S/RES/2282(2016) SC
Security Council resolution 2282 (2016) [on post-conflict peacebuilding]
71
Session
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2016/302 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2282(2016) |
| Category | Peace and security |
| UN Document | S/RES/2282(2016) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.7680
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2282 (2016)
Security Council Distr.: General
27 April 2016
Resolution 2282 (2016)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 7680th meeting, on
27 April 2016
The Security Council,
Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations,
Reaffirming its resolutions 1645 (2005), 1646 (2005) and 1947 (2010), and
recalling its resolutions 2171 (2014), 1325 (2000) and its subsequent resolutions,
and 2250 (2015) and the Statements of the President of the Security Council
S/PRST/2001/5, S/PRST/2011/4, S/PRST/2012/29 and S/PRST/2015/2, and
recalling General Assembly Resolutions A/69/313, A/70/6 and A/70/1,
Taking note of the report of the High-Level Independent Panel on Peace
Operations (A/70/95-S/2015/446) and the report of the Secretary-General on the
Implementation of the Recommendations of the High-Level Independent Panel on
Peace Operations of 17 June 2015 (A/70/357-S/2015/682) and the report of the
Secretary-General of 17 September 2015 (S/2015/716) submitting the results of the
Global Study on the implementation of resolution 1325 (2000), and encouraging
coherence, synergies, and complementarities in taking them forward,
Recognizing that development, peace and security, and human rights are
interlinked and mutually reinforcing,
Reaffirming its primary responsibility for the maintenance of international
peace and security, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations,
Deeply concerned by the high human cost and suffering caused by armed
conflicts, and recognizing the significant number of simultaneous security and
humanitarian crises that the world currently faces, and the strain that this places on
the resources of the United Nations’ system,
Recalling the determination of the peoples of the United Nations to save
succeeding generations from the scourge of war, further recalling the determination
to establish a just and lasting peace all over the world in accordance with the
purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations,
Recognizing that ‘sustaining peace’, as drawn from the Advisory Group of
Experts report, should be broadly understood as a goal and a process to build a
common vision of a society, ensuring that the needs of all segments of the
population are taken into account, which encompasses activities aimed at preventing
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the outbreak, escalation, continuation and recurrence of conflict, addressing root
causes, assisting parties to conflict to end hostilities, ensuring national
reconciliation, and moving towards recovery, reconstruction and deve lopment, and
emphasizing that sustaining peace is a shared task and responsibility that needs to be
fulfilled by the government and all other national stakeholders, and should flow
through all three pillars of the United Nations’ engagement at all stages o f conflict,
and in all its dimensions, and needs sustained international attention and assistance,
Reaffirming the primary responsibility of national governments and authorities
in identifying, driving and directing priorities, strategies and activities for sustaining
peace, and in this regard, emphasizing that inclusivity is key to advancing national
peacebuilding processes and objectives in order to ensure that the needs of all
segments of society are taken into account,
Stressing that civil society can play an important role in advancing efforts to
sustain peace,
Recalling General Assembly resolution A/70/1, entitled “Transforming our
world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”, which adopted a
comprehensive, far-reaching and people-centred set of universal and transformative
Sustainable Development Goals and targets,
Emphasizing the importance of a comprehensive approach to sustaining peace,
particularly through the prevention of conflict and addressing its root causes,
strengthening the rule of law at the international and national levels, and promoting
sustained and sustainable economic growth, poverty eradication, social
development, sustainable development, national reconciliation and unity including
through inclusive dialogue and mediation, access to justice and transitional justice,
accountability, good governance, democracy, accountable institutions, gender
equality and respect for, and protection of, human rights and funda mental freedoms,
Recognizing that peacebuilding is an inherently political process aimed at
preventing the outbreak, escalation, recurrence or continuation of conflict, and
further recognizing that peacebuilding encompasses a wide range of political,
developmental, and human rights programmes and mechanisms,
Recognizing that an integrated and coherent approach among relevant political,
security and developmental actors, within and outside of the United Nations system,
consistent with their respective mandates, and the Charter of the United Nations, is
critical to sustaining peace, and essential for improving respect for human rights,
advancing gender equality, empowering women and youth, strengthening the rule of
law, eradicating poverty, building institutions, and advancing economic
development in conflict-affected countries,
Welcoming the work of the Peacebuilding Commission as a dedicated
intergovernmental advisory body to bring a strategic approach and coherence to
international peacebuilding efforts, and recognizing the valuable work done in all its
configurations and meetings,
Recognizing the need for United Nations peacebuilding efforts to have
adequate, predictable and sustained financing in order to effectively assist countries
to sustain peace and prevent the outbreak, escalation, continuation and recurrence o f
conflict,
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Welcoming the valuable work undertaken by the Peacebuilding Fund as a
catalytic, rapid-response and flexible pre-positioned pooled fund providing
financing to activities to sustain peace in conflict-affected countries, and in
advancing strategic alignment within the United Nations system and between the
United Nations and the international financial institutions,
Recognizing the importance of strategic partnerships, pooled funding and
blended finance between the United Nations, bilateral and international donors,
multilateral financial institutions, and the private sector in order to share risks and
maximize the impact of peacebuilding efforts, taking into account the need to ensure
transparency, accountability and appropriate monitoring of funds,
Recognizing that the scale and nature of the challenge of sustaining peace calls
for close strategic and operational partnerships between the United Nations, national
governments and other key stakeholders, including international, regional and
sub-regional organizations, international financial institutions, civil society
organizations, women’s groups, youth organizations, and the private sector, taking
into account national priorities and policies,
Welcoming the contribution of peacekeeping operations to a comprehensive
strategy for sustaining peace and, noting with appreciation the contributions that
peacekeepers and peacekeeping missions make to peacebuilding,
Reiterating that United Nations’ cooperation with regional and sub -regional
organizations is critical to contributing to the prevention of the outbreak, escalation,
continuation and recurrence of conflict, in line with Chapter VIII of the United
Nations Charter,
Reaffirming the important role of women in peacebuilding and noting the
substantial link between women’s full and meaningful involvement in efforts to
prevent, resolve and rebuild from conflict and those efforts’ effectiveness and long
term sustainability, and stressing, in this regard, the importance of women’s equal
participation in all efforts for the maintenance and promotion of peace and security
and the need to increase women’s role in decision-making with regard to conflict
prevention and resolution and peacebuilding,
Reaffirming the important role youth can play in the prevention and resolution
of conflicts and as a key aspect of the sustainability, inclusiveness and success of
peacekeeping and peacebuilding efforts,
1. Welcomes the valuable input of the Advisory Group of Experts on the
Review of the Peacebuilding Architecture entitled the ‘Challenge of Sustaining
Peace’;
2. Emphasizes that sustaining peace requires coherence, sustained
engagement, and coordination between the General Assembly, the Security Council,
and the Economic and Social Council, consistent with their mandates as set out in
the Charter of the United Nations;
3. Reaffirms the importance of national ownership and leadership in
peacebuilding, whereby the responsibility for sustaining peace is broadly shared by
the Government and all other national stakeholders and underlines the importance,
in this regard, of inclusivity in order to ensure that the needs of all segments of
society are taken into account;
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4. Reaffirms its Resolution 1645 (2005), including the main purposes of the
Peacebuilding Commission as an intergovernmental advisory body, and stresses the
importance of the Peacebuilding Commission to fulfil the following functions in
this regard:
(a) To bring sustained international attention to sustaining peace, and to
provide political accompaniment and advocacy to countries affected by conflict,
with their consent;
(b) To promote an integrated, strategic and coherent approach to
peacebuilding, noting that security, development and human rights are closely
interlinked and mutually reinforcing;
(c) To serve a bridging role among the principal organs and relevant entities
of the United Nations by sharing advice on peacebuilding needs and priorities, in
line with the respective competencies and responsibilities of these bodies;
(d) To serve as a platform to convene all relevant actors within and outside
the United Nations, including from Member States, national authorities, United
Nations missions and country teams, international, regional and sub -regional
organizations, international financial institutions, civil society, women’s groups,
youth organizations and, where relevant, the private sector and national human
rights institutions, in order to provide recommendations and information to improve
their coordination, to develop and share good practices in peacebuilding, including
on institution building, and to ensure predictable financing to peacebuilding;
5. Encourages the Peacebuilding Commission, through its Organizational
Committee, to review its provisional rules of procedure in order to improve the
continuity of its Chairs and Vice-Chairs, enhance its focus on developments at the
country and regional level, and foster greater engagement by its membership, and
further encourages the Peacebuilding Commission, through its Organizational
Committee, to consider diversifying its working methods to enhance its efficiency
and flexibility in support of sustaining peace including by:
(a) Providing options for its country-specific meetings and formats, to be
applied upon the request of the country concerned, as referred to the Commission in
accordance with the relevant provisions of its resolution 1645;
(b) Enabling it to consider regional and cross-cutting issues relevant to
sustaining peace;
(c) Enhancing synergies between the Peacebuilding Fund and the
Peacebuilding Commission, and;
(d) Continuing to use its annual session to facilitate closer engagement with
relevant stakeholders;
6. Reaffirms its call upon the Peacebuilding Commission to integrate a
gender perspective into all of its work;
7. Requests the Peacebuilding Commission to include in its annual report
information on progress in implementing the provisions of its present resolution
relating to its working methods and provisional rules of procedure;
8. Acknowledges the importance of strong coordination, coherence and
cooperation with the Peacebuilding Commission, in accordance with its resolution
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1645, and in this regard, expresses its intention to regularly request, deliberate and
draw upon the specific, strategic and targeted advice of the Peacebuilding
Commission, including to assist with the longer-term perspective required for
sustaining peace being reflected in the formation, review and drawdown of
peacekeeping operations and special political missions mandates;
9. Emphasizes the importance of drawing upon the advice of the
Peacebuilding Commission when major agreements that relate to United Nations
mission mandates and transitions, are agreed between the United Nations, national
governments and authorities, and other relevant stakeholders;
10. Stresses the importance of closer cooperation between the Economic and
Social Council and Peacebuilding Commission, in accordance with their respective
mandates, including through enhanced dialogue in support of promoting coherence
and complementarity between the United Nations’ peace and security efforts and its
development, human rights and humanitarian work, and encourages the
Peacebuilding Commission to draw on the expertise of relevant Economic and
Social Council subsidiary bodies, as appropriate;
11. Encourages United Nations Member States participating in the Universal
Periodic Review process of the Human Rights Council to consider the human rights
dimensions of peacebuilding, as appropriate;
12. Stresses that a comprehensive approach to transitional justice, including
promotion of healing and reconciliation, a professional, accountable and effective
security sector, including through its reform, and inclusive and effective
demobilization, disarmament and reintegration programmes, including the transition
from demobilization and disarmament to reintegration, are critical to consolidation
of peace and stability, promoting poverty reduction, rule of law, access to justice
and good governance, further extending legitimate state authority, and preventing
countries from lapsing or relapsing into conflict;
13. Recognizes that effective peacebuilding must involve the entire United
Nations system, and in this regard, emphasizes the importance of joint analysis and
effective strategic planning across the United Nations system in its long term
engagement in conflict-affected countries and, where appropriate, in cooperation
and coordination with regional and sub-regional organizations;
14. Emphasizes the important role that effective and responsive leadership in
United Nations country operations can play in bringing together the United Nations
system around a common strategy for sustaining peace, and in this regard, stresses
the need for more coordinated, coherent and integrated peacebuilding efforts,
including among United Nations missions, United Nations country teams, and
national, regional and international development actors, in ensuring greater
effectiveness and efficiency in the delivery of critical peacebuilding tasks;
15. Stresses that the Peacebuilding Support Office should be revitalized, and
emphasizes that the full support of the Secretary-General is needed, in order for the
Peacebuilding Support Office to support the Peacebuilding Commission, to increase
synergies with other parts of the United Nations system, and to provide strategic
advice to the Secretary-General, drawing together the expertise of the United
Nations system to facilitate coherent system-wide action and support partnerships
for sustaining peace;
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16. Recognizes that development is a central goal in itself and recognizes the
important contributions of the United Nations development system to peacebuilding,
particularly through economic development and poverty eradication, and stresses
the need to continue strengthening cooperation and coordination for that purpose in
the field through United Nations Country Teams and at United Nations
Headquarters, in accordance with their respective mandates, and with respect for
national ownership and priorities of countries-affected by conflict, including
through the overarching framework of the United Nations operational activities for
development;
17. Takes note of the Secretary-General’s decision to request the United
Nations Development Group to take forward a review of the current capacities of
agencies, funds and programmes and particularly looks forward to its findings
contributing to enhancing the United Nations capacities relating to sustaining peace;
18. Underlines that the scale and nature of the challenge of sustaining peace
can be met through close strategic and operational partnerships between national
governments, the United Nations, and other key stakeholders, including
international, regional and sub-regional organizations, international financial
institutions, regional and other development banks, civil society organizations,
women’s groups, youth organizations and where relevant, the private sector, and
encourages the Peacebuilding Commission to consider options for regular
exchanges and joint initiatives with key stakeholders to promote sustainable peace,
including in the framework of the annual sessions of the Peacebuilding
Commission;
19. Stresses the importance of partnership and cooperation between the
United Nations and relevant regional and sub-regional organizations, including the
African Union, to improve cooperation and coordination in peacebuilding, to
increase synergies and ensure the coherence and complementarity of such efforts,
and in this regard, urges the Peacebuilding Commission to hold regular exchanges
of views with relevant regional and sub-regional organizations and encourages
regular exchanges, joint initiatives, and information sharing between the
Peacebuilding Support Office and relevant bodies of regional and sub -regional
organizations, such as the African Union Commission;
20. Requests the Secretary-General to explore options for strengthening the
United Nations-World Bank collaboration in conflict-affected countries in order to:
(a) assist such countries, upon their request, in creating an enabling
environment for economic growth, foreign investment and job creation, and in the
mobilization and effective use of domestic resources, in line with national priorities
and underscored by the principle of national ownership;
(b) marshal resources, and align their regional and country strategies, to
promote sustainable peace;
(c) support the creation of enlarged funding platforms bringing together the
World Bank Group, multilateral and bilateral donors and regional actors to pool
resources, share and mitigate risk, and maximize impact for sustaining peace;
(d) enable and encourage regular exchanges on priority peacebuilding areas;
21. Underscores the importance of women’s leadership and participation in
conflict prevention, resolution and peacebuilding, and recognizes the continuing
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need to increase representation of women at all decision -making levels in national,
regional and international institutions and mechanisms for the prevention and
resolution of conflict, and the consideration of gender -related issues in all
discussions pertinent to sustaining peace;
22. Encourages the Secretary-General to promote the gender dimensions of
peacebuilding, including through the delivery of gender-sensitive and targeted
programming, through the strengthening of women’s meaningful participation in
peacebuilding, supporting women’s organizations and through monitoring, tracking
and reporting achievement;
23. Calls upon Member States and relevant United Nations organs and
entities to consider ways to increase meaningful and inclusive participation of youth
in peacebuilding efforts through creating policies, including in partnership with
private sector where relevant, that would enhance youth capacities and skills, and
create youth employment to actively contribute to sustaining peace, and in this
regard, requests the Secretary-General and the Peacebuilding Commission to
include in their recommendations ways to engage youth in peacebuilding ;
24. Emphasizes the need for predictable and sustained financing to United
Nations peacebuilding activities, including through increased contributions, and
strengthened partnerships with key stakeholders, while also noting the significance
that non-monetary contributions can play in peacebuilding efforts;
25. Welcomes the contributions made to the Peacebuilding Fund, takes note
of the proposals in the Advisory Group of Experts’ report in this regard and urges all
Member States, including non-traditional donors and other partners, to consider
making voluntary contributions to the fund, including by building on the practice of
making multi-year commitments to the fund;
26. Recognizes the importance of adequately resourcing the peacebuilding
components of relevant United Nations peacekeeping operations and special
political missions, including during mission transitions and drawdown, to support
stability and continuity of peacebuilding activities;
27. Stresses the importance of enhancing the mobilization of resources for
initiatives that address the particular needs of women in peacebuilding contexts,
advance gender equality, and empower women;
28. Takes note of the General Assembly decision to include in the agenda of
its seventy-first session an item entitled ‘Peacebuilding and Sustaining Peace’;
29. Takes note of the General Assembly decision to convene at its seventysecond session, under the agenda item ‘Peacebuilding and Sustaining Peace’, a
high-level meeting of the General Assembly on efforts undertaken and opportunities
to strengthen the United Nations’ work on sustaining peace, on a date and in a
format to be decided by the President of the General Assembly;
30. Takes note of the General Assembly decision to invite the Secretary-General to report to the seventy-second session of the General Assembly, at least
sixty days prior to the high-level meeting on ‘Peacebuilding and Sustaining Peace’,
on efforts to implement its present resolution, including in the following areas:
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(a) To strengthen operational and policy coherence within the United
Nations system towards sustaining peace, including strengthened strategic planning
across the United Nations system;
(b) To improve internal United Nations leadership, capability, and
accountability — at Headquarters, and in the field — on efforts to sustain peace;
(c) To ensure continuity of relevant peacebuilding programmes, senior
leadership, and personnel, as appropriate, through the different phases of United
Nations engagement, in order to improve mission transitions;
(d) To strengthen partnerships between the United Nations and key
stakeholders, including international, regional and sub -regional organizations,
international financial institutions, and civil society organizations;
(e) To provide options on increasing, restructuring and better prioritizing
funding dedicated to United Nations peacebuilding activities, including through
assessed and voluntary contributions, with a view to ensuring sustainable financing
for the consideration of Member States;
(f) To provide options for adequate resourcing of the peacebuilding
activities of United Nations Country Teams, and the peacebuilding components of
United Nations peacekeeping operations and special political missions, including
during mission transitions and drawdown for the consideration of Member States;
(g) To strengthen the capacity of the senior leadership of the United Nations
Country Team to absorb relevant peacebuilding functions following the drawdown
of Security Council mandated missions;
(h) To support the participation of women and youth in peacebuilding
processes, including through advocacy with national stakeholders, and support to
women’s and youth organizations;
(i) To revitalize the Peacebuilding Support Office;
31. Calls for a further comprehensive review of United Nations
peacebuilding at its seventy-fourth session;
32. Decides to remain seized of the matter.
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