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This book’s overall purpose is to draw on over three decades of experience with the right to development, going beyond political posturing to analyse its constituent principles and actual applications in development practice, and potential implementation in the years to come.
The essays that comprise the 33 chapters in this book attempt to put flesh on the bones of the Declaration by examining the multiple dimensions of the right to development. The contributions not only clarify the meaning and status of this right but also examine the most salient challenges—based on actual development practice—to its transformative potential.
PREAMBLE
Note Foreword Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction
PART ONE: SITUATING THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT
Chapter 1: The emergence of the right to development Chapter 2: The Declaration on the Right to Development in the context of United Nations standard-setting Chapter 3: The challenge of implementing the right to development in the 1990s Chapter 4: Conceptualizing the right to development for the twenty-first century
PART TWO: UNDERSTANDING THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT
Chapter 5: Self-determination of peoples and sovereignty over natural wealth and resources Chapter 6: Active, free and meaningful participation in development Chapter 7: Equality, non-discrimination and fair distribution of the benefits of development Chapter 8: The human rights-based approach to development in the era of globalization Chapter 9: A human rights approach to democratic governance and development Chapter 10: Poverty Chapter 11: Women, human rights and development Chapter 12: Indigenous peoples Chapter 13: Global governance: old and new challenges Chapter 14: International solidarity in an interdependent world
PART THREE: COOPERATING FOR THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT
Chapter 15: A right to development critique of Millennium Development Goal 8 Chapter 16: Development, good governance and South-South cooperation: the African Peer Review Mechanism Chapter 17: The Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness Chapter 18: Mainstreaming the right to development into the World Trade Organization Chapter 19: The Cotonou Agreement and economic partnership agreements Chapter 20: Debt relief and sustainability Chapter 21: Sovereign debt and human rights Chapter 22: The Intergovernmental Working Group on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property Chapter 23: Climate change, sustainable development and the clean development mechanism
PART FOUR: IMPLEMENTING THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT
Chapter 24: The indicators framework of OHCHR applied to the right to development Chapter 25: The right to development and implementation of the Millennium Development Goals Chapter 26: National experience with the right to development Chapter 27: A regional perspective: article 22 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights Chapter 28: Towards operational criteria and a monitoring framework Chapter 29: Theory into practice: a new framework and proposed assessment criteria Chapter 30: The high-level task force criteria Chapter 31: The role of international law Chapter 32: The right to development in practice: provisional lessons learned Chapter 33: The right to development at 25: renewal and achievement of its potential Realizing the Right to Development and a new development agenda
ANNEXES
Annex I: Declaration on the Right to Development Annex II: Overview of United Nations mechanisms on the right to development Selected bibliography Back cover
Overview
About the right to development
OHCHR’s work on the right to development
International standards
Reports
Documents
Publications and resources
Activities
Feature stories
Statements
Videos
The contribution of development to the enjoyment of all human rights
International cooperation and solidarity
Least developed countries
Development finance institutions
Trade and investment
Working Group on the Right to Development
Expert Mechanism on the Right to Development
Special Rapporteur on the Right to Development
Independent Expert on foreign debt
Independent Expert on International Order
Special Rapporteur on human rights and International Solidarity
Right to development mechanisms
Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States
UN Development Program (UNDP)
UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)
UN Office for Financing and Development
UN Sustainable Development