59th Annual DPI/NGO Conference
"Unfinished
Business: Effective Partnerships for Human Security and Sustainable
Development"
September 6 to 8, 2006 - United Nations Headquarters - New York,
USA.
The
Conference will focus on a specific example of successful multisector
partnerships, which if emulated by other groups, holds potential
for greater impact in helping achieve the United Nation's Millennium
Development Goals. This year, we have chosen to place a distinct
emphasis on infusing a multigeneration perspective with our
larger agenda and hope that a third of all speakers and NGO
participants would be under 30 years of age.
Draft Program
Conference
Schedule
WEDNESDAY, 6 SEPTEMBER 2006
Opening
Session:
10 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
General Assembly Hall
Opening Addresses:
- Jan Eliasson, President of the Sixtieth Session of the United
Nations General Assembly (invited)
- Kofi Annan, Secretary-General, United Nations (invited)
- Shashi Tharoor, Under-Secretary-General for Communications and
Public Information, United Nations (confirmed)
Keynote Addresses: tba
NGO Welcome:
- Joan Kirby, Chair, NGO/DPI Executive Committee (confirmed)
- Michaela Walsh, Chair, 59th Annual DPI/NGO Conference (confirmed)
Afternoon Panel Session:
3 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Conference Room 4
Moving
Development Forward:
Accountability, Transparency, Equitable Trade Policies
Governments, corporations, NGO’s and other civil society
actors are forming global partnerships for development. In order
for these partnerships to be effective – as called for by
the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) #8 – all stakeholders
must exercise commitment to accountability, transparency and good
governance. For development to go forward on a truly global level,
least developed, landlocked and small island developing countries’
special needs must be addressed. These include tariff- and quota-free
access for their exports, enhanced debt relief for heavily indebted
poor countries, cancellation of official bilateral debt, and more
generous official development assistance for countries committed
to poverty reduction.
This
panel will provide examples of how accountability, transparency,
good governance and equitable trade policies are helping to raise
resources for and successfully complete projects. Panelists will
take a look at existing debt and trade policies that have a negative
impact on the ability of less developed nations to develop and
to protect jobs, thereby alleviating poverty and raising the standard
of living on an ongoing basis. Finally, they will discuss how
making the public more aware of the unique, long-term investment
aspect of MDGs can help motivate their greater participation.
THURSDAY,
7 SEPTEMBER 2006Morning Panel Session:
10 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Conference Room 4
Achieving
Financial and Ecological Sustainability
Environmental sustainability includes integrating the principles
of sustainable development into country policies and programmes,
reversing the loss of environmental resources, and reducing by
half the number of people without access to safe drinking water.
Cross-sector partnerships and financial resources are paramount
in these efforts.
Speakers
in this panel will discuss the role the United Nations has played
in establishing effective partnerships to provide adequate resources
for environmental projects as well as to help settle cross-boundary
disputes. They will look at disaster management, water quality
monitoring to improve health and control disease, and educational
outreach to rural areas. Examples of projects that have been completed
utilizing these developments through the availability of micro-credit,
the aid of other new banking policies, or the collaborative efforts
of governments, NGOs, the private sector and individual initiatives
will be depicted.
Afternoon
Roundtable Session:
3 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Roundtable
# 1 - The Role of Science and Technology in Education
Conference Room 4
Knowledge
and training in science and technology are crucial for being able
to compete in the global world of today. At the same time, technological
advances make education much more readily available to more people
around the world. This roundtable will offer participants and
panelists an opportunity to dialogue about these advances and
to provide examples of delivering quality education to remote
areas. They will look at the skills and knowledge required that
may be helpful to young people entering the work force. The panel
will also focus on such areas as gender equality and human rights,
and emphasize the role of partnerships among government, civil
society and other actors.
Roundtable
# 2 - Gender-based Approaches to Health, HIV and AIDS
Dag Hamarskjöld Library Auditorium
In recent years, violence against women has been identified as
a primary health risk to women and girls. Furthermore, gender-based
violence keeps women and girls from fully and equally participating
in development. Similarly, HIV and AIDS have had a devastating
and often invisible impact on women and girls, which is furthermore
exacerbated by discrimination, poverty and gender-based violence.
This roundtable will provide examples of gender-based approaches
to MDGs related to reducing HIV and AIDS among women and girls,
achieving universal maternal health and eliminating gender-based
violence.
Roundtable
# 3 - Human Security: Responsibility to Protect and Peacebuilding
Commission
Conference Room 8
One of the most significant achievements for human security in
the 2005 World Summit was the affirmation of an international
responsibility to protect populations from genocide, war crimes,
ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. By committing themselves
to the responsibility to protect, governments accept that they
must act earlier and more effectively in response to outbreaking
crises in their own countries or wherever they occur. The Responsibility
to Protect is understood as a responsibility to prevent and rebuild,
as well as to react. This roundtable will provide examples of
how these goals can be achieved and what role civil society organizations
play in ensuring that governments understand and implement this
responsibility. The recently established Peacebuilding Commission
will also be discussed.
FRIDAY,
8 SEPTEMBER 2006Morning Roundtable Session:
10 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
Roundtable #4 - Civil Society and Global Partnerships for Development
Conference Room 4
This roundtable will examine effective partnerships between the
United Nations, governments, media, academia, labour, youth, the
private sector and other civil society actors, including NGOs.
Such partnerships are needed to fully achieve both, the MDGs and
the United Nations reform measures endorsed by world leaders at
the 2005 World Summit. Discussion will focus on enhanced NGO access
and input to United Nations fora, the General Assembly and other
decision-making bodies. Examples of connecting global actors with
local ones will also be discussed.
Roundtable
#5 - Ways of Reducing Extreme Poverty and Hunger
Dag Hamarskjöld Library Auditorium
Ways of reducing extreme poverty and hunger as a key Millennium
Development Goal (MDG) and specific examples of successful partnerships
aimed at achieving this goal by 2015 will be the topic of the
roundtable. Unemployment as one of the causes of poverty and migration
will also be addressed, with examples of multi-stakeholder partnerships
needed to reverse this trend.
Roundtable
#6 - Respect for Cultural Diversity in Conflict Resolution
Conference Room 8
The roundtable will provide a platform for representatives from
different backgrounds to discuss efforts to increase the understanding
of multiculturalism and to promote respect for cultural diversity.
Speakers will cite examples of effective dialogues between different
religions and cultures, in particular as they apply to conflict
resolution. Clashes of ideologies, values and cultural norms that
accompany globalization will be examined to incorporate sacred
and secular practices and beliefs into multicultural solutions
to these challenges.
Afternoon
Panel Session:
2 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
The
Role of the Media and Communications Technology in Achieving the
MDGs
Conference Room 4
The
World Summit on Information Society (WSIS), held in Tunisia in
November 2005, looked at the link between information and communications
technologies (ICTs) and development. The Summit aimed to bridge
the economic and digital gap between developed and developing
countries and to promote the importance of full and equal participation
of all stakeholders (government, private sector and civil society)
in propagating ICTs. The Summit was not about technology but rather
about ways to make information society global and to convince
decision makers to use ICTs as a tool for development.
Speakers
will examine how the emerging trends in ICTs as well as new, innovative
ways of distributing content are helping to achieve the MDGs.
In addition to discussing new trends in mainstream media reporting,
they will also examine examples of how these are being supplemented
by participatory media, making information more accessible and
more diverse.
Closing
Session:
5 p.m. - 6 p.m.
Conference Room 4
Moderator:
Shashi Tharoor, Under-Secretary-General for Communications and
Public Information, United Nations (confirmed)
Keynote Addresses: tba
Closing Remarks: Michaela Walsh, Chair, 59th Annual DPI/NGO Conference
(confirmed).
SPECIAL
EVENTS
Networking:
A Call for Best Practices
Venue: tba
Interactive networking sessions are scheduled for the first and
the second day of the Conference, Wednesday, 6 September, and
Thursday, 7 September, from 1:15 pm – 2:45 pm. In an effort
to afford NGO representatives a unique opportunity to share their
most effective networking strategies on local, national and international
levels, an experienced networking trainer will lead both sessions.
We look forward to your participation as we explore best practices
in utilizing networking techniques as a tool to achieve the MDGs.