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AGENDA 21 OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 36
PROMOTING EDUCATION, PUBLIC AWARENESS AND TRAINING
36.2. Programme areas described in the
present chapter are:
·
Reorienting
education towards sustainable development;
·
Increasing public
awareness;
·
Promoting
training.
·
Reorienting
education towards sustainable development
Objectives
36.4. Recognizing that countries, regional
and international organizations will develop their own priorities and
schedules for implementation in accordance with their needs, policies
and programmes, the following objectives are proposed:
·
To endorse the
recommendations arising from the World Conference on Education for All:
Meeting Basic Learning Needs 2/ (Jomtien, Thailand, 5-9 March 1990) and
to strive to ensure universal access to basic education, and to achieve
primary education for at least 80 per cent of girls and 80 per cent of
boys of primary school age through formal schooling or non-formal
education and to reduce the adult illiteracy rate to at least half of
its 1990 level. Efforts should focus on reducing the high illiteracy
levels and redressing the lack of basic education among women and should
bring their literacy levels into line with those of men;
·
To achieve
environmental and development awareness in all sectors of society on a
world-wide scale as soon as possible;
·
To strive to
achieve the accessibility of environmental and development education,
linked to social education, from primary school age through adulthood to
all groups of people;
·
To promote
integration of environment and development concepts, including
demography, in all educational programmes, in particular the analysis of
the causes of major environment and development issues in a local
context, drawing on the best available scientific evidence and other
appropriate sources of knowledge, and giving special emphasis to the
further training of decision makers at all levels.
Activities
36.5. Recognizing that countries and
regional and international organizations will develop their own
priorities and schedules for implementation in accordance with their
needs, policies and programmes, the following activities are proposed:
·
All countries are
encouraged to endorse the recommendations of the Jomtien Conference and
strive to ensure its Framework for Action. This would encompass the
preparation of national strategies and actions for meeting basic
learning needs, universalizing access and promoting equity, broadening
the means and scope of education, developing a supporting policy
context, mobilizing resources and strengthening international
cooperation to redress existing economic, social and gender disparities
which interfere with these aims. Non-governmental organizations can make
an important contribution in designing and implementing educational
programmes and should be recognized;
·
Governments
should strive to update or prepare strategies aimed at integrating
environment and development as a cross-cutting issue into education at
all levels within the next three years. This should be done in
cooperation with all sectors of society. The strategies should set out
policies and activities, and identify needs, cost, means and schedules
for their implementation, evaluation and review. A thorough review of
curricula should be undertaken to ensure a multidisciplinary approach,
with environment and development issues and their socio-cultural and
demographic aspects and linkages. Due respect should be given to
community-defined needs and diverse knowledge systems, including
science, cultural and social sensitivities;
·
Countries are
encouraged to set up national advisory environmental education
coordinating bodies or round tables representative of various
environmental, developmental, educational, gender and other interests,
including non-governmental organizations, to encourage partnerships,
help mobilize resources, and provide a source of information and focal
point for international ties. These bodies would help mobilize and
facilitate different population groups and communities to assess their
own needs and to develop the necessary skills to create and implement
their own environment and development initiatives;
·
Educational
authorities, with the appropriate assistance from community groups or
non-governmental organizations, are recommended to assist or set up
pre-service and in-service training programmes for all teachers,
administrators, and educational planners, as well as non-formal
educators in all sectors, addressing the nature and methods of
environmental and development education and making use of relevant
experience of non-governmental organizations;
·
Relevant
authorities should ensure that every school is assisted in designing
environmental activity work plans, with the participation of students
and staff. Schools should involve schoolchildren in local and regional
studies on environmental health, including safe drinking water,
sanitation and food and ecosystems and in relevant activities, linking
these studies with services and research in national parks, wildlife
reserves, ecological heritage sites etc.;
·
Educational
authorities should promote proven educational methods and the
development of innovative teaching methods for educational settings.
They should also recognize appropriate traditional education systems in
local communities;
·
Within two years
the United Nations system should undertake a comprehensive review of its
educational programmes, encompassing training and public awareness, to
reassess priorities and reallocate resources. The UNESCO/UNEP
International Environmental Education Programme should, in cooperation
with the appropriate bodies of the United Nations system, Governments,
non-governmental organizations and others, establish a programme within
two years to integrate the decisions of the Conference into the existing
United Nations framework adapted to the needs of educators at different
levels and circumstances. Regional organizations and national
authorities should be encouraged to elaborate similar parallel
programmes and opportunities by conducting an analysis of how to
mobilize different sectors of the population in order to assess and
address their environmental and development education needs;
·
There is a need
to strengthen, within five years, information exchange by enhancing
technologies and capacities necessary to promote environment and
development education and public awareness. Countries should cooperate
with each other and with the various social sectors and population
groups to prepare educational tools that include regional environment
and development issues and initiatives, using learning materials and
resources suited to their own requirements;
·
Countries could
support university and other tertiary activities and networks for
environmental and development education. Cross-disciplinary courses
could be made available to all students. Existing regional networks and
activities and national university actions which promote research and
common teaching approaches on sustainable development should be built
upon, and new partnerships and bridges created with the business and
other independent sectors, as well as with all countries for technology,
know-how, and knowledge exchange;
·
Countries,
assisted by international organizations, non-governmental organizations
and other sectors, could strengthen or establish national or regional
centres of excellence in interdisciplinary research and education in
environmental and developmental sciences, law and the management of
specific environmental problems. Such centres could be universities or
existing networks in each country or region, promoting cooperative
research and information sharing and dissemination. At the global level
these functions should be performed by appropriate institutions;
·
Countries should
facilitate and promote non-formal education activities at the local,
regional and national levels by cooperating with and supporting the
efforts of non-formal educators and other community-based organizations.
The appropriate bodies of the United Nations system in cooperation with
non-governmental organizations should encourage the development of an
international network for the achievement of global educational aims. At
the national and local levels, public and scholastic forums should
discuss environmental and development issues, and suggest sustainable
alternatives to policy makers;
·
Educational
authorities, with appropriate assistance of non-governmental
organizations, including women's and indigenous peoples' organizations,
should promote all kinds of adult education programmes for continuing
education in environment and development, basing activities around
elementary/secondary schools and local problems. These authorities and
industry should encourage business, industrial and agricultural schools
to include such topics in their curricula. The corporate sector could
include sustainable development in their education and training
programmes. Programmes at a post-graduate level should include specific
courses aiming at the further training of decision makers;
·
Governments and
educational authorities should foster opportunities for women in
non-traditional fields and eliminate gender stereotyping in curricula.
This could be done by improving enrolment opportunities, including
females in advanced programmes as students and instructors, reforming
entrance and teacher staffing policies and providing incentives for
establishing child-care facilities, as appropriate. Priority should be
given to education of young females and to programmes promoting literacy
among women;
·
Governments
should affirm the rights of indigenous peoples, by legislation if
necessary, to use their experience and understanding of sustainable
development to play a part in education and training;
·
The United
Nations could maintain a monitoring and evaluative role regarding
decisions of the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development on education and awareness, through the relevant United
Nations agencies. With Governments and non-governmental organizations,
as appropriate, it should present and disseminate decisions in a variety
of forms, and should ensure the continuous implementation and review of
the educational implications of Conference decisions, in particular
through relevant events and conferences.
Means of
implementation Financing and cost evaluation
36.6. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of this programme to be about $8 billion to $9 billion,
including about $3.5 billion to $4.5 billion from the international
community on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative and
order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been reviewed by
Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies
and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
36.7. In the light of country-specific
situations, more support for education, training and public awareness
activities related to environment and development could be provided, in
appropriate cases, through measures such as the following:
·
Giving higher
priority to those sectors in budget allocations, protecting them from
structural cutting requirements;
·
Shifting
allocations within existing education budgets in favour of primary
education, with focus on environment and development;
·
Promoting
conditions where a larger share of the cost is borne by local
communities, with rich communities assisting poorer ones;
·
Obtaining
additional funds from private donors concentrating on the poorest
countries, and those with rates of literacy below 40 per cent;
·
Encouraging debt
for education swaps;
·
Lifting
restrictions on private schooling and increasing the flow of funds from
and to non-governmental organizations, including small-scale grass-roots
organizations;
·
Promoting the
effective use of existing facilities, for example, multiple school
shifts, fuller development of open universities and other long-distance
teaching;
·
Facilitating
low-cost or no-cost use of mass media for the purposes of education;
·
Encouraging
twinning of universities in developed and developing countries.
·
Increasing
public awareness
Objective
36.9. The objective is to promote broad
public awareness as an essential part of a global education effort to
strengthen attitudes, values and actions which are compatible with
sustainable development. It is important to stress the principle of
devolving authority, accountability and resources to the most
appropriate level with preference given to local responsibility and
control over awareness-building activities.
Activities
36.10. Recognizing that countries, regional
and international organizations will develop their own priorities and
schedules for implementation in accordance with their needs, policies
and programmes, the following activities are proposed:
·
Countries should
strengthen existing advisory bodies or establish new ones for public
environment and development information, and should coordinate
activities with, among others, the United Nations, non-governmental
organizations and important media. They should encourage public
participation in discussions of environmental policies and assessments.
Governments should also facilitate and support national to local
networking of information through existing networks;
·
The United
Nations system should improve its outreach in the course of a review of
its education and public awareness activities to promote greater
involvement and coordination of all parts of the system, especially its
information bodies and regional and country operations. Systematic
surveys of the impact of awareness programmes should be conducted,
recognizing the needs and contributions of specific community groups;
·
Countries and
regional organizations should be encouraged, as appropriate, to provide
public environmental and development information services for raising
the awareness of all groups, the private sector and particularly
decision makers;
·
Countries should
stimulate educational establishments in all sectors, especially the
tertiary sector, to contribute more to awareness building. Educational
materials of all kinds and for all audiences should be based on the best
available scientific information, including the natural, behavioural and
social sciences, and taking into account aesthetic and ethical
dimensions;
·
Countries and the
United Nations system should promote a cooperative relationship with the
media, popular theatre groups, and entertainment and advertising
industries by initiating discussions to mobilize their experience in
shaping public behaviour and consumption patterns and making wide use of
their methods. Such cooperation would also increase the active public
participation in the debate on the environment. UNICEF should make
child-oriented material available to media as an educational tool,
ensuring close cooperation between the out-of-school public information
sector and the school curriculum, for the primary level. UNESCO, UNEP
and universities should enrich pre-service curricula for journalists on
environment and development topics;
·
Countries, in
cooperation with the scientific community, should establish ways of
employing modern communication technologies for effective public
outreach. National and local educational authorities and relevant United
Nations agencies should expand, as appropriate, the use of audio-visual
methods, especially in rural areas in mobile units, by producing
television and radio programmes for developing countries, involving
local participation, employing interactive multimedia methods and
integrating advanced methods with folk media;
·
Countries should
promote, as appropriate, environmentally sound leisure and tourism
activities, building on The Hague Declaration of Tourism (1989) and the
current programmes of the World Tourism Organization and UNEP, making
suitable use of museums, heritage sites, zoos, botanical gardens,
national parks, and other protected areas;
·
Countries should
encourage non-governmental organizations to increase their involvement
in environmental and development problems, through joint awareness
initiatives and improved interchange with other constituencies in
society;
·
Countries and the
United Nations system should increase their interaction with and
include, as appropriate, indigenous people in the management, planning
and development of their local environment, and should promote
dissemination of traditional and socially learned knowledge through
means based on local customs, especially in rural areas, integrating
these efforts with the electronic media, whenever appropriate;
·
UNICEF, UNESCO,
UNDP and non-governmental organizations should develop support
programmes to involve young people and children in environment and
development issues, such as children's and youth hearings and building
on decisions of the World Summit for Children (A/45/625, annex);
·
Countries, the
United Nations and non-governmental organizations should encourage
mobilization of both men and women in awareness campaigns, stressing the
role of the family in environmental activities, women's contribution to
transmission of knowledge and social values and the development of human
resources;
·
Public awareness
should be heightened regarding the impacts of violence in society.
Means of
implementation Financing and cost evaluation
36.11. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of this programme to be about $1.2 billion, including about
$110 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and
have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms,
including any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for
implementation.
·
Promoting
training
Objectives
36.13. The following objectives are
proposed:
·
To establish or
strengthen vocational training programmes that meet the needs of
environment and development with ensured access to training
opportunities, regardless of social status, age, gender, race or
religion;
·
To promote a
flexible and adaptable workforce of various ages equipped to meet
growing environment and development problems and changes arising from
the transition to a sustainable society;
·
To strengthen
national capacities, particularly in scientific education and training,
to enable Governments, employers and workers to meet their environmental
and development objectives and to facilitate the transfer and
assimilation of new environmentally sound, socially acceptable and
appropriate technology and know-how;
·
To ensure that
environmental and human ecological considerations are integrated at all
managerial levels and in all functional management areas, such as
marketing, production and finance.
Activities
36.14. Countries with the support of the
United Nations system should identify workforce training needs and
assess measures to be taken to meet those needs. A review of progress in
this area could be undertaken by the United Nations system in 1995.
36.15. National professional associations are encouraged to develop and
review their codes of ethics and conduct to strengthen environmental
connections and commitment. The training and personal development
components of programmes sponsored by professional bodies should ensure
incorporation of skills and information on the implementation of
sustainable development at all points of policy- and decision-making.
36.16. Countries and educational
institutions should integrate environmental and developmental issues
into existing training curricula and promote the exchange of their
methodologies and evaluations.
36.17. Countries should encourage all
sectors of society, such as industry, universities, government officials
and employees, non-governmental organizations and community
organizations, to include an environmental management component in all
relevant training activities, with emphasis on meeting immediate skill
requirements through short-term formal and in-plant vocational and
management training. Environmental management training capacities should
be strengthened, and specialized "training of trainers" programmes
should be established to support training at the national and enterprise
levels. New training approaches for existing environmentally sound
practices should be developed that create employment opportunities and
make maximum use of local resource-based methods.
36.18. Countries should strengthen or
establish practical training programmes for graduates from vocational
schools, high schools and universities, in all countries, to enable them
to meet labour market requirements and to achieve sustainable
livelihoods. Training and retraining programmes should be established to
meet structural adjustments which have an impact on employment and skill
qualifications.
36.19. Governments are encouraged to
consult with people in isolated situations, whether geographically,
culturally or socially, to ascertain their needs for training to enable
them to contribute more fully to developing sustainable work practices
and lifestyles.
36.20. Governments, industry, trade unions,
and consumers should promote an understanding of the interrelationship
between good environment and good business practices.
36.21. Countries should develop a service
of locally trained and recruited environmental technicians able to
provide local people and communities, particularly in deprived urban and
rural areas, with the services they require, starting from primary
environmental care.
36.22. Countries should enhance the ability
to gain access to, analyse and effectively use information and knowledge
available on environment and development. Existing or established
special training programmes should be strengthened to support
information needs of special groups. The impact of these programmes on
productivity, health, safety and employment should be evaluated.
National and regional environmental labour-market information systems
should be developed that would supply, on a continuing basis, data on
environmental job and training opportunities. Environment and
development training resource-guides should be prepared and updated,
with information on training programmes, curricula, methodologies and
evaluation results at the local, national, regional and international
levels.
36.23. Aid agencies should strengthen the
training component in all development projects, emphasizing a
multidisciplinary approach, promoting awareness and providing the
necessary skills for transition to a sustainable society. The
environmental management guidelines of UNDP for operational activities
of the United Nations system may contribute to this end.
36.24. Existing networks of employers' and
workers' organizations, industry associations and non-governmental
organizations should facilitate the exchange of experience concerning
training and awareness programmes.
36.25. Governments, in cooperation with
relevant international organizations, should develop and implement
strategies to deal with national, regional and local environmental
threats and emergencies, emphasizing urgent practical training and
awareness programmes for increasing public preparedness.
36.26. The United Nations system, as
appropriate, should extend its training programmes, particularly its
environmental training and support activities for employers' and
workers' organizations.
Means of
implementation Financing and cost evaluation
36.27.
The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about
$5 billion, including about $2 billion from the international community
on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative and
order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been reviewed by
Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies
and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation. |