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United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
The Right to
Development
Commission on Human Rights
resolution 1999/79
The Commission on Human Rights,
Guided by the Charter of the United Nations, expressing in particular the determination to
promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom as well as to
employ international mechanisms for the promotion of the economic and social advancement
of all peoples,
Recalling that the Declaration on the Right to Development adopted by the General
Assembly in its resolution 41/128 of 4 December 1986 confirmed that the right to
development is an inalienable human right and that equality of opportunity for development
is a prerogative both of nations and of individuals, who make up nations,
Noting that the World Conference on Human Rights reaffirmed the right to development as
a universal and inalienable right and an integral part of all fundamental human rights,
Recognising that the Declaration on the right to Development constitutes an integral
link between the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Vienna Declaration and
Programme of Action (A/CONF.157/23) through its elaboration of a holistic vision
integrating economic, social and cultural rights with civil and political rights,
Expressing its concern, on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, that the unacceptable situation of absolute poverty, hunger,
disease, lack of adequate shelter, illiteracy and hopelessness remains the lot of over 1
billion people,
Emphasising that the promotion, protection and realisation of the right to development
are an integral part of the promotion and protection of all human rights,
Noting that the human person is the central subject of development and that development
policy should therefore make the human being the main participant and beneficiary of
development,
Stressing the importance of creating an economic, political, social, cultural and legal
environment that will enable people to achieve social development,
Affirming the need to apply a gender perspective in the implementation of the right to
development, inter alia, by ensuring that women play an active role in the development
process,
Emphasising that the empowerment of women and their full participation on a basis of
equality in all spheres of society is fundamental for development,
Underlining the fact that realisation of the right to development requires effective
development policies at the national level, as well as equitable economic relations and a
favourable economic environment at the international level,
Welcoming in this regard the adoption by the General Assembly of the agenda for
Development, annexed to its resolution 51/240 of 10 June 1997, which declares that
development is one of the main priorities of the United Nations and which aims at
invigorating a renewed and strengthened partnership for development, based on the
imperatives of mutual benefits and genuine interdependence,
Noting with concern that the Declaration on the Right to Development is insufficiently
disseminated and should be taken into account, as appropriate, in bilateral and
multilateral cooperation programmes, national development strategies and policies, and
activities of international organisations,
Recalling the need for coordination and cooperation through the United Nations system
for a more effective promotion and realisation of the right to development,
Underlining the important role of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
in the promotion and protection of the right to development, as mandated in paragraph 4(c)
of General Assembly resolution 48/141 of 20 December 1993,
Recalling its resolution 1998/62 of 22 April 1998 and noting General Assembly
resolution 53/155 of 9 December 1998,
Taking note with interest of the report of the Intergovernmental Group of Experts
(E/CN.4/1998/29), including the proposed strategy contained therein, and welcoming in
particular the recommendation that a follow-up mechanism be established to ensure
promotion and implementation of the Declaration on the Right to development,
- Reaffirms the importance of the right to development for every human person and all
peoples in all countries, in particular the developing countries, as an integral part of
their fundamental human rights as well as the potential contribution its realisation could
make to the full enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms;
- Recognises that the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
provides an important opportunity to place all human rights - and, in this context, the
right to development in particular - at the top of the global agenda;
- Reiterates that:
- The essence of the right to development is the principle that the human person is the
central subject of development and that the right to life includes within it existence in
human dignity with the minimum necessities of life;
- The existence of widespread absolute poverty inhibits the full and effective enjoyment
of human rights and renders democracy and popular participation fragile;
- For peace and stability to endure, national action and international action and
cooperation are required to promote a better life for all in larger freedom, a critical
element of which is the eradication of poverty;
- Reaffirms that democracy, development and respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms, including the right to development, are interdependent and mutually reinforcing,
and in this context affirms that:
- Development experiences of countries reflect differences with regard to both progress
and setbacks, and that the development spectrum has a wide range, not only between
countries but also within countries;
- A number of developing countries have experienced rapid economic growth in the recent
past and have become dynamic partners in the international economy;
- At the same time, the gap between developed and developing countries remains
unacceptably wide and developing countries continue to face difficulties in participating
in the globalisation process, and many risk being marginalised and effectively excluded
from its benefits;
- Democracy, which is spreading everywhere, has raised development expectations
everywhere, that their non-fulfilment risks rekindling non-democratic forces, and that
structural reforms that do not take social realities into account could destabilise
democratisation processes;
- Effective popular participation is an essential component of successful and lasting
development;
- Democracy, respect for all human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the right to
development, transparent and accountable governance and administration in all sectors of
society, and effective participation by civil society are an essential part of the
necessary foundations for the realisation of social- and people-centred sustainable
development;
- The participation of developing countries in the international economic decision-making
process needs to be broadened and strengthened;
- Urges all States to eliminate all obstacles to development at all levels, by pursuing
the promotion and protection of economic, social, cultural, civil and political rights and
by implementing comprehensive development programmes at the national level, integrating
these rights into development activities, and by promoting effective international
cooperation;
- Reaffirms that all human rights are universal, indivisible, interdependent and
interrelated and that the universality, objectivity, impartiality and non-selectivity of
the consideration of human rights issues must be ensured;
- Affirms that international cooperation is acknowledged more than ever as a necessity
deriving from recognised mutual interest, and therefore that such cooperation should be
strengthened in order to support the efforts of developing countries to solve their social
and economic problems and to fulfil their obligations to promote and protect all human
rights;
- Welcomes the intention of the Secretary-General to give high priority to the right to
development and urges all States to promote further the right to development as a vital
element in a balanced human rights programme;
- Also welcomes the high priority assigned by the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights to activities relating to the right to development, and urges the Office of
the High Commissioner to continue implementing Commission resolution 1998/72;
- Further welcomes the decision of the Economic and Social Council to authorise the
establishment by the Commission on Human Rights of a follow-up mechanism, consisting of an
open-ended working group and an independent expert with a mandate to present to the
working group at each of its sessions a study on the current state of progress in the
implementation of the right to development, as provided in Commission resolution 1998/72;
- Invites the High Commissioner for Human Rights to present a report to the Commission
each year for the duration of the mechanism to provide interim reports to the working
group and to make those reports available to the independent expert, in each case
covering:
- The activities of her Office relating to the implementation of the right to development
as contained in her mandate;
- The implementation of resolutions of the Commission on Human Rights and the General
Assembly with regard to the right to development;
- Inter-agency coordination within the United Nations system for the implementation of
relevant resolutions of the Commission in that regard;
- Requests the Secretary-General to submit to the General Assembly at its fifty-fourth
session and to the Commission on Human Rights at its fifty-sixth session a comprehensive
report on the implementation of the various provisions of the present resolution;
- Urges the United Nations system to continue to support the implementation of the recent
resolutions of the Commission on Human Rights regarding the right to development;
- Calls upon the Secretary-General to ensure that the working group and the independent
expert receive all necessary assistance, in particular the staff and resources required to
fulfil their mandates;
- Decides to call upon the open-ended working group to take note of the deliberations on
the right to development during the fifty-fifth session of the Commission on Human Rights.
59th meeting
28 April 1999
[Adopted without a vote. See chap. VII]
  
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