the foundation for overcoming
inequalities and advancing a people-centred approach to development and that social
_______________
3 Resolution 70/1.
4 Resolution 80/5, annex.
5 Resolution 78/1, annex.
6 Resolution 78/3, annex.
7 Resolution 78/4, annex.
8 Resolution 78/5, annex.
9 Resolution 79/2, annex.
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development and social justice cannot be attained in the absence of peace and security
or in the absence of respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms,
Recognizing further the need for integrated, coordinated and coherent action in
support of social justice, including by addressing inequalities and informality,
fostering opportunities for productive employment through education, lifelong
learning and training and skills development, extending social protection and
promoting decent work and labour rights, and noting in this regard the convening of
the World of Work Summit: Social Justice for All, held in Geneva on 14 and 15 June
2023, under the auspices of the 111th International Labour Conference,
Emphasizing the need to enhance the role of the Commission for Social
Development in the follow-up to and review of the World Summit for Social
Development, the twenty-fourth special session of the General Assembly and the
Second World Summit for Social Development, and welcoming the decision of the
Economic and Social Council that the Commission, given its mandates and experience
in promoting people-centred inclusive development, will report on social aspects
related to the agreed main theme of the Council in order to contribute to its work,10
including by offering inputs regarding the effective implementation of the 2030
Agenda in a holistic and inclusive manner,
Welcoming the decision of the Economic and Social Council that the
Commission for Social Development will consider one priority theme at each session
on the basis of the follow-up to and review of the World Summit for Social
Development and its linkages to the social dimensions of the 2030 Agenda, proposing
an action-oriented resolution with recommendations to the Council in order to
contribute to its work, and that the priority theme for the 2026 session, which shall
allow the Commission to contribute to the work of the Council, will be “Advancing
social development and social justice through coordinated, equitable and inclusive
policies”,
Recalling the ministerial declaration adopted at the high-level segment of the
2025 session of the Economic and Social Council and the 2025 high-level political
forum on sustainable development convened under the auspices of the Council on the
theme “Advancing sustainable, inclusive, science- and evidence-based solutions for
the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its Sustainable Development
Goals for leaving no one behind”,11
Reaffirming that the Declaration on the Right to Development12 also informs the
2030 Agenda, along with other relevant instruments, such as the Addis Ababa Action
Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development, 13 the
Sevilla Commitment adopted at the Fourth International Conference on Financing for
Development,14 Agenda 2063 adopted by the African Union, and the International
Labour Organization Declaration on Social Justice for a Fair Globalization, 15 and
reaffirming also the strong political commitment to address the challenge of financing
and creating an enabling environment at all levels for sustainable development in the
spirit of global partnership and solidarity,
Affirming its strong support for fair globalization and the need to translate
growth into the reduction of inequalities, eradication of poverty and commitment to
strategies and policies that aim to promote full, freely chosen and productive
_______________
10 Economic and Social Council resolution 2016/6, para. 3.
11 E/HLS/2025/1.
12 Resolution 41/128, annex.
13 Resolution 69/313, annex.
14 Resolution 79/323, annex.
15 A/63/538-E/2009/4, annex.
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employment and decent work for all and that these strategies and policies should
constitute fundamental components of relevant national and international policies and
national development strategies, including inequality and poverty reduction
strategies, reaffirming that employment creation and decent work for all should be
incorporated into macroeconomic policies, taking fully into account the impact and
social dimension of globalization, the benefits and costs of which are often unevenly
shared and distributed, and noting in this regard that the decent work agenda of the
International Labour Organization, with its four strategic objectives, has an important
role to play in achieving the objective of social protection and elimination of
inequalities, as reaffirmed in the International Labour Organization Declaration on
Social Justice for a Fair Globalization,
Recognizing that social inclusion is a means for achieving social integration and
is crucial for fostering stable, safe, harmonious, peaceful and just societies and for
improving social cohesion so as to create an environment for development and
progress and to leave no one behind,
Recognizing also the role that digital technologies can play in making social
policies more inclusive, efficient and effective, and the need to establish and leverage
synergies between digital transformation and sustainable development, to drive
people-centred outcomes,
Stressing that bridging all digital divides is a precondition for achieving
inclusive and sustainable development, including the goals of eradicating poverty and
ending hunger, and the need to close all digital divides, both between and within
countries and including the rural-urban, youth-older persons and gender digital
divides, and to promote digital inclusion, by taking into account national and regional
contexts and addressing the challenges associated with access, affordability, digital
literacy and digital skills and awareness, as well as lifelong access to digital learning
opportunities, and by ensuring that the benefits of new technologies are available to
all, taking into account the specific social, cultural and linguistic needs of each society
and persons of all ages and backgrounds, as well as of those who are in vulnerable
situations, particularly persons with disabilities, and noting the efforts to help to
bridge digital divides and expand access, including the Connect 2030 Agenda for
Global Telecommunication/Information and Communication Technology, including
Broadband, for Sustainable Development,
Recalling the need to promote safe, secure and trustworthy artificial intelligence
systems that advance, protect and preserve linguistic and cultural diversity and that
take into account multilingualism throughout the life cycle of these systems,
Recognizing that bridging all digital divides, between and within countries,
requires strengthened international cooperation, to ensure, inter alia, universal and
meaningful digital connectivity and affordable access in a safe, secure, transparent
and non‑discriminatory environment,
Emphasizing the need to ensure meaningful connectivity for all, in particular for
people living in poverty, people living in rural and remote areas and people living in
developing countries, to provide them with access to the benefits of information and
communications technologies, promote technology-sharing on a non‑discriminatory
basis and enhance the socioeconomic capacity of developing countries, and also to
ensure that the use of information and communications technologies, including digital
technologies, in the design and implementation of social policies does not result in
increased inequalities that leave more people behind,
Recognizing the immense potential of artificial intelligence systems to accelerate
progress across all the Sustainable Development Goals, as well as the need for a
balanced, inclusive and risk-based approach to the governance of artificial intelligence,
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with the full and equal representation of all countries, especially developing countries,
and the meaningful participation of all stakeholders,
Noting with concern that the digital divides, within and between countries,
including the rural-urban, youth-older persons and gender digital divides, negatively
impact equal learning opportunities and limit access to quality education,
Acknowledging the importance of adopting science, technology and innovation
strategies as integral elements of national sustainable development strategies to help
to strengthen knowledge-sharing and collaboration, as well as the importance of
scaling up investment in science, technology, engineering and mathematics education
and enhancing technical, vocational and tertiary education, digital literacy, distance
education and training, and of ensuring equal access to and participation in such
programmes for all, particularly women and girls,
Stressing that the encouragement and development of international cooperation
in the scientific and cultural fields serve the realization of, inter alia, the right of
everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental
health, bearing in mind that everyone has the right to enjoy the benefits of scientific
progress and its applications,
Recognizing the importance of new and emerging challenges and vulnerabilities
in regard to developing country external and domestic debt sustainability, and the
importance of improved international debt mechanisms to support debt review, debt
payment suspensions and debt restructuring, as appropriate, with an expansion of
support and eligibility to vulnerable countries in need,
Deeply concerned that extreme poverty and the feminization of poverty persist
in all countries of the world, regardless of their economic, social and cultural
situation, and that the extent and manifestations thereof, such as hunger and
malnutrition, vulnerability to trafficking in persons, forced and child labour, disease,
lack of adequate shelter and illiteracy, are heightened in developing countries and
particularly severe in least developed countries, while acknowledging the significant
progress made in several parts of the world in combating extreme poverty,
Stressing the importance of removing obstacles to the realization of the right of
peoples to self-determination, in particular of peoples living under colonial or other
forms of alien domination or foreign occupation, which adversely affect their social
and economic development, including their exclusion from labour markets,
Stressing also the importance of establishing a just and lasting peace all over the
world in accordance with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United
Nations, supporting all efforts to uphold the sovereign equality of all States and
respect their territorial integrity and political independence, and refraining in
international relations from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsistent with
the purposes and principles of the United Nations,
Welcoming the fifth edition of the Aswan Forum for Sustainable Peace and
Development, held in Aswan, Egypt, in October 2025 under the title “A world in flux,
a continent in motion: navigating Africa’s progress amid global shifts”,
Recognizing that terrorism, trafficking in arms, organized crime, trafficking in
persons, money-laundering, ethnic and religious conflict, civil war, politically
motivated killing and genocide pose increasing challenges to States and societies in
the attainment of conditions conducive to social development, including reduction of
inequalities, and that they further present urgent and compelling reasons for action by
Governments individually and, as appropriate, jointly to foster social cohesion while
recognizing, protecting and valuing diversity,
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Recognizing also that, since the convening of the World Summit for Social
Development in Copenhagen in 1995, advances have been made in addressing and
promoting social integration, including through the adoption of the Madrid
International Plan of Action on Ageing, 2002,16 the World Programme of Action for
Youth,17 the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, 18 the United
Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples19 and the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action,20
Welcoming the launch of the Second International Decade for People of African
Descent (2025–2034), which builds upon the First International Decade to urge
Member States to promote the social development of people of African descent,
particularly women and girls, by eradicating any form of discrimination, ensuring
access to quality education and eliminating challenges and specific risks with regard
to health,
Reaffirming the commitment to promoting the rights of Indigenous Peoples in
the areas of education, employment, housing, sanitation, health and social protection
and social security, and noting the attention paid to those areas in the United Nations
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples,
Reaffirming also the efforts of Governments to achieve all health-related
Sustainable Development Goal targets, in particular Goal 3 of ensuring healthy lives
and promoting well-being for all throughout the life course, by integrating those aims
into their national plans and policies, as well as the significant progress made in
increasing life expectancy, reducing maternal, newborn and child mortality and
combating communicable diseases,
Recognizing that action to achieve universal health coverage by 2030 is
inadequate and that the level of progress and investment to date is insufficient to meet
target 3.8 of the Sustainable Development Goals, and that the world has yet to fulfil
its promise of implementing, at all levels, measures to address the health needs of all,
Recalling the outcome of the World Health Assembly held in May 2019, the
agreement to accelerate and scale up action to prevent and treat noncommunicable
diseases, the agreement on a common approach to antimicrobial resistance, the
adoption of a new global strategy on health, the environment and climate change, and
the adoption by the Assembly of the eleventh revision of the International Statistical
Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, which went into effect on
1 January 2022,
Reaffirming the commitments made in the 2030 Agenda, including to ensure
inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities
for all,
Noting with concern that, despite the progress achieved, more than half of the
world’s population lacks access to essential health services, more than 1 billion people
bear the burden of catastrophic spending of at least 10 per cent of their household
income on healthcare and out-of-pocket expenses drive more than 300 million people
into extreme poverty each year,
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16 Report of the Second World Assembly on Ageing, Madrid, 8–12 April 2002 (United Nations
publication, Sales No. E.02.IV.4), chap. I, resolution 1, annex II.
17 Resolution 50/81, annex, and resolution 62/126, annex.
18 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 2515, No. 44910.
19 Resolution 61/295, annex.
20 Report of the Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, 4–15 September 1995 (United
Nations publication, Sales No. E.96.IV.13), chap. I, resolution 1, annexes I and II.
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Reaffirming education for sustainable development as a vital means of
implementation for sustainable development, as outlined in the Aichi-Nagoya
Declaration on Education for Sustainable Development, 21 and as an integral element
of the Sustainable Development Goal on quality education and a key enabler of all
the other Goals, and welcoming the increased international recognition of education
for sustainable development in quality education and lifelong learning,
Acknowledging the importance for achieving sustainable development of
delivering quality education to all girls and boys, which will require reaching children
living in extreme poverty, children with disabilities, migrant and refugee children and
those in conflict and post-conflict situations and providing safe, non‑violent, inclusive
and effective learning environments for all, and recognizing the importance of scaling
up investments and international cooperation to allow all children to complete free,
equitable, inclusive and quality early childhood, primary and secondary education,
including through scaling up and strengthening initiatives, such as the Global
Partnership for Education, and by upgrading education facilities that are child-,
disability- and gender-sensitive and increasing the percentage of qualified teachers in
developing countries, including through international cooperation, especially in the
least developed countries and small island developing States,
Reiterating the contribution of education to eradicating poverty in all forms and
dimensions by providing people with knowledge and skills, which increases
productivity and income and helps in reducing inequality within countries,
Recognizing the need to offer reskilling opportunities for workers in labour
markets reshaped by digital technologies,
Welcoming the adoption of resolutions 74/270 of 2 April 2020 on global
solidarity to fight the coronavirus disease (COVID‑19), 74/274 of 20 April 2020 on
international cooperation to ensure global access to medicines, vaccines and medical
equipment to face COVID‑19, 74/306 of 11 September 2020, entitled “Comprehensive
and coordinated response to the coronavirus disease (COVID‑19) pandemic”, and
74/307 of 11 September 2020, entitled “United response against global health threats:
combating COVID‑19”,
Concerned that the COVID‑19 crisis has contributed to the reversal of decades
of progress in social development, leaving more people behind and that it has also
had a negative impact on the abilities of Governments to realize the 2030 Agenda and
achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, stressing that at this critical moment in
the decade of action to deliver the Goals by 2030 the visions, principles and
commitments made at the World Summit for Social Development remain valid and
are central to addressing emerging global challenges, and recalling that social policies
have a key role to play in addressing the immediate effects of crises,
Deeply concerned that, in the post-COVID‑19 pandemic world, severe
disruptions to societies, economies, employment, global trade, supply chains and
travel, and agricultural, industrial and commercial systems, continue to have a
devastating impact on sustainable development and humanitarian needs, including on
poverty eradication, livelihoods, ending hunger, food security and nutrition,
education, environmentally sound waste management and access to healthcare,
especially for the poor and people in vulnerable situations and in countries in special
situations and those countries most affected, have widened inequalities, including
gender inequality, increased unemployment and the number of people who have left
the labour force and continue to disproportionately impact people in vulnerable
situations, including older persons, persons with pre‑existing medical conditions,
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21 A/70/228, annex.
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women and girls, children, youth, persons with disabilities, persons affected by
conflict, migrants, refugees, internally displaced persons, Indigenous Peoples, local
communities, workers in the informal economy, people living in rural areas and other
people in vulnerable situations, and are making the prospect of achieving all
Sustainable Development Goals more difficult, including eradicating poverty in all
its forms and dimensions by 2030, ending hunger and achieving food security and
improved nutrition,
Noting with alarm that, despite improvements in many aspects of social
development since 1995, including reductions in extreme poverty and food insecurity,
as well as improved access to education and energy, progress has stagnated or reversed
since 2020, owing to the multiple and widespread impacts of COVID‑19, conflicts
and climate change, and particularly concerned by the rise in extreme poverty, hunger,
malnutrition and food insecurity, energy poverty, water scarcity, inequalities,
education disruptions, violence against women and children, unemployment, barriers
to access financial resources and to develop quality, reliable, sustainable and resilient
infrastructure, additional social and economic vulnerabilities affecting in particular
those already in the most vulnerable situations, in addition to the increased challenges
posed by climate change, biodiversity loss, desertification and pollution,
1.
Takes note of the report of the Secretary-General;22
2.
Welcomes the reaffirmation by Governments of their will and commitment
to continue implementing the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and
the Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development, in particular
to promote equality and social justice, eradicate poverty, promote full and productive
employment and decent work for all and foster social integration to achieve stable,
safe and just societies for all, and recognizes that the implementation of the
Copenhagen commitments and the attainment of the internationally agreed
development goals are mutually reinforcing;
3.
Reaffirms its commitment to working tirelessly for the full implementation
of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, and its recognition that eradicating
poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest
global challenge and an indispensable requirement for achieving sustainable
development in its three dimensions – economic, social and environmental – in a
balanced, holistic and integrated manner;
4.
Recognizes that poverty is a multidimensional phenomenon, and
encourages Member States to develop comprehensive, integrated and coherent
poverty eradication strategies that effectively address the structural causes of poverty
and inequality with an emphasis on job-rich growth; address and meet the basic
human needs of people living in poverty; ensure their access to quality education,
nutrition, health, water, sanitation, housing, electricity and other public social
services, access to employment and decent work for all, as well as access to
productive resources, including credit, land, training, technology and knowledge; and
ensure their participation in decision-making on social and economic development
policies and programmes in this regard;
5.
Expresses deep concern that the global goal of eradicating poverty in all
its forms and dimensions by 2030 is slipping from the world’s reach, and recognizes
that the multidimensional impacts of the COVID‑19 pandemic have exacerbated it,
causing the extreme poverty rate to rise for the first time in a generation, increasing
by 11 per cent in 2020, especially in low- and middle-income countries, and, inter
alia, among women and girls and persons with disabilities;
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22 A/80/146.
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6.
Stresses the importance of taking targeted measures to eradicate poverty
in all its forms and dimensions everywhere, including extreme poverty, and achieve
social development, so that no one is left behind, with enhanced international support
and strengthened global partnerships, and notes the need for countries, the United
Nations development system and all relevant stakeholders to ensure and promote a
multidimensional coordinated approach in their work and efforts to eradicate poverty;
7.
Calls upon Member States to adopt measures to recognize, reduce and
redistribute women’s and girls’ disproportionate share of unpaid care and domestic
work and the feminization of poverty, which was exacerbated by the COVID‑19
pandemic, including through poverty eradication measures, labour policies, public
services and gender-responsive social protection programmes;
8.
Emphasizes that the major United Nations conferences and summits,
including the Millennium Summit, the International Conference on Financing for
Development, in its Monterrey Consensus,23 the 2005 World Summit, the Follow-up
International Conference on Financing for Development to Review the
Implementation of the Monterrey Consensus, in its Doha Declaration on Financing
for Development,24 the high-level plenary meeting of the General Assembly on the
Millennium Development Goals, the United Nations Conference on Sustainable
Development, the 2013 special event to follow up efforts made towards achieving the
Millennium Development Goals, the third International Conference on Financing for
Development, in its Addis Ababa Action Agenda, the United Nations summit for the
adoption of the post-2015 development agenda, the 2023 Sustainable Development
Goals Summit, the 2024 Summit of the Future, and the Fourth International
Conference on Financing for Development, have reinforced the priority and urgency
of the eradication of poverty in all its forms and dimensions within the United Nations
development agenda;
9.
Recognizes the complex character of the ongoing food insecurity situation,
including food price volatility, as a combination of several major factors, both structural
and conjunctural, which is also negatively affected by, inter alia, environmental
degradation, drought and desertification, global climate change, natural disasters, the
lack of the necessary technology, and armed conflicts, and also recognizes that a
strong commitment from national Governments and the international community as a
whole is required to confront the major threats to food security and to ensure that
policies in the area of agriculture do not distort trade and worsen food insecurity;
10. Also recognizes that investing in the capacities of women and girls is
important in reducing poverty, food insecurity, malnutrition and inequalities, as well
as in achieving higher productivity and boosting social returns in terms of health,
lower infant mortality and the well-being of their families;
11.
Reaffirms the importance of supporting the African Union’s development
framework, Agenda 2063, as well as its 10-year plan of action, as a strategic
framework for ensuring a positive socioeconomic transformation in Africa within the
next 50 years, which is the African Union long-term strategy emphasizing
industrialization, youth employment, improved natural resource governance and the
reduction of inequalities, and its continental programme embedded in the resolutions
of the General Assembly on the New Partnership for Africa’s Development25 and
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23 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.
24 Resolution 63/239, annex.
25 A/57/304, annex.
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regional initiatives, such as the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development
Programme;
12. Stresses that the benefits of economic growth should be inclusive and
distributed more equitably and that, in order to close the gap of inequality and avoid
any further deepening of inequality, comprehensive social policies and programmes,
including appropriate social transfer and job creation programmes and social
protection systems, are needed;
13. Reaffirms that social integration policies should seek to reduce
inequalities, promote access to basic social services, quality education for all and
healthcare, eliminate discrimination, increase the participation and integration of
social groups, particularly young people, older persons and persons with disabilities,
noting the role of sports in this regard, and address the challenges posed to social
development by globalization and market-driven reforms in order for all people in all
countries to benefit from globalization;
14. Stresses that an enabling environment is a critical precondition for
achieving equity and social development and that, while economic growth is essential,
entrenched inequality and marginalization are an obstacle to the broad-based and
sustained growth required for sustainable, inclusive and people-centred development,
and recognizes the need to balance and ensure complementarity between measures to
achieve growth and measures to achieve economic and social equity and inclusion in
order for there to be an impact on overall poverty levels;
15. Acknowledges that investment in human capital and social protection has
been proven to be effective in reducing poverty and inequality, and invites Member
States to mobilize innovative sources of financing, including through public-private
partnerships, to secure adequate levels of social expenditure necessary for expanding
coverage towards universal access to health education, innovation, new technologies
and basic social protection and to address the issues of illicit financial flows and
corruption;
16. Stresses that international trade and stable financial systems can be
effective tools to create favourable conditions for the development of all countries
and that trade barriers and some trading practices continue to have negative effects
on employment growth, particularly in developing countries, that good governance
and the rule of law at the national and international levels and the need to promote
respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms are essential for sustained
economic growth, sustainable development, the reduction of inequalities, the
eradication of poverty, hunger and malnutrition and for addressing the most pressing
social needs of people living in poverty, and in this regard also stresses the importance
of economic, social and cultural rights and the importance of the principles of
non‑discrimination, inclusivity and meaningful participation for the implementation
of the outcome of the World Summit for Social Development;
17. Acknowledges that inequalities persist within and among countries, posing
significant challenges to social cohesion, reaffirms that the eradication of poverty, the
promotion of prosperity, gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls
and the reduction of inequality within and among countries are fundamental to
achieving sustainable development for all, and that this requires collective and
transformative efforts to leave no one behind and put the furthest behind first, and
adapt institutions and policies to take into account the multidimensional nature of
inequality and poverty and the inherent interlinkages between different Goals and
targets of the 2030 Agenda;
18. Urges Member States to strengthen social policies, as appropriate, paying
particular attention to the specific needs of disadvantaged and marginalized social
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groups, inter alia, women, children, youth, persons with disabilities, people living
with HIV/AIDS, older persons, Indigenous Peoples, refugees, internally displaced
persons, migrants and other persons in vulnerable situations, as well as to address all
forms of violence in its many manifestations, including domestic violence, and
discrimination, including xenophobia, against them, to ensure that these groups are
not left behind, and recognizes that violence increases the challenges faced by States
and societies in the achievement of poverty eradication, full and productive
employment and decent work for all, and social integration;
19. Reaffirms the commitment to gender equality and the empowerment of all
women and girls, as well as to the mainstreaming of a gender perspective into all
development efforts, recognizing that they are critical for achieving sustainable
development and for efforts to combat hunger and malnutrition, poverty and disease,
to strengthening policies and programmes that improve, ensure and broaden the full
participation of women in all spheres of political, economic, social and cultural life
as equal partners and to improving the access of women to all resources needed for
the full exercise of all their human rights and fundamental freedoms by removing
persistent barriers and allocating adequate resources for the elimination of all forms
of violence and discrimination against women, including in the workplace, inter alia,
by addressing wage inequality, ensuring equal access to full and productive
employment and decent work for all, reconciliation of work and private life for both
men and women, as well as strengthening their economic independence;
20. Recognizes that youth participation is important for development, and
urges Member States and United Nations entities, in consultation with youth and
youth-led and youth-focused organizations, to explore and promote new avenues for
the full, effective, structured and sustainable participation of young people and
youth‑led organizations in relevant decision-making processes and monitoring, in all
spheres of political, economic, social and cultural life, including in designing and
implementing policies, programmes and initiatives, in particular while implementing
the 2030 Agenda;
21. Reaffirms the right to food and acknowledges the importance of promoting
sustainable farming and agriculture, and, recognizing the important contribution that
family farming and smallholder farming can play in providing food security, reducing
inequality in access to food and nutrition, calls upon Governments to ensure access
by all people, in particular the poor and people in vulnerable situations, including
infants, to safe, nutritious and sufficient food all year round;
22. Urges Governments, with the cooperation of relevant entities, to establish
nationally appropriate social protection that supports labour market participation and
addresses and reduces inequality and social exclusion, and social protection systems
and
floors,
including
through
streamlining
fragmented
social
protection
systems/programmes, ensuring that such programmes are gender-responsive and
disability-sensitive, and progressively extend their coverage to all people throughout
their life cycle, including for workers in the informal economy, invites the
International Labour Organization, upon request, to support government efforts to
strengthen social protection strategies and policies on extending social protection and
social security coverage, urges Governments, while taking account of national
circumstances, to focus on the needs of those living in, or vulnerable to, poverty and
to give particular consideration to universal access to basic social security systems,
including the implementation of social protection floors, which can provide a
systemic base upon which to address poverty and vulnerability, and in this regard
takes note of the International Labour Organization recommendation on social
protection floors;
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23. Urges Member States to build resilient and inclusive social protection
systems towards universal social protection throughout the life course, including by
extending coverage to workers in the informal economy and to people in vulnerable
situations;
24. Encourages Member States to ensure safe, fair and decent working
conditions, including through living wages, regular adjustments of minimum wages,
effective enforcement of labour standards, and active labour market policies for both
formal and informal workers;
25. Stresses the need to address challenges faced by those working in informal
or vulnerable jobs, by investing in the creation of more decent work opportunities,
including providing access to decent jobs in the formal sector in accordance with
International Labour Organization recommendation No. 204 concerning the transition
from the informal to the formal economy, and enhancing the productive capacities of
people, and strengthen labour institutions and employment and labour-market
policies, taking into consideration the specific circumstances of each country and by
promoting close partnerships with relevant stakeholders;
26. Urges Member States to strengthen, as appropriate, the authority and
capacity of national mechanisms for promoting gender equality and the empowerment
of women and girls, at all levels, which should be placed at the highest possible level
of government, with sufficient funding, and to mainstream a gender perspective across
all relevant national and local institutions, including labour, economic and financial
government agencies, in order to ensure that national planning, decision-making,
policy formulation and implementation, budgeting processes and institutional
structures contribute to women’s economic empowerment in the changing world of
work;
27. Also urges Member States to address the high rates of youth
unemployment, underemployment, vulnerable employment, informal employment
and young people not in employment, education or training by developing and
implementing targeted and integrated local and national youth employment policies
for inclusive, sustainable and innovative job creation, improved employability, skills
development and vocational training to facilitate the transition from school to work
and to increase the prospects for integrating youth into the sustainable labour market,
and through increased entrepreneurship, including the development of networks of
young entrepreneurs at the local, national, regional and global levels that foster
knowledge among young people about their rights and responsibilities in society, and
encourages Member States to invest in education, support lifelong learning and
provide social protection for all youth and to request donors, specialized United
Nations entities and the private sector to continue to provide assistance to Member
States, including technical and funding support, as appropriate;
28. Recognizes that promoting full employment and decent work for all also
requires investing in education, training and skills development for women and men,
and girls and boys, strengthening social protection and health systems and applying
international labour standards, and urges States and, as appropriate, the relevant
entities of the United Nations system and international and regional organizations,
within their respective mandates, as well as civil society, the private sector, employer
organizations, trade unions, the media and other relevant actors, to continue to
develop and strengthen policies, strategies and programmes to enhance, in particular,
the employability of women and youth and to ensure their access to full and
productive employment and decent work for all, including by improving access to
formal and non‑formal education, skills development and vocational training, lifelong
learning and retraining and long-distance education, inter alia, in information and
communications technology and entrepreneurial skills, particularly in developing
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countries, including with a view to supporting the economic empowerment of women
in the different stages of their lives;
29. Reaffirms the New Urban Agenda,26 which envisages cities and human
settlements that fulfil their social function, including the social and ecological
function of land, with a view to progressively achieving the full realization of the
right to adequate housing, as a component of the right to an adequate standard of
living, without discrimination, universal access to safe and affordable drinking water
and sanitation, as well as equal access for all to public goods and quality services in
areas such as food security and nutrition, health, education, infrastructure, mobility
and transportation, energy, air quality and livelihoods, and further encourages the
implementation of comprehensive housing policies and investment in safe, affordable,
adequate and accessible housing to reduce financial pressures on low-income
households and improve health, education and employment outcomes;
30. Stresses the importance of stepping up efforts to achieve universal access
to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all, including through
enhanced international cooperation to assist developing countries to, inter alia, ensure
access to electricity through increased financing and by promoting decentralized
solutions for expanding access in rural areas, including mini-grids and stand-alone
systems, and considering measures to facilitate access to sustainable energy,
particularly for low-income households;
31. Recognizes that the negative effects of climate change and environmental
disasters have differential impacts, with people in vulnerable situations, poor and
rural communities and low-income countries being disproportionately exposed to
floods, droughts and other natural disasters, and that they have a lower capacity and
assets to recover from such external shocks, and expresses concern that climate
change may cause high and volatile food and commodity prices and hit them hardest;
32. Acknowledges the important nexus between international migration and
social development, and stresses the importance of effectively enforcing labour laws
with regard to labour relations and working conditions of migrant workers, inter alia,
those related to their remuneration and conditions of health, safety at work and the
right to freedom of association;
33. Reaffirms that social development requires the active involvement of all
actors in the development process, including civil society organizations, corporations,
the public sector and small businesses, and that partnerships among all relevant actors
within countries are increasingly becoming part of national and international
cooperation for social development, also reaffirms that, within countries, partnerships
among the Government, civil society and the private sector can contribute effectively
to the achievement of social development goals, and acknowledges the role of the
public and private sectors as employers and enablers for the effective generation of
new investments, full and productive employment and decent work for all, including
through partnerships with the United Nations system, civil society and academia;
34. Stresses the importance of the policy space and leadership of national
Governments for implementing policies for poverty eradication and sustainable
development, while remaining consistent with relevant international rules and
commitments, in particular in the areas of human rights, 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
within the context of the implementation of the 2030 Agenda;
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26 Resolution 71/256, annex.
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35. Underlines the responsibility of the private sector, at both the national and
the international levels, including small and large companies and transnational
corporations, regarding not only the economic and financial implications, but also the
development, social, gender and environmental implications of their activities, their
obligations towards their workers and their contributions to achieving sustainable
development, including social development, emphasizes that transnational
corporations and other business enterprises have a responsibility to respect human
rights, applicable laws and international principles and standards, to operate
transparently, in a socially and environmentally responsible manner, and to refrain
from affecting the well-being of peoples, and also emphasizes the need to take further
concrete actions on corporate responsibility and accountability, including through the
participation of all relevant stakeholders, inter alia, for the prevention or prosecution
of corruption, and to prevent human rights abuses;
36. Reaffirms the necessity of improving availability, affordability and
efficiency of health products by increasing transparency of prices of medicines,
vaccines, medical devices, diagnostics, assistive products, cell- and gene-based
therapies and other health technologies across the value chain, including through
improved regulations and building constructive engagement and a stronger
partnership with relevant stakeholders, including industries, the private sector and
civil society, in accordance with national and regional legal frameworks and contexts,
to address the global concern about the high prices of some health products, and in
this regard encourages the World Health Organization to continue its efforts to
biennially convene the Fair Pricing Forum with Member States and all relevant
stakeholders to discuss the affordability and transparency of prices and costs relating
to health products;
37. Recognizes that health is an investment in human capital and social and
economic development, towards the full realization of human potential, and
significantly contributes to the promotion and protection of human rights and dignity
as well as the empowerment of all people;
38. Welcomes the renewed commitment in the political declaration of the high-
level meeting on universal health coverage to achieve universal health coverage,
which implies that all people have access, without discrimination, to nationally
determined sets of the needed promotive, preventive, curative, rehabilitative and
palliative essential health services, and essential, safe, affordable, effective and
quality medicines and vaccines, while ensuring that the use of these services does not
expose the users to financial hardship, with a special emphasis on those who are
marginalized;
39. Reaffirms that achieving universal health coverage, including financial
risk protection, access to quality essential healthcare services and access to safe,
effective, quality and affordable essential medicines and vaccines for all, is essential
to eradicate poverty, and reduce inequality and achieve sustainable development for
all;
40. Acknowledges that expanding healthcare is a challenge, as well as that the
rising cost of medications and health products is threatening the sustainability of
health systems in many countries, and stresses the responsibility of States to ensure
access for all, without discrimination of any kind, to medicines, in particular essential
medicines, that are affordable, safe, effective and of quality, and encourages Member
States to strengthen public health systems to achieve universal health coverage,
including through using disaggregated data and impact assessments, to close gaps and
ensure equity;
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41. Expresses concern at the estimated global shortfall of 10 million health
workers by 2030, primarily in low- and middle income countries, recognizes the need
to train, build and retain a skilled health workforce, including nurses, midwives and
community health workers, who are an important element of strong and resilient
health systems, and also recognizes that increased investment in a more effective and
socially accountable health workforce can unleash significant socioeconomic gains
and contribute to the eradication of poverty in all its forms and dimensions, the
empowerment of all women and girls and the reduction of inequality;
42. Calls upon States, at the international level, to take steps, individually
and/or through international cooperation, in accordance with applicable international
law, including international agreements, to ensure that their actions as members of
international organizations take into due account the right of everyone to the
enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, and that
the application of international agreements is supportive of public health policies that
promote broad access to safe, effective and affordable medicines;
43. Encourages all States to apply measures and procedures for enforcing
intellectual property rights in such a manner as to avoid creating barriers to the
legitimate trade in medicines, and to provide for safeguards against the abuse of such
measures and procedures;
44. Calls upon Member States to make greater investments and promote
decent work in the health and social sectors, enable safe working environments and
conditions, effective retention and equitable and broad distribution of the health
workforce, and strengthen capacities to optimize the existing health workforce,
including through expanding rural and community-based health education and
training to contribute to the achievement of universal health coverage;
45. Encourages Governments to end all forms of malnutrition, including the
internationally agreed targets on stunting and wasting in children under 5 years of
age, and address the nutritional needs of adolescent girls, pregnant and lactating
women and older persons;
46. Welcomes the rapid expansion in school enrolment worldwide, with
literacy rates rising steadily over the past 50 years, and the improvement in the access
to early childhood, primary, secondary, tertiary and distance education and throughout
the life course, and calls upon the international community to provide inclusive and
equitable quality education at all levels so that all people may have access to lifelong
learning opportunities that help them to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to
exploit opportunities to participate fully in society;
47. Calls for mitigating the effects of school closures and cuts in national
education budgets, including on learning, child nutrition and all forms of violence,
by, inter alia, safely reopening schools, providing safe, non‑violent, inclusive and
effective learning environments for all, taking all possible actions to ensure qualified
teachers, lower pupil-teacher ratios, and learners’ re-enrolment and re-engagement,
learning recovery and well-being through a non‑discriminatory, accessible,
integrated, multisectoral, child-sensitive and gender-responsive approach, and
encourages the scaling-up of efforts for remedial, accelerated learning and catch-up
strategies to mitigate learning losses, equipping children and adolescents with
foundational skills, such as literacy and numeracy, and taking actions to ensure quality
education and learning programmes beyond the schools for out-of-school children and
youth and illiterate adults, particularly for the poorest and those in vulnerable
situations;
48. Recognizes the limited access to and high rates of dropout from school and
secondary education, the increased rates of exclusion from education with age and the
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existence of large disparities in school attendance and learning acquisition by region,
wealth, sex, urban or rural residence and other factors such as Indigenous identity or
disability, underscoring the challenges ahead, and also recognizes that poverty may
affect access to quality education at the secondary and tertiary levels;
49. Also recognizes that factors such as poverty, residing in a rural area or
having a disability all too often prevent children and adolescents from accessing
quality education, especially at the secondary and tertiary levels;
50. Encourages all States to measure progress in the realization of the right to
education, such as by developing national indicators as an important tool for the
realization of the right to education and for policy formulation, impact assessment
and transparency;
51. Encourages States to increase investments and international cooperation
to allow all girls and boys to complete free, equitable, inclusive and quality early
childhood, primary and secondary education, including by scaling up and
strengthening initiatives, such as the Global Partnership for Education, and to explore
additional innovative mechanisms based on models combining public and private
resources, while ensuring that all education providers give due respect to the right to
education, and by leveraging digital technologies to expand equitable access to
quality education, improve learning outcomes and promote inclusion;
52. Urges States to support the efforts of developing countries, in particular
the least developed countries, to realize progressively the right to education, including
the progressive realization of the equal enjoyment of the right to education by every
girl through appropriate resources, including financial and technical resources, in
support of country-led national education plans;
53. Reaffirms the right to education, and calls upon the international
community to provide universal access to inclusive, equal and non‑discriminatory
quality education at all levels – early childhood, primary, secondary, tertiary and
distance education, including technical and vocational training – as well as to promote
the completion of primary and secondary education so that all people may have access
to lifelong learning opportunities that help them to acquire the knowledge and skills
needed to exploit opportunities to participate fully in society and contribute to
sustainable development;
54. Recognizes that substantial and efficiently spent investments are needed to
improve the quality of education and vocational training and in order to enable
millions of people to acquire skills for decent work, and takes note with appreciation
of the report of the International Commission on Financing Global Education
Opportunity and the recommendations contained therein, as appropriate;
55. Urges Member States to promote and respect women’s right to education
throughout the life course at all levels, especially for those who have been left furthest
behind, and eliminate gender disparities in access to all areas of secondary and tertiary
education, promote financial literacy and inclusion, digital literacy and
entrepreneurship, ensure that women and girls have equal access to career
development, training, scholarships and fellowships and adopt positive action to build
women’s and girls’ leadership skills and influence, and adopt measures that promote,
respect and guarantee the safety of women and girls in the school environment and
that support women and girls with disabilities at all levels of education and training;
56. Underlines that the pandemic has accelerated the pace of digital
transformation and accentuated its central role in recovering better and achieving the
2030 Agenda, and in this regard encourages Member States to promote
multi‑stakeholder partnerships, including with science, technology and innovation
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communities, academia, civil society, the private sector and intergovernmental
institutions, including the United Nations, to close the digital divides, achieve
universal, meaningful and affordable Internet connectivity and promote responsible
and inclusive Internet governance;
57. Urges States to continue to take action to bridge the digital divides and
spread the benefits of digitalization, expand participation of all countries, in particular
developing countries, in the digital economy, including by enhancing their digital
infrastructure connectivity, building their capacities and access to technological
innovations through stronger partnerships and improving digital literacy, leverage
digital technology to expand the foundations on which to strengthen social protection
systems, build capacities for inclusive participation in the digital economy and strong
partnerships to bring technological innovations to all countries, and reaffirms that the
same rights that people have offline must also be protected online;
58. Urges Member States to scale up international cooperation and financing
for digital capacity development in developing countries in order to bridge all digital
divides within and between countries and ensure that all States can safely and securely
seize the benefits of digital technologies;
59. Encourages Member States and other stakeholders, in particular the
private sector, to establish strong partnerships and increase investments in developing
countries in order to close all digital divides, within and between countries, and
promote digital inclusion by promoting universal and meaningful digital connectivity
and addressing the challenges of coverage, affordability, awareness, relevance and
digital skills, with a particular emphasis on connecting people living in poverty and
bridging the gender digital divide;
60. Recognizes that advancing digital inclusion requires a predictable and
transparent enabling environment that encompasses policy, legal and regulatory
frameworks that support innovation, protect consumer rights, nurture digital talent
and skills, promote fair competition and digital entrepreneurship, and enhance
consumer confidence and trust in the digital economy;
61. Urges Member States, when considering whether to integrate information
and communications technology, including digital technologies, into the design and
implementation of social policies, to consider the benefits, harms, acceptability,
feasibility, use of resources and equity of the social policies, and to analyse the costs
and benefits in relation to efficiency, effectiveness, inclusiveness, safety and security,
and the impact on the environment;
62. Encourages Member States, in articulating a digital strategy for
integrating information and communications technologies, including digital
technologies, into the design and implementation of social policies, to ensure
inclusivity, equality and social justice, to complement digital access to social
programmes with non‑digital means to ensure that no one is left behind, and to
allocate adequate financing and sufficient resources for integrating information and
digital technologies into social policies;
63. Invites the United Nations system to continue to support Member States in
their pursuit of socially just transitions towards sustainable development and facilitate
international cooperation in the field of digital technologies for developing countries,
upon their request, with the aim of achieving the 2030 Agenda for the common future
of present and coming generations, and close the digital divides which are
exacerbating existing inequalities globally, especially during and after the pandemic,
and stresses the commitment of Member States to reinvigorating and strengthening
multilateralism to collectively address global challenges and to support countries in
need in their efforts to enable an inclusive, sustainable and resilient recovery,
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including through mobilizing all means to strengthen their education, healthcare and
social protection systems and mitigate and adapt to the negative effects of climate
change;
64. Reaffirms that international cooperation has an essential role in assisting
developing countries, including the least developed and middle-income countries, in
strengthening their human, institutional and technological capacity;
65. Underlines that South-South cooperation is an important element of
international cooperation for development as a complement to, not a substitute for,
North-South cooperation, recognizes its increased importance, different history and
particularities, and stresses that it should be seen as an expression of solidarity among
peoples and countries of the South, based on their shared experiences and objectives,
and that it should continue to be guided by the principles of respect for national
sovereignty, national ownership and independence, equality, non‑conditionality,
non‑interference in domestic affairs and mutual benefit;
66. Emphasizes that international public finance plays an important role in
complementing the efforts of countries to mobilize public resources domestically,
especially in the poorest and the most vulnerable countries with limited domestic
resources, and that an important use of international public finance, including official
development assistance, is to catalyse the mobilization of additional resources from
other public and private sources, and notes that official development assistance
providers have reaffirmed their respective commitments, including the commitment
by many developed countries to achieve the target of 0.7 per cent of gross national
income for official development assistance to developing countries and 0.15 to 0.2 per
cent of gross national income for official development assistance to the least
developed countries;
67. Welcomes the increase in the volume of official development assistance
since the adoption of the Monterrey Consensus, expresses its concern that many
countries still fall short of their official development assistance commitments,
reiterates that the fulfilment of all official development assistance commitments
remains crucial, commends those few countries that have met or surpassed their
commitment to 0.7 per cent of gross national income for official development
assistance and the target of 0.15 to 0.20 per cent of gross national income for official
development assistance to the least developed countries, urges all other countries to
step up efforts to increase their official development assistance and to make additional
concrete efforts towards the official development assistance targets, welcomes the
decision by the European Union reaffirming its collective commitment to achieve the
target of 0.7 per cent of gross national income for official development assistance
within the time frame of the 2030 Agenda and undertaking to meet collectively the
target of 0.15 to 0.20 per cent of gross national income for official development
assistance to the least developed countries in the short term and to reach 0.20 per cent
of gross national income for official development assistance to the least developed
countries within the time frame of the 2030 Agenda, and encourages official
development assistance providers to consider setting a target to provide at least 0.20
per cent of gross national income for official development assistance to the least
developed countries;
68. Expresses concern that global challenges have strained developing
countries’ fiscal space and reversed trends in official development assistance,
reaffirms the importance of official development assistance as a key component of
international development cooperation in helping developing countries to achieve
sustainable development, stresses the essential role that official development
assistance plays in complementing, leveraging and sustaining financing for
development efforts in developing countries and in facilitating the achievement of
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development objectives, including the internationally agreed development goals, in
particular the Sustainable Development Goals, and welcomes steps to improve the
effectiveness and quality of aid based on the fundamental principles of national
ownership, alignment, harmonization, managing for results and mutual accountability;
69. Welcomes the contribution to the mobilization of resources for social
development by the initiatives taken on a voluntary basis by groups of Member States
based on innovative financing mechanisms, including those that aim to provide
further access to drugs at affordable prices to developing countries on a sustainable
and predictable basis, such as the International Drug Purchase Facility, Unitaid, as
well as other initiatives such as the International Finance Facility for Immunization
and the Advance Market Commitment for Vaccines;
70. Emphasizes that a coordinated global response is critical to assisting
countries in preserving or increasing social protection systems, including by
strengthening international solidarity, multilateralism, international cooperation and
global partnerships among all stakeholders, in order to achieve the objectives of the
World Summit for Social Development and the 2030 Agenda, while leaving no one
behind, with an endeavour to reach the furthest behind first;
71. Encourages Governments to support the research and development of
vaccines and medicines for the communicable and non‑communicable diseases that
primarily affect developing countries, provide access to affordable essential
medicines and vaccines, in accordance with the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS
Agreement and Public Health, which affirms the right of developing countries to use
to the full the provisions in the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual
Property Rights regarding flexibilities to protect public health, and, in particular,
provide access to medicines for all;
72. Stresses that the international community shall enhance its efforts to create
an enabling environment for social development and poverty eradication through
increasing market access for developing countries, technology transfer on mutually
agreed terms, financial aid and a comprehensive solution to the external debt problem;
73. Reaffirms that each country has the primary responsibility for its own
economic and social development and that the role of national policies and
development strategies cannot be overemphasized, including their importance in
safeguarding and increasing social spending to fully implement the 2030 Agenda, and
underlines the importance of adopting effective measures, including new financial
mechanisms, as appropriate, to support the efforts of developing countries to achieve
sustained economic growth, sustainable development, poverty eradication and the
strengthening of their democratic systems;
74. Stresses that the international community should support national
commitments to eradicate poverty in all its forms and dimensions with the goal to
ensure that no one is left behind, and recognizes the need for greater international
cooperation to further reduce inequality between and within countries and increase
capacity-building support to countries with the most constrained resources to ensure
that social expenditures meet certain targets;
75. Reconfirms the Addis Ababa Action Agenda and the Sevilla Commitment,
and recognizes the need to take steps to significantly increase investment to close
resource gaps, including through the mobilization of financial resources from all
sources, including public, private, domestic and international resource mobilization
and allocation;
76. Reaffirms the commitments made at the Fourth International Conference
on Financing for Development and in its outcome document to take concrete actions
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to enhance fiscal space, address debt challenges of developing countries and lower
the cost of capital and to provide and mobilize additional, innovative, adequate,
affordable, predictable and accessible financing from all sources, recognizing the
comparative advantages of public and private finance;
77. Stresses the importance of strengthening multilateral cooperation to
enhance fiscal space for social spending and supporting developing countries in
ensuring predictable, adequate and uninterrupted funding of social protection and
other essential social spending to overcome challenges, especially those related to
global shocks and crises;
78. Calls upon Member States to adopt coordinated policies that harness
globalization, technology, demographic and economic shifts and other trends to
achieve social development, while reducing inequality, including through increasing
investments in social protection systems, inclusive quality education, healthcare, and
housing;
79. Recognizes that informal employment is linked to economic insecurity, and
encourages States to adopt, as appropriate, strategies to formalize work, extend social
protection, expand tailored support to informal and formal workers, and implement
labour market policies, to ensure productive employment and decent work, with
particular attention to youth, women, and persons with disabilities;
80. Reaffirms that the Commission for Social Development, as a functional
commission of the Economic and Social Council, in promoting the integrated
treatment of social development issues in the United Nations system, shall review, on
a periodic basis, issues related to the follow-up to and implementation of the
Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme of Action, in a manner consistent with
the functions and contributions of the relevant organs, organizations and bodies of the
United Nations system, and shall advise the Council thereon;
81. Also 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;
82. Further reaffirms the mandate of the Commission for Social Development
and that social development is a cross-cutting element in discussions surrounding the
2030 Agenda, and calls upon Member States, the relevant specialized agencies, funds
and programmes of the United Nations system, civil society and relevant stakeholders
to enhance their support for the high-level political forum on sustainable development
as it builds upon the work of the functional commissions of the Economic and Social
Council, including the Commission, while reflecting the integrated nature of the
Sustainable Development Goals as well as the interlinkages between them;
83. Requests the United Nations funds, programmes and agencies to continue
to support national efforts of Member States to achieve inclusive social development
in a coherent and coordinated manner, to mainstream the goal of full and productive
employment and decent work for all into their policies, programmes and activities, as
well as to support efforts of Member States aimed at achieving this objective, and
invites financial institutions to support efforts in this regard;
84. Invites the Secretary-General, the Economic and Social Council, the
regional commissions, the relevant specialized agencies, the funds and programmes
of the United Nations system and other intergovernmental forums, within their
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respective mandates, to continue to integrate into their work programmes and give
priority attention to the Copenhagen commitments and the Declaration on the tenth
anniversary of the World Summit for Social Development, 27 to continue to be actively
involved in their follow‑up and to monitor the achievement of those commitments
and undertakings;
85. Calls upon the Commission for Social Development to continue to address
inequality in all its dimensions, in the context of the implementation of the
Copenhagen Declaration and the Programme of Action, as well as the implementation
of the 2030 Agenda, and invites the Commission to emphasize the increased exchange
of national, regional and international experiences, the focused and interactive
dialogues among experts and practitioners and the sharing of best practices and
lessons learned;
86. Requests the Secretary-General to continue engaging with Member States
to sustain and further strengthen the political momentum on health-related issues,
including the realization of universal health coverage and, in close collaboration with
relevant United Nations agencies and other stakeholders, including regional
organizations, to strengthen existing initiatives that are led and coordinated by the
World Health Organization to provide assistance to Member States, upon their
request, towards the achievement of universal health coverage and all health-related
targets of the Sustainable Development Goals;
87. Calls upon the international community to provide inclusive and equitable
quality education at all levels throughout the life course – early childhood, primary,
secondary, tertiary and distance education, including technical and vocational
training – so that all people, particularly those in vulnerable situations, may have
access to lifelong learning opportunities that help them to acquire the knowledge and
skills needed to exploit opportunities to participate fully in society and contribute to
sustainable development;
88. Decides to include in the provisional agenda of its eighty-first session,
under the item entitled “Social development”, the sub-item entitled “Implementation
of the outcome of the World Summit for Social Development and of the twenty-fourth
special session of the General Assembly”, with a particular focus on translating the
commitments made in the Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of Action into
concrete action, including the identification of best practices, and means to catalyse
the implementation of the Doha Political Declaration towards the achievement of
social development for all, and requests the Secretary-General to submit a report on
the question to the General Assembly at that session.
62nd plenary meeting
15 December 2025
_______________
27 See Official Records of the Economic and Social Council, 2005, Supplement No. 6 (E/2005/26),
chap. I, sect. A; see also Economic and Social Council decision 2005/234.
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