Citizens of the Earth
by Rene Wadlow
In a mixture of the titles of the "Citizens
of the World" and the "Friends of the Earth" -
the representatives of 40 governments speaking as the "Citizens
of the Earth" called on 2 February 2007 for an improved
UN system of ecological governance. The "Citizens of the
Earth" were meeting in Paris under the leadership of the
French President Jacques Chirac. Chirac has always been concerned
with ecological issues and had presented a strong call for action
at the Johannesburg Summit on the Environment in 2002. Now,
with only four months left of his presidency, he wishes to leave
his mark as a champion of world action for ecologically-sound
development.
The call of the "Citizens of the Earth"
came two days after the UN-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change meeting in Paris at UNESCO had presented a
strong report on the consequences of global warming and the responsibility
of human action in provoking the climate change.
The role of the United Nations system in
building awareness of ecological dangers began in 1971 with a
small meeting in Founex just outside Geneva, Switzerland, organized
by Maurice Strong who was the Secretary-General of the 1972 Stockholm
Conference on the Human Environment. Strong is a dynamic leader
who has always attracted to himself a "brain trust"
of young professionals who were willing to think "outside
the box", and Strong was always ready to listen to them.
The "Founex Report" set out the main points for the
1972 Conference along with the contribution of non-governmental
efforts, in particular the Dai Dong The Gioi initiative named
after the Vietnamese term for "a world of great togetherness".
The Dai Dong conference held in Menton, France in 1970, "a
human conspiracy for a human world" produced the "Menton
Statement" co-signed by some 2000 scientists, some of whom
were to play key roles in political-ecology efforts such as Rene
Dumont, Thor Heyerdahl and Margaret Mead.
At about the same time and with some of
the same people involved, the basic needs approach to development
was starting to take form. Those individuals who were concerned
with ecology began looking at ecologically vulnerable areas such
as deserts, swamps and mountain sides. They also looked at the
persons living in such zones. People living in fragile ecological
zones were among those whose basic needs were not being met and
whose livelihood activities were often menaced.
Studies being made by the UN and NGOs for
the 1974 World Food Conference held in Rome pointed to the same
facts: Most of the undernourished people in the world live in
the underdeveloped countries and the great majority of them live
in the countryside. One of the major ironies of ecologically-unsound
development is that many of those whose function in life is to
produce food are living in poverty with an under-consumption
of food. These facts led to a serious consideration of the way
that cash crops for export have displaced subsistence crops for
local consumption. These facts led to a serious consideration
of the way that cash crops for export have displaced subsistence
crops for local consumption.
The studies for the 1974 World Food Conference
also put the emphasis on land tenure arrangements and related
social organization. Some types of social organization (mainly
the basic structure of the local village) are the pillars upon
which agricultural production takes place. Land tenure issues
placed a spot light on the role of large estates, plantations
with salaried or servile labor and the then collectivised agriculture
of the USSR and China. Thus land tenure could become a political
issue and was largely set aside. However, poverty and ecologically
unwise land use remained an area on which there could be international
cooperation.
In 1972, there began a UN response to the
consequences of the drought in the Sahel states of West Africa.
The consequences underlined the dangers of ecological misuse
of land, water, animals, and livelihood patterns. The ecological
impact was the most obvious, and thus was a major living example
for the 1972 Stockholm Conference.
The 1972 Stockholm Conference, followed
by the 1974 World Food Conference set the intellectual stage
for the 1976 World Employment Conference where meeting basic
needs became the central policy recommendation.
The 1972 Stockholm Conference led to the
creation of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) with
Maurice Strong as first Executive Director. Strong pushed that
UNEP's headquarters be located in a developing country. During
the Stockholm Conference there were a good number of voices from
developing countries who complained that "environment"
was an industrialized country's problem while their concern was
"poverty".
"Poverty is the greatest pollution"
became the slogan for this position. Strong hoped that by placing
the UNEP headquarters in a developing country, it would show
that there was a real link between environment and development
issues.
Strong has always presented a holistic
philosophy, first articulated by the philosopher-political leader
of South Africa Jan Christian Smuts. As Strong has stressed,
sustainable development links together the economic, social,
population, gender and human settlement dimensions of development.
For Strong a sustainable future requires significant cultural
change - " a reorientation of the ethical, moral and spiritual
values which provide the primary motivations for human behaviour.
Concepts of caring, respect, sharing and cooperation with others
must be at the centre of the motivational system that undergirds
the transition to sustainability." (1)
The UNEP was located in Nairobi, Kenya,
which creates difficulties for interaction with other parts of
the UN system located primarily in New York, Washington, Geneva,
Rome, Paris and Vienna. UNEP has never been able to play the
leading role that its friends hoped for it. Strong left the
Executive Director post once the program created, and Mostfa
Tolba, an Egyptian scientist took his place. Tolba was a respected
environmental scientist, but he did not have Strong's facility
to bring together a loyal "brain trust" and to sell
his ideas. Strong had made a good deal of money as a "self-made"
businessman in Canada and had an outgoing personality so he could
interact with business, government leaders, UN civil servants,
and NGOs with the same warm, open but demanding personality.
Tolba was a quiet scholar, and UNEP slipped from public attention
and from influence in the UN system during his period of leadership.
By the late 1970s-early 1980s, environmental
leadership had flowed away from UNEP and had been taken over
by an NGO, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature
(IUCN) and its fund-raising arm, the World Wildlife Fund. The
IUCN is located just outside Geneva and so its staff can interact
easily with the UN and its specialized agencies in Geneva which
have environmental concerns such as the World Meteorological
Organization, the World Health Organization and the International
Labour Organization. Thus the IUCN developed the World Conservation
Strategy which was the first to stress sustainability, especially
of natural life-support systems in the context of human needs.
The Conservation Strategy led to the 1982 UN General Assembly
adopting the "World Charter for Nature" which is the
intellectual high-water mark of ecological concerns in the UN
- an equivalent of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights
but not as well known.
Certain states, in particular Japan, became
increasingly concerned that UNEP was not playing the leadership
role that it should. The Japanese government thought that there
should be an independent evaluation of the ecological agenda
and of the ways to meet new challenges 10 years after the creation
of UNEP. Since Japan was chairing the UNEP council, and the Japanese
government was willing to put up considerable funding, in 1983,
the World Commission on Environment and Development was created.
The Commission became popularly known as the Brundtland Commission
after the chair, Gro Harlem Brundtland, at the time Prime Minister
of Norway. The Commission had its secretariat in Geneva and
interacted with the UN system and NGOs.
The Commission Report Our Common Future
was published in 1987 - a time when the Cold War was winding
down with the changes taking place in the Soviet Union under
Mikhail Gorbachev.(2) The Brundtland Commission popularized the
term "sustainable development" defined as the ability
to "meet the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs."
Since the report, the term "sustainable development"
has become a central tenet in the international environmental-governance
discourse. The Brundtland Commission report helped create the
momentum which led to the 1987 negotiations on the Montreal Protocol
on Substances That Deplete the Ozone Layer." The Montreal
Protocol built on the hope of the management of international
environmental issues through diplomatic means and international
environmental law based on treaties.(3)
There are now some 500 international treaties
and agreements on environmental concerns. Many observers of
ecological issues believe that now is the time to bring together
into a single UN Specialized Agency the many different efforts
being made. Such an ecological agency needs to have a "high
visibility" to be able to discuss as an equal with the World
Bank, the Food and Agriculture Organization and the International
Labour Organization. Such a new UN Agency needs to have the
drive and also the outreach to be able to associate the large
number of NGOs involved with ecological issues. There needs
to be visible leadership so that people know where to turn for
advice, help, and support.(4)
The "Citizens of the Earth" have
pointed out the need. Now is the time for us who are "citizens
of the world" and "friends of the earth" to build
upon this momentum and to push for the creation of a strong agency
for ecological issues. The relation between ecologically-sound
development and a basic needs approach is clear and should be
a focus for common efforts. Today we need coordination and leadership
to meet the challenges facing the human family.
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(1) Maurice Strong. Where on Earth are
We Going? (Toronto: Alfred A. Knopf-Canada, 2000)
(2) World Commission on Environment and
Development. Our Common Future (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1987)
(3) Richard Elliot Benedick. Ozone Diplomacy
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1991)
(4) Peter M. Hass, Robert O. Keohane,
Marc A. Levy (Eds.). Institutions for the Earth: Sources of Effective
International Environmental Protection (Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press, 1993)
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