WORKSHOP ENGAGING CITIZENS TO COUNTER CORRUPTION FOR BETTER PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY AND ACHIEVEMENT OF THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS

Similar documents
PUBLIC PRACTICES AND INSTITUTIONS FOR ENHANCING ACCOUNTABILITY AND PREVENTING CORRUPTION IN THE DELIVERY OF PUBLIC SERVICES

INTRODUCTORY PRESENTATION

by Roberto Villarreal

EXPERT GROUP MEETING ENGAGING CITIZENS TO ENHANCE PUBLIC SECTOR ACCOUNTABILITY AND PREVENT CORRUPTION IN THE DELIVERY OF PUBLIC SERVICES

PARALLEL THEMATIC SESSION B: USES OF ICT FOR ENHANCING EDUCATION AND HEALTH

CITIZENS ENGAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT: A PERSPECTIVE FROM THE UNITED NATIONS

UNITED NATIONS DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS DIVISION FOR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT WORKSHOP

Paris, France October 2014

Report on sustainable development goals for the West Africa subregion. Key messages. African Union Commission. African Development Bank 1

Open Government Data for Sustainable Development

Transfer and adaptation of innovative practices for improved public service delivery in Least Developed Countries (LDCs)

MAINSTREAMING POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES WITHIN THE MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS (MDGs( MDGs): THE ROLE OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION

Aide-Memoire. The Future is now: Accelerating Public Service Innovation for Agenda 2030

21st Century is the Century of the Oceans Ban Ki-moon, UN Secretary - General

ROLE OF UNDP IN ENSURING ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY: MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOAL (MDG)7 IN UGANDA

Transfer and adaptation of innovative practices for improved public service delivery in LDCs. Expert Group Meeting. New York, United States of America

A I D E M E M O I R E THE AFRICAN E-LEADERSHIP MEETING. Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, June, 2011 (Draft of April 2011)

The SDGs: Making the transition to a more integrated approach to sustainable development. SDGs. MDGs. Alan AtKisson SLU 17 Apr 2015

Aide-Memoire. The Future is now: Accelerating Public Service Innovation for Agenda 2030

Sustainable Water and Sanitation Services and Poverty Reduction. Sergio Feld, Ph.D. Policy Advisor - Environment UNDP Regional Centre in Bangkok

Transfer and adaptation of innovative practices for improved public service delivery in Least Developed Countries (LDCs)

2014 United Nations Public Service Forum Day and Awards Ceremony OVERALL AIDE-MEMOIRE

GOAL 1. Yoshi Shimizu. End poverty in all its forms everywhere.

China s Poverty Reduction: Achivements, Explanation, Chanllenges and Strategies

CAPACITY BUILDING IN CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

DPADM/UNDESA Presentation for First Intersessional Meeting of the Open-ended Intergovernmental Working Group on Prevention of Corruption

Data and statistics for monitoring development plans in GEORGIA

Lessons Learned from Global MDG Monitoring

How will the Sustainable Development Goals shape development cooperation?

The Lima Declaration

AIDE MEMOIRE. A National Capacity Building Workshop. Organized by. United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA)

Economic and Social Council

TA K I N G A C T I O N

RECOMMENDATIONS FROM THE UNITED NATIONS PUBLIC SERVICE FORUM AND AWARDS CEREMONY

WORKSHOP 1. Leading with Integrity and Inventiveness in Public Governance AIDE MEMOIRE

Committee on Development and Intellectual Property (CDIP)

2. Confirming that effective co-operation is only possible through effective communication;

Press Kit for the Sustainable Development Summit 2015: Time for Global Action for People and Planet FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

The Government of Nepal endorsed the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in

WORKSHOP IV. E-GOVERNMENT AS A TOOL FOR PARTICIPATION AND TRANSPARENCY

Universities and the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda

WASH advocacy and the Global Goals for Sustainable Development

WASH advocacy and the Global Goals for Sustainable Development

What are the key learning effects of the sustainability strategy process in North Rhine-Westphalia?

Ministerial Declaration Ministerial declaration

United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Division for Public Administration and Development Management

We aim at distributing to all Member States the revised version of the modalities resolution on Thursday 19 November 2015.

Food and Agriculture in Agenda 2030: 8 points +

The UN Sustainable Development Goals: What boards should do

CSR Management. Corporate Philosophy. CSR Activities Concepts and Systems. Review activities according to plans each year

High-level Meeting on. Sharing of Best Practices on Innovation in Public Administration in the Mediterranean Region

High-Level International Conference on the International Decade for Action Water for Sustainable Development,

Target 1: Eliminate by 2030, the extreme poverty (people living on US $ 1.25 a day);

THE ROAD TO ACHIEVING THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS

Ministerial Declaration

6 th International Summer School 2014 Comprehensive Land Policy- Fundamental for Sustainable Urban and Rural Development (12-13 Nov.

CARE s Work Today. - CARE has around 9,000 employees working towards ending poverty and social injustice.

MANDATES ARISING FROM THE SIXTH SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS. We, the Heads of State and Government of the Americas, resolve:

Sustainable Development Goals: Transforming our World with Innovation

CONCEPT NOTE. Workshop 2: Making Institutions Inclusive and Ensuring Participation in Decision-making. Friday, 22 nd June 2018

IFAD and the United Nations Decade of Family Farming ( )

Energy and Environment in the Context of Sustainable Development Goals in India

Millennium Villages A Revolution is Possible

Community Solidarity Fund (CSF) Application Form

Songs of Innocence and Experience?

PGA SDG Action Event High-Level SDG Financing Lab How to finance the SDGs? 18 April 2017, Trusteeship Council CONCEPT NOTE

COHERENCE BETWEEN KENYA S PRSP, ERS AND ACHIEVEMENT OF MDGs. Nicholas N. Waiyaki

IMPROVING LIVING STANDARDS THROUGH MAINSTREAMING OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS INTO THE NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY IN TAJIKISTAN

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme and of the United Nations Population Fund

2009/20 Social dimensions of the New Partnership for Africa s Development

Implementing the Sustainable Development Goals and the NDP in KZN

Implementing the Sustainable Development Goals and the NDP in KZN

11 th Session of the UN Committee of Experts on Public Administration

Session IV: Common Country Analysis as the foundation for setting UN joint priorities. LUNDAP Evaluation and CCA experience LESOTHO

Draft Wrap-Up Remarks, HLPF Week One. H.E. Ms. Marie Chatardová, President of ECOSOC. Conference room 4 Friday 13 July :30 pm

Mapping the 169 targets

Contributions to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development

MALAWI S EXPERIENCE IN IMPLEMENTING SDGs

CONCEPT NOTE. 12 th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF NATIONAL INSTITUTIONS FOR THE PROMOTION AND PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS

Overview of the post-2015 development agenda

(In Support Of the ECOSOC Annual Ministerial Review) CONCEPT NOTE A. BACKGROUND. 1. The Annual Ministerial Review

REPORT OF THE ECOSOC PANEL ON PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY: The Role of Public Accountability in Good Governance

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 20 December [on the report of the Second Committee (A/68/445)]

ASEAN Community in a Global Community of Nations

The United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs: its role and the support it provides

2016 e-government Survey and Sustainability, Considering Local Governments and Communities By

Copied from A/59/3 (part I) Action taken by the Council

Joint Meeting of the Executive Boards of UNDP/UNFPA/UNOPS, UNICEF, UN-Women and 30 and 31 January 2012 New York

YOUTH. Indirectly addressing youth interests: SDG framework is an expression of intergenerational solidarity / contract for the future.

Mainstreaming Gender Into the WSIS

Transport, Ports & the SDGs. Vincent F. Valentine UNCTAD

Towards making the most of SDGs for Bangladesh. Some Reflections on Access to Resources, Environment and Climate Change

EvalAgenda Global Evaluation Agenda Developed by a global, multi-stakeholder consultative process

Reshaping Education for Sustainable Development: its contribution to Climate Change Adaptation efforts

Information and communications technologies for development

Tenth Anniversary United Nations Public Service Forum. UN Public Service Day UN Public Service Awards Ceremony. Theme:

Dear Delegates, It is a pleasure to welcome you to the 2016 Montessori Model United Nations Conference.

Evaluation: annual report

SDGs and Indicators for Agricultural Water

Plenary Session 1 Strategic Planning for Implementing the 2030 Agenda

Transcription:

WORKSHOP ENGAGING CITIZENS TO COUNTER CORRUPTION FOR BETTER PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY AND ACHIEVEMENT OF THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS OPENING SESSION: WELCOMING REMARKS AND INTRODUCTION TO THE WORKSHOP Roberto Villarreal Chief, Development Management Branch Division for Public Administration and Development Management United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs 26-27 October 2011, Palmeraie Golf Palace Complex, Marrakesh, Morocco

INTRODUCTION AND WELCOMING REMARKS WHO This workshop has been organized by UNDESA in cooperation with UNODC Through the Development Management Branch of the Division of Public Administration and Development Management of UNDESA and the Corruption and Economic Crime Branch of the Division for Treaty Affairs of UNODC Invitations were delivered by direct email to 500 individuals, groups and organizations, and information and contact data for any interested person to attend was included in the two workshop websites In government, the private sector, civil society and academia of countries in all regions around the world as countering corruption is a fundamental matter to foster inclusive, equitable and sustainable development in all countries, both developed and developing and because success requires multi-stakeholder country-wide strategies 79 confirmed participants from 33 countries (23 developing, 10 developed) and 5 international organizations ORGANIGRAM http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 2

INTRODUCTION AND WELCOMING REMARKS WHY (1) In September 2010, as a conclusion of the High Level Meeting of the United Nations General Assembly (GA) to assess progress towards the 8 Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) after the first decade since their adoption, the GA acknowledged achievements around the world and called on member States to: look at practices that have proven effective and are replicable support participatory, community-led strategies promote universal access to public and social services invest in basic services for health, education, water and sanitation ensure the full participation of all segments of society, including the poor and disadvantaged, in decision-making processes work towards transparent and accountable systems of governance at the national and international levels The UN Secretariat looks forward to further assist member States in this regard MDGs GA DECLARATION http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 3

INTRODUCTION AND WELCOMING REMARKS WHY (2) Examples of corruption with negative effects for development, social justice and advancement towards the MDGs Deviating funds from public budgets intended for poverty alleviation, education and healthcare programs to influence political campaigns Manipulating public procurment or concessions to public service providers in infrastructure, equipment and materials, in ways that increase the cost or lower the quality of government services, education, healthcare, etc. Taking and giving bribes to gain preferential access to public services: public registries, schools, hospitals and clinics, water, justice, etc. Taking and giving bribes in recruitment of public officers for public service delivery Taking and giving bribes to influence laws or regulations on environmental matters, etc. Examples of weak accountability with same negative effects Inadequate reporting by government to citizens on uses of public funds, and outputs/outcomes from develoment programs Inadequate use of audits for political reasons Culture of secrecy in public policy decision making, favoring capture by vested interests or elites http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 4

INTRODUCTION AND WELCOMING REMARKS WHAT FOR Analyze the engagement of citizens, and their organizations in the private sector and civil society, to cooperate with the public administration to counter corruption in the delivery of public services, particularly those related with the MDGs, in the framework of the UNCAC The objectives are: To provide participants with a better understanding of the issues, and with updated knowledge as to what works, and in which contexts offer them policy advise from experts and practitioners of diverse disciplines and from different countries enable participants to determine if there are possible improvements in the public administration of their respective countries to engage citizens for countering corruption to better advance towards the MDGs. identify future capacity building activities by DPADM and UNODC with other international organizations, to assist member States in connection with this http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 5

INTRODUCTION AND WELCOMING REMARKS HOW Series of sessions of 1.5 hours each, devoted to: Concepts, rationales and institutions Bottom-up initiatives arising from citizens, civil society and the private sector Top-down initiatives coming from government, including uses of ICT for egovernance and eparticipation Promotion of enabling conditions to develop national integrity systems Analysis of opportunities for international cooperation Each session will encompass: Setting the focus by a Moderator An initial short presentation by a specialist, to motivate discussion Comments from 5 practitioners of different countries and diverse institutional perspectives Open discussion with all participants http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 6

ONE FINAL REMARK The nature of this workshop is to facilitate collective thought through deliberation on the central topic Participants will without doubt face a paradox: the better they succeed in deepening the discussion on these matters, the more there will be to further deliberate Thus, time in the next two days will not only be a limited resource, but clearly one in very short supply To continue a rich dialogue among all of you on this topic, after this personal meeting, you will be invited to maintain, if interested, a virtual dialogue through an ad hoc blog on internet that will prolong your fruitful exchanges of information and knowledge http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 7

END OF PRESENTATION We thank you for attending this workshop and hope you find it useful For additional information, or to explore possibilities of cooperation, please see all workshop s background materials and presentations at: www.unpan.org or contact: Roberto Villarreal rvillarreal@un.org Anni Haataja haatajaa@un.org 8

ANNEXES http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 9

DPADM AND DMB IN THE UN SECRETARIAT BACK

MILLENNIUM DECLARATION Development encompasses a considerable large array of matters, so to focus attention and concentrate efforts from relevant actors in a set of very fundamental ones, the Millennium Declaration adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2000, highlighted the following and set corresponding targets for the year 2015 to guide adequate progress (continued )

MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS AND TARGETS (1) Goal 1 End Poverty and Hunger Target 1: Halve, between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of people whose income is less than $1 a day Target 2: Achieve full and productive employment and decent work for all, including women and young people Target 3: Halve, between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of people who suffer from hunger Goal 2 Achieve Universal Primary Education Target 1: Ensure that, by 2015, children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling Goal 3 Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women Target 1: Eliminate gender disparity in primary and secondary education, preferably by 2005, and in all levels of education no later than 2015

MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS AND TARGETS (2) Goal 4 Reduce Child Mortality Target 1: Reduce by two thirds, between 1990 and 2015, the underfive mortality rate Goal 5 Improve maternal Health Target 1: Reduce by three quarters the maternal mortality ratio Target 2: Achieve universal access to reproductive health Goal 6 Combat HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Other Diseases Target 1: Have halted by 2015 and begun to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS Target 2: Achieve, by 2010, universal access to treatment for HIV/AIDS for all those who need it Target 3: Have halted by 2015 and begun to reverse the incidence of malaria and other major diseases

MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS AND TARGETS (3) Goal 7 Ensure Environmental Sustainability Target 1: Integrate the principles of sustainable development into country policies and programmes and reverse the loss of environmental resources Target 2: Reduce biodiversity loss, achieving, by 2010, a significant reduction in the rate of loss Target 3: Halve, by 2015, the proportion of the population without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation Target 4: By 2020, to have achieved a significant improvement in the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers

MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS AND TARGETS (4) Goal 8 Develop a Global Partnership for Development GO BACK Target 1: Address the special needs of least developed countries, landlocked countries and small island developing states Target 2: Develop further an open, rule-based, predictable, nondiscriminatory trading and financial system Target 3: Deal comprehensively with developing countries debt Target 4: In cooperation with pharmaceutical companies, provide access to affordable essential drugs in developing countries Target 5: In cooperation with the private sector, make available benefits of new technologies, especially information and communications

UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY RESOLUTION A/RES/65/1: KEEPING THE PROMISE: UNITED TO ACHIEVE THE MDGs We take note of the lessons learned and successful policies and approaches in the implementation and achievement of the Millennium Development Goals and recognize that with increased political commitment these could be replicated and scaled up for accelerating progress, including by: ( ) (e) Supporting participatory, community-led strategies aligned with national development priorities and strategies; (f) Promoting universal access to public and social services and providing social protection floors; (g) Improving capacity to deliver quality services equitably; (h) Implementing social policies and programmes, including appropriate conditional cash-transfer programmes, and investing in basic services for health, education, water and sanitation; (i) Ensuring the full participation of all segments of society, including the poor and disadvantaged, in decision-making processes; ( ) (l) Enhancing opportunities for women and girls and advancing the economic, legal and political empowerment of women; (n) Working towards transparent and accountable systems of governance at the national and international levels; BACK

END OF ANNEXES http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/ 17