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Holy See (Observer State)
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- Date submitted: 31 Oct 2011
- Stakeholder type: Member State
- Name: Holy See (Observer State)
- Submission Document: Download
Full Submission
The Permanent Observer Mission of the Holy See to the United Nations presents its
compliments to the Bureau for the Preparatory Process of the United Nations Conference on
Sustainable Development and has the honor to submit the following input for the pÌeparations of
the Rio+20 outcome document:
The Holy See believes that in addressing the overarching pillars of environmental,
economic and social development, a human centered approach, as reflected in the first principle
of the original Rio Declaration, must form the foundation for all development policies. The
centrality of the human person and the promotion of the dignity and wofih of all persons without
distinction are fundamental in order to avoid a reductionist approach which views the human
person as an obstacle to development. States must work to promote true human development
through the recognition of the need for integral development which values all of its aspects:
environmental, economic, social, ethical, moral and spiritual.
In the area of environmental development, we must start from the foundation that the
environment is God's gift to everyone and thus the human family has a responsibility to.serve as
a steward of creation to ensure that our use of the environment takes into account the impact of
our actions on future generations, especially on the poor and the least ploteoted. Through the
recognition and promotion of intra-generational and inter-generational solidarity we can better
ensure that development does not come at the expense of the poor aĦd the least fortunate in
society. In our discussions on 1Ħs ftio+2O outcome document, we must work to ensure that all
peopie have access to clean air, Water and 1and, and to assist those States and peoples who lack
access to these most basic of resources.
In exercising our role as stewards of creation we must avoid the false thinking,
consistently disproven, that views increasing populations as the cause of environmental
degradation needing to be countered by population reduction. This view not only seeks to replace
a human centered approach to development with one which places the environment as the center
of development policy, but also fails to recognize that those countries whose population's growth
aĦe stagnant or falling, are often the same countries whose patterns of consumption and growth
are the driving forces behind environmental degradation. Our discussion on the Rio+20 outcome
document must reject this logic and instead replace it with environmental policies which respect
the human person and work to ensure the rights of all people to life's most basic resources,
namely clean air, Water, land, nutrition, safe sanitation and shelter.
Just economic development policy must also recognize the rights of the human person
and the indispensable responsibility to promote the common good. Such development must take
into account both the material well-being of society and the spiritual and ethical values which
give meaning to material and technological progress.
The international community is confronting an ongoing challenge to the existing
economic order as countries face difficult decisions in addressing national budgets while at the
same time addressing the challenges of stagnation and, in some cases, economic conÍaction. The
ongoing economic crisis has been driven in large part by ideas which place utilitarian and
individual self-interest above, and sometimes at the expense of, the broader community. That is
why a renewed commitment to the indispensable role of human-centered ethics in economic
decision makine is necessary in order to promote a more effective and sustainable economic
development. For too long financial systems and economic models have sought only to find
ways to increase profits aĦd financial capital without having taken into account whether these
new models and programs would be just and promote the common good. In order to break this
cycle of financial boom and bust, economic policy makers must therefore place human centered
ethics at the heart of frnancial and economic planning.
The promotion of economic development requires also renewed commitment to global
solidarity which recognizes the universal nature of goods and the responsibilities we have to one
another. Through the transfer of technology, access to an equitable and just global trade system,
fulfillment of official development assistance promises, greater use of innovative financing
mechanisms for development and reassessment ofthe global financial governance structures, we
can work to create a more fratemal and just global community.
This solidarity must also take into account the need to address growing inequities within
society and between States in order to promote just and equitable f,rnancial and economic
policies. In the end, economic policies must be judged not on their ability to generate wealth for
a select few but on how well the poorest and the least fortunate in society are fairing. This
prefetential option for the poor meets the moral demands of social justice and sustainable peace
and development.
The Rio+20 Conference also provides an opportunity for States to begin the discussions
on how States can work together to create more effective international financial and economic
govemance structures. In an interconnected world where financial and economic failures have
consequences in all comers of the globe it is no longer tenable for States to look only inward
when developing economic policies. A new govemmental structure, guided by the overarching
need to respect human dignity, must place itself at the service ol all States for the promotion of
the common good.
In order to be effective and just, such a govemmental structure must not be seen as an
opportunity to consolidate decision making into one body which dictates to States and
communities or be seen as a means by States to exert political or economic authority over each
other. Rather, such a body must work to promote the very conditions which make economic
advancement and opportunity a reality for all people and States and must consist of different
levels of actors which work together to assist one aĦother in fulhlling their individual and joint
responsibilities. This requires respecting the pĦtnSipŝ-Af-$ŝflda{ty and assisting individual
States and communities in making the necessary reforms to their social, economic, ecological,
political and legal systems so that they are able to address the need for sustainable energy
supplies, develop social protection floors aĦd provide solutions to address the specific needs of
both the urban and rural poor.
While environmental and economic development provide the technical structures
necessary for society, social development seeks to address the social structures and social
institutions necessaty to promote people's welfare. At the hearl of such social structures is the
need to provide support for the family. The family is the fundamental unit of society and the
place where chiidren first learn the skills and virtues needed within society, vr'here the elderly
aĦd disabled are given care and where social, spiritual and personal development ìs first
nurtured. It is therefore of utmost imporlance that policies and programs created during the
upcoming Rio +20 Conference recognize that without legal, political aĦd economic support for
the family, attempts to address broader economic development will remain elusive.
The Holy See also believes that in order to promote social development, States and the
pfivate sector must work together in order to provide full and decent employment for all or, in
other words, to realize the riqht to work. Decent work provides persons with the living wage
necessary to suppofi themselves and their family and with an ability to contribute their talents to
the betterment of society. Access to decent work provides the most effective tool in fulfilling the
goal of poverty eradication.
In every comer of globe, social development increasingly needs to address the issue of
migration. People from around the world continue to cross national borders in the search for
better social, economic and political opporlunities. The particular needs of migrants, especially
irregular immigrants, require policies and programs which respect their dignity, protect them
from economic and sexual exploitation, and respect the right of families to stay together, address
their social and spiritual needs and work to integrate them into their new communities for they
are members of our same human family.
The Holy See believes that the upcoming United Nations Conference on Sustainable
Development in Rio will provide an opportunity for States to work together to address these
concerns and many others in order to draw up a framework for a more just, equitable and
sustainable future for the global community.
The Permanent Observer Mission of the Holy See to the United Nations avails itself of
this opportunity to renew to the Bureau for the Preparatory Process of the United Nations
Conference on Sustainable Development the assurances of its highest consideration.