document stringlengths 20 49 | text_en stringlengths 147 11k | label stringclasses 2
values |
|---|---|---|
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 31. Expresses concern about security of access issues, including fuel, firewood and other energy sources, water and sanitation, housing, food and health care, including mental health and psychosocial support services, and their use in humanitarian emergencies, and notes with appreciation national and international init... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 32. Encourages the international community, including the relevant United Nations bodies and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, to support the activities of Member States to strengthen their disaster preparedness and response capacities and, as appropriate, initiatives to improve syst... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 33. Welcomes the increasing number of Member States and regional organizations that have taken steps to promote the implementation of the Guidelines on the National Facilitation and Regulation of International Relief and Initial Recovery Assistance in the Event of Disasters, encourages others to do likewise, as appropr... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 35. Recognizes that disasters, including those related to the adverse effects of climate change, are increasing in number and scale, which in some cases can lead to displacement and additional pressure on host communities, encourages Member States, the United Nations system and relevant organizations and parties to int... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 36. Calls upon Member States, the United Nations system and humanitarian organizations to provide emergency assistance in a manner that contributes, as appropriate, to long-term recovery and development, including through multi-year funding and with a focus on humanitarian capacity that builds resilience, including, bu... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 37. Encourages Member States and United Nations funds and programmes, as well as specialized agencies, to respond more effectively to needs in humanitarian contexts, including by increasing the scope of social protection policies and cash assistance, wherever possible, including multi-purpose cash assistance programmes... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 38. Encourages Member States, the United Nations system and other relevant organizations to accelerate and ease, where possible, funding for disaster preparedness, early action, rapid response and early recovery, and in this regard encourages the study, development and, where appropriate, strengthening of innovative an... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 39. Calls upon States, as well as the United Nations system and humanitarian organizations, within their mandates and in accordance with humanitarian principles, drawing lessons from the experience of the VOCID-19 pandemic, to continue to build on preparedness strategies, early warning and early action systems, forecas... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 40. Takes note of the efforts of Member States, the United Nations system and the international community to strengthen disaster preparedness and humanitarian response capacities at the local, national and regional levels, calls upon the United Nations system and relevant partners to assist Member States in capacity-bu... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 41. Encourages Member States, and invites relevant humanitarian organizations to work closely with national institutions, including local government and the private sector, as appropriate, to seek effective and context-sensitive means to improve the availability of emergency preparedness in urban areas and to ensure re... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 42. Reaffirms the right to education for all and the importance, in humanitarian emergencies, of ensuring the safety of schools, creating conditions conducive to learning and providing quality education at all levels, including for girls, by providing, where possible, technical and vocational training, with adequate fu... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 43. Urges Member States, the United Nations system and relevant humanitarian actors to increase their support for humanitarian programmes and interventions for safe, inclusive, equitable and quality education at all levels and at all ages, in order to mitigate the direct and indirect effects of the closure of schools a... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 44. Encourages the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and other organizations of the United Nations system to continue to cooperate with Member States and relevant United Nations entities to facilitate the exchange of up-to-date, accurate and reliable information, including disaggregated, harmonized an... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 45. Calls upon the relevant organizations of the United Nations system to contribute to improving the cycle of humanitarian action programmes, in particular the development of collaborative and comprehensive needs assessment tools, such as the rapid initial multisectoral assessment tool, the joint and immediate impleme... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 48. Encourages the United Nations system and humanitarian organizations to further streamline the delivery of aid by reducing management costs, harmonizing partnership agreements, ensuring transparency and comparability of cost structures and strengthening measures for greater accountability through the adoption of new... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 49. Requests Member States, relevant United Nations humanitarian agencies and other relevant humanitarian actors to promote gender equality and the empowerment of women in all aspects of humanitarian action, to take appropriate measures to ensure the full participation of women, girls, men and boys, including persons w... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 50. Recognizes that women can play an important role in early relief efforts, and invites Member States, the United Nations system and other relevant humanitarian organizations to promote the presence of women in decision-making positions and their effective participation in the planning and implementation of response ... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 52. Calls upon the United Nations system and humanitarian and development organizations, in coordination with Member States, to engage in dialogue with all persons affected by disasters and crises, in particular those most at risk, through, inter alia, outreach activities, participation in processes affecting them, sup... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 53. Calls upon the United Nations humanitarian system, by consulting, as appropriate, with Member States, the evidence base on which humanitarian assistance is based, by improving common mechanisms and working methods to improve the quality, transparency, reliability, compatibility and comparability of common humanitar... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 54. Calls upon the United Nations system and its humanitarian partners to better report on their activities to Member States, including affected States, and all other stakeholders, including local governments, relevant local organizations and other actors, as well as affected populations, and to further strengthen huma... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 55. Calls upon Member States, the United Nations system and humanitarian organizations to find better ways to address the growing lack of capacity and resources, in order to effectively address the needs of the affected populations, including by harmonizing and, where possible, simplifying reporting requirements, reduc... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 56. Calls upon donors to provide, in a timely manner, adequate, predictable and usable resources in a flexible manner, on the basis and in proportion to the needs established by the assessment, and to mobilize support to respond to situations of unknown or underfunded emergencies, to consider making multi-year commitme... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 57. Welcomes the efforts of the Central Emergency Response Fund to improve the timeliness and predictability of humanitarian response, stresses the importance of continuing to improve the functioning of the Fund, and in this regard encourages the United Nations funds and programmes and the specialized agencies to revie... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 58. Calls upon all Member States, and invites the private sector and all interested individuals and institutions, to consider increasing their voluntary contributions to the Central Emergency Response Fund in order to increase the annual funding to 1 billion United States dollars and to continue to strengthen the posit... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 59. Urges Member States and relevant parties to mobilize resources to support humanitarian response plans to address the VOCID-19 pandemic and its consequences, stressing the importance of rapid, flexible, predictable, adequate and effective funding and the need to support the Central Emergency Response Fund and pooled... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 60. Encourages Member States, the private sector and all relevant individuals and institutions to consider increasing their voluntary contributions to pooled funds and, as appropriate, other pooled funding mechanisms to facilitate the provision of humanitarian assistance to populations in need; | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 61. Calls upon Member States in a position to do so and development and humanitarian partners, as part of their efforts to provide resources in a flexible manner, to consider ways and means to better integrate disaster preparedness and resilience-building issues into humanitarian and development assistance, including r... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 62. Calls upon all Member States in a position to do so to increase their voluntary contributions to humanitarian emergencies, including through the allocation, with appropriate flexibility, of unearmarked and multi-year funds where possible, reaffirms in this regard that the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 63. Encourages Member States to ensure, in cooperation with relevant United Nations humanitarian organizations, that the basic humanitarian needs of affected populations, including safe drinking water, food, housing, health care, including sexual and reproductive health, education and protection, energy, information an... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 64. Also encourages Member States to ensure, in cooperation with relevant United Nations humanitarian agencies, that basic health-care services, including reliable and safe access to sexual and reproductive health care, mental health care and psychosocial support, are provided to women and girls from the outset of emer... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 65. Urges Member States and humanitarian organizations to integrate protection and health risks, as components of humanitarian action, into humanitarian assessment and planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of humanitarian response, and to strengthen efforts to strengthen local and national systems, capaci... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 66. Urges Member States, the United Nations system and humanitarian organizations to intensify their efforts to provide and fund high-quality, context-sensitive, gender-sensitive and human rights-sensitive cross-sectoral psychosocial and mental health services, to ensure that these services are integrated into humanita... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 67. Encourages Member States, the United Nations system and humanitarian organizations to continue to work together to identify and respond to the different protection needs of affected populations, including the most vulnerable, in response to humanitarian crises, and to ensure that they are duly reflected in prepared... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 68. Invites Member States, as well as relevant agencies and actors, to assess the impact of humanitarian emergencies on migrants, in particular those in vulnerable situations, to address them and to better coordinate international efforts to provide assistance and protection to migrants, in conjunction with national au... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 69. Invites Member States to take measures to ensure at the international level the protection and respect of the rights of refugees, including the principle of non-refoulement and adequate standards of treatment, in accordance with international law, including, where appropriate, the 1951 Convention relating to the St... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 70. Recognizes the importance of rapid and effective registration of the populations concerned as a protection tool and a means of quantifying and assessing the needs for the provision and distribution of humanitarian assistance, notes that refugees who find themselves without any identity documents attesting to their ... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 71. Reaffirms the obligation of all States and parties to armed conflict to protect civilians, as provided for in international humanitarian law, encourages States parties to armed conflict to take all necessary measures to improve the protection of civilians, and invites all States to promote a culture of protection, ... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 72. Urges Member States to continue to take the necessary measures to ensure the protection of the injured and the sick, as well as the safety and security of medical and humanitarian personnel engaged exclusively in medical activities, and of their facilities, equipment, means of transport and supplies, including thro... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 74. Urges Member States to continue to take the necessary measures to ensure the safety and security of humanitarian personnel, as well as facilities, equipment, means of transport and supplies at their disposal, including through the adoption of effective measures to prevent and combat acts of violence, attacks and th... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 75. Stresses the responsibility of States to prevent and combat effectively violence against civilians in armed conflict, to comply with their obligations under international law to end impunity and to ensure that those responsible for such violations are promptly brought to justice, in accordance with national legisla... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 76. Calls upon all States and all parties involved in complex humanitarian emergencies, in particular during or after armed conflict, in countries where humanitarian personnel are involved, to cooperate fully, in accordance with the relevant provisions of international law and national legislation, with United Nations ... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 77. Urges States undertaking counter-terrorism activities to fulfil their international obligations, including in cases where international humanitarian law applies, in particular with regard to the provision of humanitarian assistance to civilian populations, recognizes the crucial role of humanitarian organizations i... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 78. Recognizes that the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement 15 are important in that they provide an international framework for the protection of internally displaced persons and that forced displacement is not only a humanitarian problem but also an obstacle to development, encourages Member States and humani... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 79. Takes note with interest of the report of the High-level Panel of the Secretary-General on Internal Displacement, recognizes the crucial importance of intensifying efforts to address the root causes of the problem of internally displaced persons and to improve prevention, protection and assistance measures and dura... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 80. Welcomes the progress made in the continuous improvement of the United Nations security management system, and supports the guidance given by the Secretary-General to the General Assembly, with a focus on the effective management of the risks to which personnel are exposed, including in the delivery of humanitarian... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 81. Encourages the United Nations system and other relevant humanitarian actors, as part of their risk management strategies, to ensure good relations with national and local administrations, to gain their confidence and to be accepted by local populations and all relevant actors, including religious leaders, as approp... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 82. Requests the Secretary-General to report to the General Assembly on the measures taken to enable the United Nations system to continue to strengthen its capacity to recruit and deploy the required personnel in a timely, efficient and flexible manner, to obtain timely, cost-effective and, where possible, local suppl... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 83. Urges all countries to incorporate the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development into their national development policies and frameworks, and urges Member States, the United Nations system and relevant stakeholders to work together to reduce the needs and build resilience of the most vulnerable in order to contribute... | operative |
A-RES-77-28-fr-parsed | 84. Requests the Secretary-General to report to the General Assembly at its seventy-eighth session, through the Economic and Social Council at its session of 2023, on progress made in strengthening the coordination of emergency humanitarian assistance of the United Nations, and to submit a comprehensive report on the u... | operative |
A-RES-77-283-fr-parsed | 1. Encourages all Member States to submit regular voluntary national reviews, including a country-led assessment, as deemed relevant and useful at the national level in partnership with all relevant stakeholders, in accordance with the principles of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, taking into account that moni... | operative |
A-RES-77-283-fr-parsed | 2. Recognizes that voluntary national reviews, as a process for strong, voluntary, effective, participatory, transparent and integrated monitoring and review of sustainable development goals, can help countries to measure progress in their implementation and ensure that no one is left behind; | operative |
A-RES-77-283-fr-parsed | 3. Encourages all Member States to use the evidence from assessments of the achievement of sustainable development goals to take decisions and report on progress in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda, including through their voluntary national reviews, as appropriate; | operative |
A-RES-77-283-fr-parsed | 4. Calls upon the organizations of the United Nations system, within their existing mandates and resources, to support, when requested by Member States, efforts to undertake assessments of the implementation of the sustainable development goals and to facilitate the exchange of experiences and knowledge materials deriv... | operative |
A-RES-77-286-fr-parsed | 2. Invites all Member States, the United Nations system, international and regional organizations and civil society, including non-governmental organizations, individuals and other interested parties, to observe World Sustainable Transport Day by organizing educational activities and events to enhance public knowledge ... | operative |
A-RES-77-286-fr-parsed | 3. Invites the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the Secretariat, in collaboration with the regional economic commissions, within their mandates, to facilitate the observance of World Sustainable Transport Day, bearing in mind the provisions contained in the annex to Economic and Social Council resolution 19... | operative |
A-RES-77-286-fr-parsed | 4. Requests the Chair of the General Assembly to consider convening, through voluntary contributions and avoiding any duplication of work, taking into account, inter alia, activities organized within the framework of the decade of action and achievements for sustainable development for the full implementation of the 20... | operative |
A-RES-77-286-fr-parsed | 6. Stresses that sustainable, low-emission and energy-efficient modes of transport contribute to adaptation to and mitigation of climate change and to the achievement of sustainable development goals, and stresses the importance of long-term strategies and multi-stakeholder partnerships to develop these modes of transp... | operative |
A-RES-77-286-fr-parsed | 7. Encourages the United Nations system and other international organizations, relevant international and regional financial institutions, multilateral and bilateral donors and the private sector to better coordinate their efforts and work collaboratively to mobilize financial and technical assistance to countries, in ... | operative |
A-RES-77-286-fr-parsed | 8. Requests the Secretary-General to bring the present resolution to the attention of all Member States, United Nations bodies and other international and regional organizations, as well as civil society, including non-governmental organizations and individuals; | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 2. We recall that the Sendai Framework applies to the risk of small- or large-scale, frequent or rare, sudden or slow-moving disasters caused by natural or anthropogenic hazards, or related to environmental, technological and biological hazards and hazards. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 3. We reiterate the call made in the Sendai Framework for a significant reduction of disaster risk and loss of life, as well as damage to health, livelihoods and economic, physical, social, cultural and environmental property resulting from such disasters for individuals, businesses, communities and countries. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 4. We recognize that, in the face of disaster risks, a broader preventive approach, with a greater emphasis on the human dimension, is needed in line with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, 2 and that effective policies and measures to reduce such risks must be designed to manage multiple hazards in various s... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 6. We express our deep concern at the increasing frequency and intensity of disasters, as well as their number and magnitude and their devastating consequences, resulting in immense loss of life, food insecurity and famine, loss of biodiversity, water-related problems, increased displacement, humanitarian needs, develo... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 8. We recognize that disaster risks are increasingly complex and widespread and that they can have an impact on all sectors and geographical areas, as well as at the local, national, regional and global levels, and in this regard we continue to consider that conventional approaches to disaster management are no longer ... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 10. We reaffirm the urgent need to implement the Sendai Framework as an integral part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development with a view to adopting a risk-sensitive approach to sustainable development and recall the synergies between the implementation of the Sendai Framework and other outcomes of the major Un... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 11. We welcome the outcome of the twenty-seventh session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and of the Fourth Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement, held in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, including decision 4 on new fun... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 12. We welcome the convening from 22 to 24 March 2023 of the United Nations Conference on the Mid-term Comprehensive Review of the Implementation of the Goals of the International Decade of Action on the theme "Water and sustainable development" (2018-2028) and reaffirm that sustainable, integrated and disaster-sensiti... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 13. We are grateful to countries, entities of the United Nations system and stakeholders for their contributions to the midterm review, including by submitting voluntary national reports 5 and reporting on progress against the seven global goals through the Sendai Framework follow-up system, and take note of the report... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 14. We welcome the progress made since 2015 in understanding risks at all levels, including the establishment and maintenance of disaster loss databases and the improvement in the collection, analysis and use of disaster risk data in decision-making in many countries. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 15. We are concerned that gaps in the collection of data on disaster losses and risks, including data disaggregated by income, sex, age and disability, constitute obstacles to the development of multisectoral and inclusive disaster risk reduction policies and strategies. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 16. We emphasize the need to strengthen efforts to improve the quality of and access to multi-hazard hazard data in all sectors, including their use in multi-hazard early warning systems in all countries, particularly in developing countries, in order to make policy and investment decisions by ensuring a sufficient und... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 17. We recognize the need to go further in assessing and addressing the fundamental elements of risk, including risk-creation factors and vulnerability, and to better integrate information on vulnerability, exposure and resilience of individuals and communities into existing disaster data platforms and decision-making ... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 18. We emphasize the need to improve understanding and knowledge of disaster risks, in particular in developing countries, including through the exchange of good practices and know-how, the transfer of technology on preferential and preferential terms, on mutually agreed terms, education and training programmes on disa... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 19. We believe that greater attention should be paid in all countries to raising awareness and understanding of the risks of new, emerging and future disasters, including the effects of climate change, biodiversity loss, environmental degradation and rapid and unplanned urbanization, as well as technological hazards an... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 20. We call upon States to improve their understanding of disaster risks, taking into account their national circumstances, needs and priorities, including by:
(a) Intensify the collection and analysis of data on hazards, disasters and their consequences, including loss and damage, and the monitoring of systemic risks,... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 21. We reaffirm that each State has primary responsibility for disaster risk prevention and reduction and welcome the progress made in strengthening national disaster risk governance, including the significant increase since 2015 in the number of countries with national disaster risk reduction strategies and the consid... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 22. We reiterate the importance of involving society as a whole in disaster risk reduction in the interests of inclusion, and we welcome the essential role played by non-State stakeholders in the implementation of the Sendai Framework at the local, national, regional and global levels. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 23. We reiterate that while progress has been made on disaster risk governance at the local level, more needs to be done, and we believe that there is a need to strengthen support for local authorities, as well as contacts with local populations and civil society organizations in developing countries, particularly in l... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 24. We are concerned that the existing divisions within and between national and local institutions hinder coordination efforts in disaster risk reduction, biodiversity conservation, sustainable development and economic policies and plans, as well as climate change policies and plans, including mitigation and adaptatio... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 26. We call upon States to improve overall disaster risk governance, taking into account their national circumstances, needs and priorities, including by:
(a) Strengthening national multi-hazard risk governance through the full involvement of all State institutions, including the establishment or strengthening of natio... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 27. We know that global investments have increased in some areas of disaster-related financing, such as social protection, predictive financing and risk transfer mechanisms, such as insurance, but we are concerned that investments in disaster risk reduction and investment risk reduction remain insufficient, and we are ... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 28. We emphasize the critical need to improve capacity-building and capacity-building activities, financial resources, data and technology, and partnerships to assist developing countries in implementing the Sendai Framework and the United Nations Development Programme | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 29. We believe that greater attention needs to be paid to the adverse effects of disasters on the debt sustainability of a large number of least developed countries, small island developing States, landlocked developing countries and African countries, as well as middle-income countries with special difficulties, and t... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 30. We are deeply concerned that public and private investments in disaster risk prevention, preparedness and reduction remain insufficient and do not meet existing or future risks; we reaffirm the importance of investments that contribute to disaster risk reduction, the protection of lives, livelihoods and property, t... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 31. We recognize the need for integrated and inclusive economic, structural, legal, social, health, cultural, educational, environmental, technological, political, financial and institutional measures to prevent and reduce exposure to hazards and vulnerability to disasters, to improve preparedness for recovery interven... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 32. We also believe that the global community, including international financial institutions, development banks and the private sector, must redouble its efforts to develop financing instruments for disaster risk reduction in order to address the scale of financing needed by developing countries to prevent and reduce ... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 33. We call upon States to invest in disaster risk reduction, including by:
(a) Identify gaps in public spending on disaster risk reduction and allocate more national resources to it so that disaster risk reduction is integrated into public budget formulation, financial planning, expenditure, investment and procurement... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 35. We are deeply concerned that the coverage and accessibility of multi-seas early warning systems remains inadequate in all countries, and stress the urgent need to expand the coverage of such systems throughout the world, including in developing countries, particularly in the least developed countries, small island ... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 36. We believe that more needs to be done to invest in, modernize, maintain and strengthen multi-hazard and multi-sectoral human-centred early warning systems and to ensure that early warning information is widely disseminated and meets the needs of users, including from a socio-cultural perspective, in order to enable... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 37. We are concerned that the number of people and countries affected by disasters will increase as a result of the effects of climate change and increasing exposure and vulnerability to risks, and that most countries still lack effective disaster preparedness mechanisms that would enable them to respond effectively an... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 39. We call upon States to strengthen their preparedness for disasters, with a view to their inclusion, so that response measures can be effective and that they can be strengthened during the recovery, rehabilitation and reconstruction phase, including by:
(a) Prepare, review and test national and local disaster respon... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 40. We commit ourselves to responding to the calls for action contained in this political declaration and to promoting a disaster risk-sensitive approach to sustainable development at the local, national, regional and global levels and to accelerating progress in integrating disaster risk reduction into policies, progr... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 41. We reaffirm the critical and cross-cutting role of science, technology and innovation in enhancing the effectiveness and efficiency of disaster resilience measures and call for their increased application to support and accelerate the implementation of the Sendai Framework and its four priority actions. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 42. We consider that the outcome of the mid-term review of the Sendai Framework and the present political declaration can be a contribution to other outcomes of major United Nations intergovernmental conferences and summits in the economic, social and environmental fields. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 43. We look forward to the holding of global and regional platforms for disaster risk reduction before 2030, which will assess and review progress and provide practical guidance for the implementation of the Sendai Framework, including with regard to the implementation of this political declaration. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 45. We welcome the progress made and note with appreciation the progress report issued by the High-level Panel on the Development of a Multidimensional Vulnerability Index for Small Island Developing States, look forward to the completion of this work and call upon the international community to consider making multidi... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 46. We will invest in the capacity-building and capacity-building of developing countries, including the least developed countries, landlocked developing countries and small island developing States, in disaster risk reduction, through increased investment and capacity-building programmes at the national, regional and ... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 47. We believe that North-South cooperation, complemented by South-South and triangular cooperation, is a key element in disaster risk reduction and that further strengthening of such cooperation is therefore needed. | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 49. We call upon the relevant entities of the United Nations system, within their respective mandates, to strengthen their support for the implementation of the Sendai Framework and the calls for action contained in this political declaration, and we call for the integration of disaster risk reduction into common count... | operative |
A-RES-77-289-fr-parsed | 50. We call upon the relevant entities of the United Nations system to strengthen their technical support, upon request, for the development of disaster risk reduction standards, laws and regulations; for overall risk governance; and for the collection, distribution and distribution of data. | operative |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.