Celebrating 75 Years of the United Nations
Sep 21, 2020JOSÉ ANTONIO OCAMPO
The UN embodies the best of humanity – the belief that all people deserve
basic dignity, and that working together is the only way to deliver it.
Seventy-five years after its birth, the world – beginning with the United
States – must revive that belief, and recommit to the multilateralism that it
demands.
NEW YORK – As the United Nations marks its 75th anniversary, the world is
in turmoil. The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in nearly one million deaths so
far and is nowhere close to being contained. The world economy is experiencing
its worst recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Extraordinarily
severe natural disasters, from floods to wildfires, are wreaking havoc on many
countries. And the United States – long the world’s leading proponent of
multilateral cooperation – is rejecting and even antagonizing its friends and
partners. The UN, and the belief in global solidarity that it embodies, have
never been more essential.
1.
The UN was built on three pillars. The first was peace. Its overriding aim
was to succeed where its ill-fated predecessor, the League of Nations, had
failed: avoid another world war. Established at the dawn of the Cold War, the
UN became an essential forum for dialogue; since the fall of the Berlin Wall,
it has played an important peace-building role in several countries.
The second pillar was human rights. In 1948, the UN General Assembly
approved the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which
set out for the first time the fundamental rights – including civil, political,
economic, social, and cultural rights – that all countries were obliged to
uphold. Though the mechanisms the UN created to protect those rights have a
mixed record, there is no doubt that the UDHR was a major milestone in making
human rights an international priority.
The third pillar was development. According to the UN Charter, member countries are committed to
“promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom.” The
development agenda also encompassed the objective of reducing inequalities
among countries, including through decolonization, which was also part of the post-World
War II agenda.
To promote development, the UN created five regional commissions between
1947 and 1973, and supported developing countries with technical assistance, an
activity that became institutionalized with the creation of the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) in 1965. Moreover, in January 1961, the UN
resolved that the 1960s would be its first “decade of development” – an
initiative promoted by US President John F. Kennedy.
As an essential element of that agenda, the UN sought to support the
creation of a fairer global economic system that would enable shared progress.
As the decolonization process progressed, and a growing number of developing
countries became UN members, the organization became the world’s foremost
platform for discussing and implementing changes to the world economic order.
The UN Conference on Trade and Development – created in 1964 – supported this
process. Among its achievements was the introduction in the global trading
system of “special and differential treatment” for developing countries.
The UN later expanded its focus to ensuring that developing countries can
access the financing they need. The 2002 International Conference on Financing
for Development – held in Monterrey, Mexico, and supported by the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank – was a milestone in this regard. Two more
such conferences have since been held – in Doha, Qatar, in 2008, and in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia, in 2015 – to advance the agenda set out in 2002. Similarly,
the UN has played a central role in debates on financing developing countries’
responses to the COVID-19 crisis.
But economic progress represents only part of the development equation.
This recognition first emerged in 1978, when the International Labor
Organization (ILO) published a study that defined the “basic needs” of
people in developing countries: food, clothing, housing, education, and public
transportation. This paved the way for the concept of “human development” that
the UNDP later operationalized in its Human Development Reports.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall, a series of global conferences broadened
the human-development agenda further. For example, the Fourth World Conference
on Women, held in 1995, produced the Beijing Declaration and Platform
for Action, the most progressive blueprint ever for advancing
women’s rights. In January 2011, a designated entity – UN Women – was
established to advance these objectives.
UN Women is just the latest addition to a dense network of specialized
agencies reflecting the UN’s commitment to social development. These include
UNESCO (the UN’s educational and cultural agency), the World Health
Organization (WHO), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and the Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO). The ILO was also integrated into the UN system.
Yet another essential node of this network is the UN Environment Programme,
established at the 1972 UN Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm.
Since then, a series of UN-sponsored conferences – from the 1992 Conference on
Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro to the 2015 Climate Change
Conference (COP 21) in Paris – have produced landmark agreements to combat
climate change, protect biodiversity, and stop desertification. They represent
our best hope for keeping our planet habitable. At a moment when the effects of
climate change are becoming increasingly apparent, the importance of such
efforts cannot be overstated.
In fact, it is the UN that has championed the broad concept of “sustainable
development,” which recognizes that healthy, long-term development must account
for economic, social and environmental issues. In 2000, the UN led the way in
establishing the Millennium Development Goals, followed in 2015 by the
Sustainable Development Goals, which are today the world’s main framework for
advancing this agenda.
.
The UN remains a highly influential institution. More important, it
embodies the best of humanity – the belief that all people deserve basic
dignity, and that working together is the only way to deliver it. Seventy-five
years after its birth, the world – beginning with the US – must revive that
belief, and recommit to the multilateralism that it embodies.
José Antonio
Ocampo, a former finance minister of Colombia and UN under-secretary general,
is a professor at Columbia and Chair of the Independent Commission for the
Reform of International Corporate Taxation (ICRICT). He is the author of Resetting the International Monetary (Non)System and co-author
(with Luis Bértola) of The Economic Development of Latin America since
Independence
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