Untitled Document
Summary of the
Programme of Action
International Conference on Population & Development (ICPD)
Cairo, 5-13 September 1994
After vigorous debate, more than 180 countries agreed to adopt the 16-chapter
ICPD Programme of Action. The 115-page document outlines a 20-year plan to promote
sustainable, human-centered development and a stable population, framing the
issues with broad principles and specific actions. Some 20 delegations expressed
reservations about specific parts of the text. The full-text of the Programme
of Action is available on-line at http://www.un.org/popin/icpd2.htm.
Chapters I &
II: The Preamble and the Principles set out the development and human rights
context of the Programme.
The Preamble places
the ICPD in global context, noting the interdependence of population and development;
recent rapid population growth; the need to mobilize partnerships and international
resources; and the links to agreements from other major world conferences and
universal standards of human rights.
The set of 15 Principles
states positions on basic issues discussed in the rest of the document. These
include: the universal equality and rights of all as set forth in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights; people-centered sustainable development; gender
equity; the context of population programmes; the relationship of population,
resources, the environment and development; the eradication of poverty; the
rights to education and to physical and mental health; support for the family;
the health and development of children; the treatment of documented migrants;
the right to asylum; the rights of indigenous people; and sustained economic
growth that benefits a broad social base.
Each subsequent
chapter contains Bases for Action, Objectives, and Actions.
Chapter III: Interrelationships
Among Population, Sustained Economic Growth and Sustainable Development: Outlines
links between the needs and acts of growing numbers of people and the finite
"carrying capacity" of natural resources.
Action recommendations include: integrating population, production and consumption
dynamics into sustainable development policies; investing in human resources,
including education, employment and health services, particularly in needs of
women and the poor; promoting socially responsive economies; and taking extra
measures to end poverty in ecologically vulnerable areas.
Chapter IV: Gender
Equality, Equity and Empowerment of Women: Addresses imbalances between women
and men and the need to empower women, protect the girl child, and achieve gender
equity.
Action recommendations
include: policies and programs to empower women; promoting equal treatment and
preventing the neglect and abuse of girl children; and promoting equal responsibility
of men in family life, in health, communication and economics.
Chapter V: The
Family, Its Roles, Rights, Composition and Structure: Recognizes that the family,
in all its forms, is the basic unit of society and that population and development
policies should promote the family in all its diversity.
Action recommendations
include: promoting the earning power of poorer families and greater compatibility
between work and parental duties; and developing innovative policies to assist
families with health, social and/or political disadvantages.
Chapter VI: Population
Growth and Structure: States that countries where demographic growth outstrips
economic growth face special challenges in ensuring a quality of life based
on human rights and sustainable development.
Action recommendations
include: integrating demographic trends with social and economic development;
reducing high maternal and child mortality levels that often lead to high fertility
rates; meeting the health, education, social, training and employment needs
of children and youth; enhancing equity, self-reliance and support systems for
elderly people, particularly women; and recognizing the perspectives of indigenous
cultures and persons with disabilities and developing responsive policies and
programs.
Chapter VII: Reproductive
Rights and Reproductive Health: States that all couples and individuals have
the right to attain the highest standard of sexual and reproductive health.
Action recommendations
include: providing universal reproductive health services by 2015, including
participatory programs for adolescents, men, migrants and displaced persons;
seeking universal access to safe, appropriate and adequately-funded family planning
programs by 2015, based in the principles of voluntary and informed choice and
quality of care; helping women avoid abortion; promoting the prevention, detection
and treatment of sexually-transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS; developing
policies and programs that support comprehensive sexual education and services
based on an improved understanding of the need for responsibility, the realities
of current behavior, and the prevention of abuse, including female genital mutilation;
and ensuring access to appropriate and supportive reproductive health programs
and services for adolescents.
Chapter VIII: Health,
Morbidity and Mortality: Focuses on international and national level commitments
to increasing health and life span and improving the quality of life of all
people.
Action recommendations
include: promoting strategies to reduce morbidity and mortality, to recognize
the custodial role of women in health, and to reduce local and large-scale environmental
health hazards; reducing high infant and child mortality rates to 35 and 45
per 1,000, respectively, and maternal mortality by half by 2015; and mobilizing
to prevent and assess the impact of HIV/AIDS, protecting the rights of all those
affected.
Chapter IX: Population
Distribution, Urbanization and Internal Migration: In the context of human rights,
outlines the need for countries to foster balanced and sustainable patterns
of population distribution through sustainable development and the reduction
of "push factors" related to migration, including ending all forced
migration and "ethnic cleansing."
Action recommendations
include: keeping population distribution policies consistent with other development
goals, policies and human rights; encouraging the growth of small-to-medium
urban centers; reducing urban bias through rural development incentives, conservation
and infrastructure; promoting urban development responsive to growth; maintaining
consistency with the Fourth Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of
Civilian Persons in Time of War (1949); improving conditions for the urban poor,
especially women and street children; and providing displaced persons with basic
social services, including health, education, and employment opportunities.
Chapter X: International
Migration: Considers documented and undocumented migrants, refugees, asylum-seekers
and displaced persons, emphasizing the need to address the root causes of migration
and vulnerabilities of the displaced.
Action recommendations
include: addressing economic imbalances between developed and developing countries;
addressing circumstances of environmental refugees; gathering sound data on
migration factors; addressing discriminatory attitudes and practices; promoting
integration and re-integration of the displaced; adopting sanctions for international
trafficking, especially against exploitation, prostitution and coercive adoption;
enhancing mechanisms for cross-border responsibility; and respecting the principle
of non-refoulement, the non-forcible return of persons whose freedom is threatened.
Chapter XI: Population,
Development and Education: Focuses on the need for universal access to quality
education, the relationship between population and sustainable development,
and the need to enhance people's ability to "exercise their basic right
to decide freely and responsibly on the number and spacing of their children."
Action recommendations
include: achieving universal access to quality education; promoting job training,
non-formal education and literacy programs; integrating reproductive health,
gender sensitivity, demographic, health and environmental perspectives into
existing programs as appropriate; using the media to expand culturally-appropriate
knowledge and motivation in population, health and development; disseminating
information on the relationships between population, consumption, production
and sustainable development through databases and networks; and strengthening
research about population and development issues.
Chapter XII: Technology,
Research and Development: Outlines the need to collect, analyze and disseminate
population, socio-economic, and reproductive health-related data.
Action recommendations
include: encouraging collection and use of data; setting up databases to link
categories such as population, education, environment, health, poverty, family
well-being, migration and development issues, including consumption and women's
role in economic development; implementing appropriate training programs; refining
research on reproductive and sexual health at social, medical and technical
levels; improving program recognition of social, cultural and economic differences;
applying operations research to evaluations; and investigating gender discrepancies
revealed in research.
Chapter XIII: National
Action: States that each country should incorporate population concerns into
national development strategies, involve all sectors of society in development
decisions, and mobilize and allocate resources.
Action recommendations
include: working with partners to promote awareness of population and development
strategies, plans, policies and programs; developing human resources, especially
women as leaders; promoting experience-sharing and database networking; developing
client-centered information systems; mobilizing resources through cost-recovery
measures, including more involvement of the private sector, to ensure "universal
availability of and access to high-quality reproductive health and family planning
services"; and increasing public and development assistance spending in
social sectors, including developing reliable cost estimates.
Chapter XIV: International
Cooperation: States the need for the international community to create an enabling
economic environment for implementing the Programme, to develop "people-centered"
population and development strategies, and to make a strong commitment to funding
population and development programs.
Action recommendations
include: offering technical assistance and appropriate technology transfer to
reinforce national capacity-building; promoting economic policy favoring sustained
economic growth; strengthening cooperation between governmental and non-governmental
organizations; striving to fulfill the consensus target of .7% of GNP for overall
official population and development assistance; coordinating financing and planning
based on evaluation, needs assessment, and complementary programs; exploring
innovative financing mechanisms and direct South-South funding; and expanding
financial aid in population, reproductive, sexual health, and family planning.
Chapter XV: Partnership
with the Non-Governmental Sector: Calls for greater cooperation and partnerships
among all levels of government and the full range of NGOs and the private sector
in program design, implementation, coordination, and evaluation.
For governments,
action recommendations include: promoting partnerships with NGOs, especially
women's groups through dialogue, decisionmaking, program planning, training,
outreach and other activities; and promoting partnerships with the private sector
and NGOs. For NGOs, action recommendations include: strengthening interaction
with communities while joining national, regional and international debates
on population and development. For the private sector, action recommendations
include: channeling financial and other appropriate support to non-profit NGOs
and meeting their employees' needs for information, education and reproductive
health services.
Chapter XVI: Follow-up
to the Conference: Calls for creation of national, subregional, regional and
international follow-up mechanisms to promote implementation of the Programme
of Action through appropriate, coordinated and specific policies and programs.
Action recommendations
include: prioritizing political leadership and commitment, dissemination, spending
levels, accountability, multi-disciplinary expertise and evaluation, and increasing
efficiency in U.N. and aid groups. The ICPD made a global commitment to mobilize
$17 billion annually by the year 2000 and over $21 billion by 2015 for population
and reproductive health programs. So far, less than $10 billion per year is
being directed to these programs, four-fifths of it from developing countries.
International assistance remains well below the $5.7 billion per year that the
ICPD agreed would be required by 2000.
Sources: Programme
of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development; Document/Conference
Summary, Population Communications International; Chapter Summaries, International
Women's Health Coalition; State of World Population 1998, United Nations Population
Fund.
Communications
Consortium Media Center
March 2000
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