UNGASS
"Family Rights" Frame Disguises Right Wing Propaganda
July 11, 2008 - 7:00am (Print)
What Does Youth Participation in HIV/AIDS Strategy Mean? Collaboration.
by Brian Ackerman, Advocates for Youth
June 24, 2008 - 7:00am (Print)
Punishing Sex Workers Won't Curb HIV/AIDS, Says Ban-Ki Moon
by Melissa Ditmore, Independent consultant
June 24, 2008 - 7:00am (Print)
Live-Blogging from Session on PEPFAR
June 11, 2008 - 1:20pm (Print)
Guest Blogger: Reporting from the UNGASS Special Session on Youth and HIV
June 11, 2008 - 12:10pm (Print)
Live-Blogging from Promoting Gender Equality in the AIDS Response
June 11, 2008 - 9:45am (Print)
Live-Blogging from the UN High Level Meeting on AIDS
June 10, 2008 - 10:21am (Print)
From Inclusion to Leadership
I am on my way back to Washington, rolling away from the rollicking clatter of New York City and the seat of international administration at which over the past week, dozens of brilliant young activists have made their presence felt as profoundly as possible. As didactic and occasionally enthralling as the meeting was, I can’t seem to shake the lingering sense of disappointment at the ultimately mediocre strength of the session’s results. The final political declaration to come out of the 2006 UNGASS review was a mixed bag; encouragingly, it included the strongest youth language ever seen in such a document, as well as a demand for national targets (if not specific quantitative nor global ones) and some mention of putting life before intellectual property rights through access to generic drugs.
Paragraph 26 reads: “(Therefore, we) commit to address the rising rates of HIV infection among young people to ensure an HIV-free future generation through the implementation of comprehensive, evidence-based prevention strategies, responsible sexual behaviours, including the use of condoms, evidence-and skills-based, youth specific HIV education, mass media interventions, and the provision of youth friendly health services.”
The UN Declaration On HIV/AIDS: Nations Must Be Pressured to Exceed These Goals to Defeat HIV/AIDS
by Scott Swenson, RH Reality Check
June 3, 2006 - 9:07am (Print)
Here is the final Declaration of Review from the UN on HIV/AIDS following a week long Special Session of the General Assembly reviewing the historic 2001 Declaration of Commitment. It is important to note that Secretary Kofi Anan was instrumental in convening the global community in 2001 in to discuss AIDS, the first time the UN met specifically to consider a health issue. That was 20 years into the pandemic, and without his leadership it might never have happened. This review happens at a time when many question the UN and the funding commitments required to keep the body functioning.
Youth Play Significant Role in Confusing UN Process
by Naina Dhingra, Advocates for Youth
June 2, 2006 - 5:11pm (Print)
So after months of preparation and work, we’re finally at the close of the UN High Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS. Was it worth it? What did we get? What did we learn? And where do we go from here?
Let’s start with the process. “Dazed and confused” best captures our attempts to fathom the torturous negotiations around the political declaration. The lack of transparency resulted from the fact that the UN instituted a completely new process for this meeting jettisoning the standard procedures that we all understood and that provided a pretty clear read on individual nation’s positions on various issues. The new approach featured a convoluted co-chair process that cloaked individual nation’s intentions and created new drafts without governments really negotiating the tough issues together.
NGOs were extremely frustrated with the co-chairs and did not feel they were receptive to civil society views. The whole affair felt like a rush to consensus by avoiding the real issues- a perception that only fueled further discontent. Governments friendly to our issues such as EU and Canada felt the co-chairs were openly hostile to them for continuing to request changes in the document. The President of the General Assembly intervened and became intricately involved in the document drafting after pressure from civil society.
