UN General Assembly Resolution on Volunteerism
read the 1985 resolution
26/11/2002 - UN Department of Public Information Press Release
- GA/10107 Fifty-seventh General Assembly - Plenary - 60th and 61st
Meetings (AM & PM)
GENERAL ASSEMBLY ADOPTS TEXT CALLING ON GOVERNMENTS TO OBSERVE
INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTEER DAY FOR ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
The General Assembly this afternoon called on governments, with
the support
of the media, civil society and the private sector, to observe 5
December,
International Volunteer Day for Economic and Social Development,
and to
include activities focused on follow-up to the achievements of the
International Year of Volunteers in its public awareness-raising
campaign.
Adopting a resolution on follow-up to the International Year of
Volunteers
without a vote, the Assembly also invited all stakeholders to support
volunteerism as a strategic tool to enhance economic and social
development, including by expanding corporate volunteering.
Prior to that action, Assembly President Jan Kavan (Czech Republic)
said
during the preceding debate this morning that local voluntary involvement
was a valuable and indispensable contribution to the improvement
of social
conditions, promotion of economic development and empowerment of
people to
take charge. It reinforced a sense of collective responsibility
and
brought about a tangible difference to the lives of many.
The International Year, he noted, was a milestone in recognizing
the
tireless work of volunteers around the world, helping to connect
volunteers
worldwide and to create an environment conducive to volunteer action.
Many
more governments now saw volunteerism as a valuable asset which
needed to
be strategically factored into development policies and programmes.
Denmarks representative, speaking on behalf of the European
Union and
associated States, said that since the launch of the International
Year,
progress had been made in enhancing the recognition, facilitation,
networking and promotion of voluntary action. A key tool used in
the
pursuit of those goals had been the Internet, with which volunteers
had
been able to expand their networks and enhance their exchange of
knowledge
and information. The Internet had also demonstrated its capacity
as a
multiplier of ideas and a means of sharing best practices.
Canadas representative, highlighting the significance of
the social impact
of volunteering, both at a macro level and on the level of relationships
between individuals, said that volunteering was of benefit both
to those
who received assistance and to those who provided it. In many cases,
there
was no clear distinction between the two, he added.
During the discussion, delegations highlighted efforts taken at
the
national level to promote the International Year and to increase
involvement in volunteer activities. The Australian Government launched
a
different celebratory theme each month to provide a framework for
organizations planning their activities for the Year, its representative
stated.
Egypts representative noted that the participation of youth
in a national
project to develop villages had been successful. Among that countrys
activities was an international conference organized by the General
Union
of Scouts in August 2001, the publication of a guidebook for volunteers
and
the establishment of a training camp for volunteers.
Other speakers today were the representatives of Brazil, Japan,
Viet Nam,
United States, Qatar, Honduras, United Arab Emirates, New Zealand,
Australia, Republic of Korea, India, Kyrgyzstan, Czech Republic,
Philippines and Pakistan.
Also making a statement was the observer of the International Federation
of
Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
The Assembly will meet again at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, 27 November,
to consider the report of the Economic and Social Council.
Background
Before the General Assembly this morning was the Report of the
Secretary- General on the International Year of Volunteers: outcomes
and future perspectives (document A/57/352), which presents the
background to the Year and an overview of the action taken. Describing
the Year as successful by any account, the report says that 123
national committees and scores of local, regional and state committees
were formed and that the official web site received close to 9 million
hits. A heightened recognition of the role of volunteerism in development
resulted from the plethora of activities, including efforts to measure
the contributions of volunteers in every part of the world.
The report notes marked improvements in legislative frameworks
and national and local infrastructure for voluntary action, stating
that networks were established among stakeholders from governments,
the United Nations system, civil society, the private sector and
elsewhere. These should help sustain many of the advances resulting
from the Year, which highlighted the relevance of volunteerism to
achieving the goals set out at the Millennium Summit and other major
conferences and summits.
According to the report, the Year underlined the central role of
United Nations Volunteers within the United Nations system in enhancing
the recognition, facilitation, networking and promotion of volunteerism,
in collaboration with other stakeholders. Governments and the United
Nations system, together with civil society and other actors, were
urged to work together to ensure that more citizens from all societal
groups were willing and able to volunteer time in ways that brought
benefits to society and self-fulfilment to the individual volunteer.
In its conclusions, the report notes that when the Year was launched
in 1997, understanding of the concept of volunteerism and its many
manifestations was limited, the general perception being that while
contributing to general public good, it was characterized by improvization
and amateurism and indulged in by better-off members of society
to help disadvantaged population groups. In most countries, infrastructure
to promote and support voluntary action, including legislation,
was weak or absent and dialogue at all levels among volunteer-involving
organizations and between them and other stakeholders was limited.
However, there are many signs that the situation has evolved significantly,
according to the report. The years leading up to 2001 witnessed
a sensitization to, and a mobilization around, the volunteerism
of a huge and diverse range of stakeholders, including government
agencies, non- governmental organizations (NGOs), community groups,
private companies, academia and the media. In addition, a major
outcome of the Year has been a collective recognition by governments
of the role and contribution of voluntary action and the need to
adopt strategic approaches to enhancing the environment for such
action to flourish. Global trends towards greater self-help, decentralization,
participatory democracy and networking are all having an impact
on citizen participation and volunteerism is one defining characteristic.
Regarding the future, the report highlights three areas of follow-up
to be considered: continued advocacy with governments and the United
Nations system, including in and around intergovernmental forums;
the need for governments, NGOs, the private sector, the United Nations
system, eminent persons and others to continue taking all possible
measures to promote voluntary action; and, with respect to technical
cooperation, enhancing the environment for volunteering, including
the drafting of national legislation, the undertaking of volunteer-related
research, establishment of volunteer centres, the formation of national
volunteer corps, the development of volunteer opportunities via
the Internet and the expansion of corporate volunteering.
Also before the Assembly was a draft resolution on Follow-up to
the International Year of Volunteers (document A/57/L.8), which
calls upon governments, with the active support of the media, civil
society and the private sector, to observe 5 December, International
Volunteer Day for Economic and Social Development, and to include
activities focused on follow-up on the achievements of the International
Year of Volunteers in its public awareness-raising campaigns.
By other terms, the Assembly calls for the relevant organizations
and bodies of the United Nations system to integrate volunteerism
in its various forms into their policies, programmes and reports,
and encourages the recognition and inclusion of volunteer contributions
in future United Nations and other relevant international conferences,
such as the World Summit on the Information Society.
Also by the text, the Assembly requests the Secretary-General to
factor such contributions made by volunteers in his reports on the
implementation of the Millennium Declaration and of other major
United Nations conferences, summits, special sessions and their
follow-up meetings. He is also requested to take measures, in particular
within the mandates and the existing resources of the United Nations
Volunteers and the Department of Public Information, to ensure that
the potential of the International Volunteer Day for Economic and
Social Development in follow-up to the International Year of Volunteers
is fully realized.
Statements
JAN KAVAN (Czech Republic), President of the General Assembly,
stressing the importance of volunteerism in society, said that local
voluntary involvement was a valuable and indispensable contribution
to the improvement of social conditions, promotion of economic development
and empowerment of people to take charge. Volunteerism reinforced
a sense of collective responsibility and brought about a tangible
difference to the lives of many.
The International Year of Volunteers was a milestone in recognizing
the tireless work of volunteers around the world, he said. It helped
to connect volunteers from various parts of the world and created
an environment conducive and motivating to volunteer action. Many
more governments now saw volunteerism as a valuable asset, which
needed to be strategically factored into development policies and
programmes.
The Year, he continued, had been launched to achieve four main
objectives - recognition, facilitation, networking and promotion
of volunteering. One important achievement was the facilitation
of volunteering through a number of measures and another was the
involvement of non-traditional actors, such as the private sector.
The year had helped to build networks of volunteers, thereby giving
volunteers in individual countries a sense of inter-connective support
and mutuality.
He said the Year had placed volunteering on a more solid basis
for years to come, but a great deal remained to be done if volunteerism
was to fulfil its potential. Governments should continue to support
and develop its infrastructure and technical cooperation and international
organizations, civil society and the private sector should also
continue to support volunteer movements. The unique relationship
between volunteerism and the United Nations should be reinforced
and developed, he stressed
Introduction of Draft Resolution
MARIA DE LOURDES EGYDIO VILLELA (Brazil), introducing the draft
resolution on follow-up to the International Year of Volunteers,
said that volunteerism allowed for the empowerment of all persons
and furthered the participation of the individual in a common destiny.
To promote volunteerism was to enable all human beings to make the
most of their lives. Volunteer work enriched the volunteer and enhanced
the self-esteem of participants at both the giving and receiving
ends. It fostered tolerance, solidarity and trust -- the building
blocks of peace, justice, equality and sustainable development.
Research showed that one in four Brazilians had dedicated time to
volunteer activities, she said. As a result of the activities organized
in the context of the International Year, there was a growing recognition
in Brazil of the impact of civic participation and of the benefits
of volunteering. Among other things, thousands of secondary school
students all over the country had embraced volunteerism and were
busy planning and executing projects, which contributed to their
education as well as to an increased integration between communities
and schools.
YOSHIYUKI MOTOMURA (Japan) said that although the United Nations
and the international community had celebrated the year with great
success, it remained necessary for the people of the world to continue
those activities in the years to come. The United Nations could
play a significant role in enhancing volunteerism. In the past year,
he said, the Government of Japan had taken measures in public relations,
awareness and information gathering on volunteerism and human resources
development. It had placed the greatest emphasis on cultivating
volunteers and training courses to develop young volunteer leaders.
He said the Japanese Postal Savings system, under its Postal
Savings for International Voluntary Aid campaign, by which
account holders donated the interest from their accounts, had provided
approximately $3 million in grant assistance to 140 NGOs engaged
in 150 volunteer projects. Also, the Japan International Cooperation
Agency had dispatched senior volunteers, aged 40 to 69 years old,
to developing countries in response to requests for technical cooperation.
OLE E. MOESBY (Denmark), speaking for the European Union and associated
countries, said that since the launch of the International Year
of Volunteers, 2001, progress had been made in enhancing the recognition,
facilitation, networking and promotion of voluntary action. A key
tool used in the pursuit of these goals had been the Internet, through
which volunteers had been able to expand their networks and enhance
their exchange of knowledge and information. The Internet had also
demonstrated its capacity as a multiplier of ideas and a means of
sharing best practice.
The responsibility for further expanding the scope of voluntary
activity and securing its long-term viability rested with governments,
he said, through developing partnerships with civil society and
the private sector. Joint action by public authorities and volunteer
associations could help both to achieve their common objectives.
The members of the European Union had removed legal and administrative
obstacles to voluntary activity in both national and international
contexts, guided by the strategic objectives formulated by the United
Nations within the framework of the International Year. He said
volunteers had contributed to the promotion of human rights and
international solidarity, combating racism, environmental protection
and sustainable development. At the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, voluntary contributions had been recognized in areas
such as disaster management, ensuring safe drinking water and environmental
and social responsibility and accountability. Yet, the responsibility
taken, or the economic value of voluntary activity, should never
replace the responsibility of governments towards their citizens.
AMR ABOUL ATTA (Egypt) said that his country attached great importance
to the work done by NGOs, governments and the private sector and
had been one of the first countries to constitute the committee
for the Preparations for the International Year of Volunteers. Egypt
had celebrated the Year in a practical way, focusing on information
and emphasizing volunteer activities in various areas, especially
among the youth. It had also held televised meetings on various
projects and activities. In addition, the National Council for Women
had published documents on the history of volunteerism.
He said young people had participated in a successful national
project to develop villages and the General Union of Scouts had
organized an international conference in August 2001. Further, a
guide for volunteers had been published and a training camp established
by governmental stakeholders. The Government had also introduced
volunteers into official organizations and sent them to international
meetings within the framework of the Year. Civil society and the
business sector had also stepped up efforts for the Year. He emphasized
the need for follow-up efforts to the Year at both the national
and international levels.
NGUYEN THANH CHAU (Viet Nam) said that over the past 10 years poverty
had been reduced from 30 to 10 per cent in his country and, that
while more than 1,000 villages were listed as being in extreme poverty,
it was expected to be wiped out by 2015 in accordance with the Millennium
Development Goals. Although the United Nations system and its agencies,
funds and programmes had been responsive to that special responsibility
at the international level, and their contribution had been widely
recognized, effective international cooperation, including the sharing
of experience, technical cooperation and capacity-building, should
be emphasized.
He pointed out that after decades of severe wars, Viet Nam had
more than five million disabled persons of all ages and with varied
disabilities throughout the country, accounting for 6 per cent of
the population. For the Government and people of Viet Nam, therefore,
looking after the disabled and the less fortunate in society was
not only a question of implementing specific policies but one of
achieving genuine integration as well. To that end, the Government
advocated closer links between economic and social development,
between social progress with special care and the creation of equal
opportunities for vulnerable persons and those with disabilities.
Although Viet Nam had achieved great success protecting its disabled
persons, he said, one of the Governments particular concerns
today was that of taking care of people, especially child victims
of toxic chemicals and Agent Orange used in war. Their plight was
so miserable that it could not wait until research into that issue
was finalized. He acknowledged that in response to the Governments
own initiatives, a number of countries and NGOs had delivered assistance
and especially lauded the cooperation and assistance of United Nations
agencies and regional organizations in that regard. However, more
attention and further assistance were needed and it was hoped that
the United Nations would encourage the international community to
cooperate and assist Viet Nam in that endeavour.
JOHN BRIDGELAND (United States), Assistant to the President and
Director of the USA Freedom Corps, said that in January 2002, President
George W. Bush had laid out a vision for a stronger union that was
rooted firmly in the power of volunteer service. Calling on every
citizen to dedicate at least two years to community, national and
international service, he had created the USA Freedom Corps to help
every American answer that call to service and to foster a culture
of service, citizenship and responsibility. He said that the USA
Freedom Corps was a coordinating council to oversee the development
of government policies promoting, enhancing and supporting volunteer
service. The ultimate goal of such efforts would be the doubling
of the number of Peace Corps volunteers so that by 2007, there would
be about 15,000 Americans sharing American compassion abroad. The
Corporation for National and Community Service would also mobilize
senior and young Americans to recruit, train and supervise volunteers
around the country. New programmes would also be formulated to help
communities prevent, prepare for and respond to all kinds of emergencies,
including threats of terrorism. With the help of organizations including
the Points of Light Foundation, he said, the United States had created
the USA Freedom Corps Volunteer Network, the largest ever clearinghouse
of volunteer service opportunities. Leaders of business had responded
to the Presidents appeal by creating the Business Strengthening
America initiative to engage employees and consumers in serving
others. The Freedom Corps was also working with educational institutions
at all levels to inculcate habits of service in young people. All
efforts targeting youth had come in the midst of a decline in overall
volunteer service and civic participation among adults and the Freedom
Corps had the task of reversing that trend. A nationwide survey
would be undertaken to create a new national volunteer service indicator
to measure volunteer behaviour and determine the impact of such
services. The United States was prepared to share its research and
experiences with other nations so they could harness the time and
talents of their people in volunteer service, he said.
ABDULLAH EID SALMAN AL-SULAITI (Qatar) said that the implementation
of social and economic development was founded not only on government
efforts, but also on the culmination of efforts by civil society,
the private sector and all those carrying out volunteer acts. Volunteerism
was appreciated by all peoples of the world, as had been confirmed
by the International Year of Volunteers. Islam held volunteerism
as an activity of every individual participating and fully integrating
into society. In Qatar, various institutions had been created to
invest the energy of individuals in the service of society. At the
governmental level, he said, Qatar had established a high-level
committee to coordinate actions taken by civil society and private
enterprise to develop social work and prevent their overlapping.
That committee had also worked to raise societal awareness on the
importance of volunteerism. Furthermore, volunteerism was also the
subject of a committee, which helped to train young people to provide
voluntary services. In the context of civil society, the Government
had set up a prize to show appreciation of volunteers, the importance
of their efforts, and the importance of continuing that work. Childrens
volunteer efforts had also been honoured in order to inculcate appreciation
for volunteerism in their minds.
OTTO MARTINEZ (Honduras), saying he could testify to the importance
of volunteerism, recalled that when Hurricane Mitch had struck Honduras
last year, his country had been able to understand the spirit and
solidarity of those compatriots who had come to the aid of the most
needy. The country also understood international volunteerism, because
at the time of its greatest calamity, others had come to help. He
said that the future of mankind would be better with the help and
assistance of volunteers, which would nourish the seeds of volunteerism.
Volunteerism should involve young people, business people, and government
people. The youth could think of the best way to build a better
world, he said.
ABDULAZIZ NASSER AL-SHAMSI (United Arab Emirates) said that social
development depended on political stability and the provision of
means for economic development. There was a need to stress the importance
of international efforts to find viable and durable solutions to
armed conflicts and wars, fulfilling commitments such as the allocation
by developed countries of 0.7 per cent of their gross domestic income
as official development aid, assisting the integration of developing
countries into the global economy by establishing a multilateral,
just and impartial trading system and providing the latest technology
to help developing States to promote their economic and social growth.
He said his country had made progress in social development by adopting
a development strategy based on a comprehensive federal social welfare
system, providing free, high-quality education to all citizens from
elementary school to university, adopting a five-year plan to eradicate
illiteracy, providing equal employment opportunities to men and
women and laying the foundation for a national pension programme.
Furthermore, it had established a marriage fund to extend loans
on easy terms, provided free health care, medical services and treatment
to its citizens and conducted awareness programmes regarding tuberculosis,
HIV/AIDS, hepatitis and other diseases. Moreover, he said, the United
Arab Emirates was committed to the promotion of social development
outside the country, and had constructed cultural centres, schools,
hospitals, orphanages, mosques and churches in friendly neighbouring
countries. It had also extended donations, grants and easy- term
loans to other countries.
DON MACKAY (New Zealand) said that partnerships between governments
and civil society were important for promoting volunteerism. In
New Zealand, the International Year of Volunteers had been organized
through partnerships between the Government and the voluntary sector.
A Government-appointed Ministerial Reference Group for the International
Year of Volunteers, 2001, comprising of representatives from the
community and voluntary sector, was responsible for coordination
and provided the Government with advice on volunteer issues. He
said New Zealand was one of three countries noted in the Secretary-
Generals report that had increased funding to provide longer-term
support to the voluntary sector as a result of the International
Year of Volunteers. The Government had allocated $2.19 million to
strengthen the infrastructure of volunteering organizations over
three years. A Statement of Government Intentions for an Improved
Community-Government Relationship, signed by the Prime Minister
had been released at the end of the International Year of Volunteers.
The Government had also set up a project to consider its policy
on volunteering, he said. That project reviewed and made recommendations
on legislation towards volunteering, identified ways in which the
Government could enhance the peoples ability to volunteer,
and worked to ensure Government policy supported volunteerism and
volunteers, including in relation to the fulfilment of the cultural
obligations of ethnic groups, such as the Maori and Pacific peoples.
PETER TESCH (Australia), noting that his country had a long tradition
of volunteering, said that some 32 per cent of adult Australians
volunteered their time and energy to not-for-profit organizations.
Australias initiatives for the International Year were divided
into three areas - funding to the community and voluntary
sectors, development of key partnerships and a communication strategy.
Promotion of the Year was done in partnership with businesses and
the community, and included funding to establish a recruitment database
for the organization Volunteering Australia. While the
main aim of the Years communication strategy was to promote
the Year, it also sought to raise awareness, particularly among
non-volunteers, of the range, scope and positive experience of volunteering,
he said. The Australian Government had launched a different celebratory
theme each month to provide a framework for organizations planning
their activities for the Year. Communicating the message of the
Year was also done in partnership with another major milestone for
Australia - the centenary of the establishment of Australia
as a federation. Since 2000, he noted, ongoing federal funding to
support volunteering had more than doubled and research continued
on how best to support volunteers. The sectors capacity was
being further developed through programmes which, for example, enhanced
volunteer skills development.
LEE HO-JIN (Republic of Korea) said the tradition of volunteerism
had greatly dissipated in his country because of rapid modernization
and industrialization. But, with the growth of civic activism, it
had found fertile ground for a new era of possibilities and contributions
at the community, national and global levels. The Government operated
a system of support for volunteer activities, including the provision
of public facilities, project-based subsidies and the improvement
of relevant laws. Since 2000, the Ministry of Government Administration
and Home Affairs had dispensed $12.5 million annually for volunteer
activities, and had assisted in setting up local volunteer centres
around the country. He said 2002 was a busy year for volunteers
in the Republic of Korea. They had provided services for the FIFA
World Cup, which the country had co- hosted, for victims of the
devastating typhoon which had hit the eastern part of the country
in late August and during the Asian Games held between 29 September
and 14 October in Busan. Given the importance of volunteerism, it
should be promoted and strengthened in the context of the globalizing
world. The possibilities of information and communication technologies
(ICT) should be fully embraced to supplement the traditional on-the-scene
approach of volunteerism, he said.
VIJAY K. NAMBIAR (India) said his country considered volunteerism
to be one of the important tools for addressing the problem of exclusion.
It provided a vehicle for empowering excluded population groups
to gain access to opportunities. He recalled that in the years following
Indias independence, it had sought to harness its social wealth
for national development through the National Service Scheme, which
had been introduced in 1969 with the aim of involving students on
a voluntary and part-time basis. The success of that project had
led to the launch in 1977 and 1978 of the National Service Volunteer
Scheme, which envisaged participation in voluntary work on a full-time
basis. India had participated actively in the observance of the
International Year of Volunteers, and had worked for its success
by organizing conferences, workshops and youth camps, he said. The
country's highest developmental planning body, the Planning Commission,
had been designated as the nodal agency for the countrys voluntary
sector.
ALMAZ BIYBOSUNOV (Kyrgyzstan) said close attention should be paid
to undertakings in support of volunteerism at the national level.
The Kyrgyz Government had created a national coordinating council
to track the process of passing the country's first law on volunteering.
Moreover, the Government had continued to work intensively within
the framework provided by the General Assembly in the International
Year of Volunteers, including through activities aimed at easing
the plight of refugees, facilitating their integration into Kyrgyzstan,
and helping in voluntary repatriation, as well as emergency planning.
The outcomes of the International Year and its projects had made
it possible to get a better idea of how to develop the potential
of volunteerism, he said. The Government had prioritized information
campaigns and worked at the local level to encourage citizens to
volunteer. The need for volunteerism was greater than ever, given
such global problems as HIV/AIDS, drugs and terrorism, he stressed.
Cooperation between governments and private sectors would make it
possible to further develop volunteerism, he added. It was also
important to focus attention at both the local and international
levels on international organizations, and to draw attention to
voluntary work in solving societal problems. In Kyrgyzstan, a decision
had been taken to draft uniform standards to serve as a universal
system for recruiting, monitoring and assessing volunteers
work.
GILBERT LAURIN (Canada) highlighted the significance of the social
impact of volunteering, both at a macro level and on the level of
relationships between individuals. Volunteering was of benefit both
to those who received assistance and to those who provided it. In
many cases, there was no clear distinction between the two. Volunteering
at its best was the act of participating fully in the development
of ones own society. Canada encouraged all governments to
tapinto that immense potential, seeking guidance in that regard
from the Recommendations on support for volunteering
annexed to the resolution adopted last year. He said his country
had a strong tradition of volunteering, as evidenced by its large
voluntary sector, which consisted of an estimated 180,000 non- profit
organizations and hundreds of thousands of other volunteer groups
that were not incorporated. In 2000, 6.5 million Canadians had volunteered
their time to a voluntary organization and the sector employed a
further 1.3 million people. That diverse multitude of organizations
ranged from small community-based groups to large, national umbrella
organizations and included neighbourhood associations, service clubs,
advocacy coalitions, food banks, shelters, transition houses, symphonies
and local sports clubs. In October, he added, the creation and appointment
of a Minister for the Voluntary Sector was announced. The role of
the Minister was to ensure the accomplishment of the Governments
commitments under the Accord Between the Government of Canada and
the Voluntary Sector -- a blueprint to guide the relationship
between the Government and the voluntary sector.
ÁRKA KR?ÁLOVÁ (Czech Republic) said
that her country, recognizing that promotion was an important field
without which no voluntary programme could develop effectively,
had embarked on a wide-ranging programme of actions aimed at spreading
information about the potential of volunteerism. They included the
press, the electronic media, including the Internet, which aired
views on particular projects by various representatives of society,
and non-profit organizations involved in voluntary activities both
inside the country and abroad. She said that because volunteerism
was very sensitive to any institutionalization, at the same time,
taking into account the Governments need for an adequate legislative
framework for voluntary activities, the Czech Republic had decided
during the International Year of Volunteers to pass an act on voluntary
service. The idea for that legal instrument had been developed with
the close cooperation of civil society and based on a previous analysis
of the field practice and operative Czech legislation in relation
to voluntary service. The aim of that act was not to regulate or
limit existing and considerably different forms of voluntary services
and activities, but the clear definition of their operational mode
and of conditions under which the Government could promote them,
she explained. Although the International Year of Volunteers had
been very fruitful, it was not enough to sufficiently influence
the nations attitude towards volunteerism and the Government
had, therefore, turned its attention to the follow-up of the Year,
earmarking funds to support voluntary programmes and projects.
NIDA GARCIA (Philippines) said volunteerism was a vehicle by which
vulnerable and marginalized groups, including the youth, older persons,
disabled people, families and others could be part of a countrys
socio- economic and cultural endeavours. Among the youth, the social
benefits of volunteerism could counteract the negative effects of
drug abuse and poverty. Also through volunteerism, the poor could
be part of the solution in the fight against poverty. In the Philippines,
she said, volunteers were involved in different phases of policy-making.
Regional consultations had been held among various sectors of society
during the planning phase of the Philippine Medium Term Development
Plan and in the implementation phase, volunteers had been given
the opportunity to choose programmes. To give further impetus to
the role of volunteers, a national resolution supporting volunteerism
had been adopted, she added.
MASOOD KHALID (Pakistan) said his country was evolving a new approach
to development. The traditional resources were not sufficient to
meet human development needs and alternative sources of financing
and human resources were essential to facilitate development. Volunteerism
could play a key role in supporting human development endeavours
in Pakistan, and a number of initiatives had accordingly been taken.
The National Commission for Human Development, formed in June, would
function as an instrumental body for human development efforts,
both public and private, with a presence in each district. It was
the first initiative of its kind in Pakistan. The Commission had
created a National Volunteer Corps, following the United Nations
International Year of Volunteers, as part of its broader agenda,
he continued. It drew on the skills and motivation of grass-roots
volunteers to help meet development objectives in education, health
and poverty alleviation. Pakistan had also become one of the first
countries to set up a Human Development Fund, with the collaboration
of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), for the achievement
of poverty alleviation and human development. It was also the first
country to establish a public-private partnership for human development
following the Monterrey Conference on Financing for Development.
ZOY KATEVAS DE SCLABOS, International Federation of Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies, said the International Year had been a resounding
success, not so much for what had happened, but because of the renewed
commitment demonstrated. Many non-profit organizations had received
a boost from the Year and renewed their commitment to volunteerism.
It was important to pay tribute to those who had contributed to
their communities. She said that a disturbingly large number of
governments had not recognized the importance of volunteerism for
their own communities. In Syria, volunteers had provided assistance
a few hours after the collapse of the Zeyoun Dam. In Chile, 21,780
volunteers (14,456 of whom were young) had made key interventions
in emergencies. Those were good examples of the constant need to
be able to rely on volunteers. Worldwide, societies were mobilizing
volunteers to combat AIDS and getting involved in anti-stigmatization
campaigns, she said. Governments were not being asked to create
volunteers, but they could create a conducive environment for voluntary
work. Suggesting a systematic review of volunteerism, she said the
Federation's next international conference would study ways in which
commitments had been put into effect. Governments were urged to
join that endeavour.
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