Thursday
Mar052015

Suggestions for text for the Declaration component of the Post-2015 Development Agenda

The following information has been received from the UN-NGLS and DESA DSD on NGO stakeholder suggestions for inspirational and aspirational text / language for the Declaration section of the Post-2015 Development Agenda:

On 19 February 2015, a discussion document for the Declaration section of the Post-2015 Development Agenda was released by the co-facilitators of the post-2015 intergovernmental negotiations, Ambassador David Donoghue, Permanent Representative of Ireland to the UN, and Ambassador Macharia Kamau, Permanent Representative of Kenya to the UN. The document is available here: http://bit.ly/p2015-declaration-discussion-document

It is composed of 15 paragraphs which outline ideas to be included in the Declaration.

UN DESA DSD and UN-NGLS invite non-governmental stakeholders to provide suggestions for inspirational and aspirational text / language for any of these paragraphs using this online form:

http://bit.ly/p2015declaration-suggest-paragraphs

You may contribute to one or more of the 15 paragraphs; you are not required to respond for all. You may introduce new topics when doing this. In addition, you may also submit up to three additional standalone paragraphs to address ideas beyond those presented in the 15 paragraphs of the discussion document.

A compilation document of all submissions with attributions will be prepared by UN-NGLS and DESA-DSD and shared online. 

DEADLINE: 17 March 2015

This deadline has been guided by the Secretariat for the post-2015 negotiations.

Proposed paragraphs submitted via this form can be viewed here: http://bit.ly/p2015-declaration-paragraphs-submitted

Thank you in advance for your contributions.

UN-NGLS and DESA DSD

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

« Youth Leadership Working Group (YLWG) writes to Post-2015 facilitators and others about human rights and needs of children and young people | Main | 2015 Declaration: Meeting great expectations (maybe) »