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Delhi Sustainable Development Summit 2002
Ensuring sustainable livelihoods:

challenges for governments, corporates, and civil society at Rio+10
8 - 11 February 2002, New Delhi

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8 Feb. 2002 9 Feb. 2002 10 Feb. 2002 11 Feb. 2002
                                   
    9 February 2002: Plenary session 1
          
    Agenda 21: ensuring sustainable livelihoods
  
                                               
Chairperson

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Mr P V Jayakrishnan
Secretary, Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India

 

          
Speaker

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Dr Leena Srivastava
Director, Regulatory Studies & Governance Division, TERI

"That part of globalization that ignores those who are living on the fringes and have few assets to compete with others does not lead to sustainable livelihood."

 

                              
Speaker
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Mr Reinhart Helmke
Executive Director, United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS), New York

"Collective responsibility is often interpreted as nobody’s responsibility."

           
Speaker
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Mr L C Jain
Chairman, Industrial Development Services, India

"Imparting primary education to all is one area India has failed to live up to its task."

 

     

           
Speaker

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Dr Maritta R v Bieberstein Koch-Weser
President, Earth3000, Germany

"There is more money for military security rather than there is for environmental security. The budget for sustainable development and poverty alleviation is shrinking."

 

           
Speaker

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Dr Claude Martin
Director-General, World Wide Fund International, Switzerland

"Poverty alleviation must be addressed in the context of trade-offs."


 

                         
Session summary

      

Agenda 21 emphasized the need for equitable development and environmental protection, with sustainable livelihoods as a core issue. Sustainable livelihoods encompass enhancement of resource productivity and security of assets, resources, income-earning activities, and food. They are undermined by environmental degradation, lack of social infrastructure, and poverty.

In implementing Agenda 21, particularly with reference to poverty alleviation and ensuring sustainable livelihoods, the crucial factors are globalization trends, policy reforms, funding, public participation initiatives, and awareness.

Globalization has engendered concerns like rapid lifestyle changes and cultural upheaval indeveloping countries. An instance is brain drain—exploitation of assets with no return to source countries.

Post-Rio, policy reforms have not adequately recognized the poor. The marginalization of social and environmental ministries vis-à-vis the economic ministries in India is a case in point. The bureaucracy continues to be a bottleneck in the implementation of most initiatives as it is far removed from the grass-roots reality.

Funding has focused on military security rather than environmental and social security. Sustainable development programmes suffer from inadequate financing. Aid commitments are often not fulfilled; in some cases, ODA is mismanaged.

Effective and accountable local institutions at the grass roots are preconditions for ensuring food production and livelihoods, particularly in developing countries. Their efforts must be reinforced through dedicated scientific and social support.

Education and awareness, particularly environmental, contribute to capacity building, reductionof vulnerability, and instilling a sense of responsibility towards larger environmental issues. Developed countries must also recognize these responsibilities.

People should be aware of, and know how to demand, their fundamental rights. Community participation evokes practices and learning, which must be ploughed back for enhanced management.

Institutional mechanisms to guide and monitor Agenda 21 implementation at various levels include good governance; public participation; innovative fund-raising mechanisms; unrestricted movement of trained manpower (with returns to source countries akin to levies on capital transactions); and goal orientation and coordinated functioning.