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E-RES-2018-12-fr-parsed | 28. Stresses that social change in urban and rural areas is characterized by an increase in the urban population and the number of migrants, young people and older persons in many places, and urges Governments at all levels to consider the impact of demographic change on urban governance, municipal and local financing ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-12-fr-parsed | 29. Also stresses that, regardless of the model or degree of decentralization of a country, both central and local governments have a responsibility to achieve sustainable development goals, and that it is essential that they work together in a spirit of collaboration and partnership; | operative |
E-RES-2018-12-fr-parsed | 31. Recognizes that information and communications technologies have transformative power, and welcomes the increasing use of such technologies by Governments to provide public services and perform other functions and to involve the public in decision-making, while recognizing that the digital divide persists in many f... | operative |
E-RES-2018-12-fr-parsed | 32. Requests the Committee, at its eighteenth session, to be held from 8 to 12 April 2019, to consider the theme selected for the 2019 session of the Board and to make recommendations thereon; | operative |
E-RES-2018-12-fr-parsed | 33. Invites the Committee to contribute to the thematic review of the High-level Political Forum and to contribute to the overall review of the implementation of the sustainable development goals to be undertaken by the Forum in 2019, paying particular attention to the multisectoral nature of all objectives; | operative |
E-RES-2018-12-fr-parsed | 34. Also invites the Committee to continue to provide advice on methods and practices relating to institutions, policies and mechanisms for the achievement of sustainable development goals, bearing in mind that circumstances and situations vary greatly from country to country, as well as advice on how to make instituti... | operative |
E-RES-2018-12-fr-parsed | 35. Requests the Secretary-General to take into account all the provisions of the present resolution in the work of the Organization, inter alia, by addressing research and analytical gaps and by addressing the capacity-building needs of Member States in order to create, at all levels, adequate and effective capacity-b... | operative |
E-RES-2018-14-fr-parsed | 2. Invites Member States, relevant public administrations, United Nations agencies, international organizations, donors, the private sector, academia and non-governmental organizations working in the field of disaster risk reduction and management to adopt, in accordance with their mandates, the Strategic Framework on ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-14-fr-parsed | 10. The following objectives are proposed to assist Member States in assessing their progress towards achieving the outcome and objective of the Strategic Framework:
(a) Policy makers and relevant entities are aware of the importance of geospatial information and services for disaster risk management; the review, monit... | operative |
E-RES-2018-14-fr-parsed | 11. The Strategic Framework builds on the principles set out in the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015-2030); General Assembly resolutions 59/212 and 69/243 of 23 December 2014, entitled "International cooperation in humanitarian assistance in the field of natural disasters: from relief to development";... | operative |
E-RES-2018-14-fr-parsed | (c) The implementation of the Framework should promote the exchange, interoperability and harmonization of data among neighbouring countries in order to ensure effective response to transboundary disasters;
(d) The implementation of the Framework should be consistent with or contribute to the development of national ge... | operative |
E-RES-2018-14-fr-parsed | 14. The management of geospatial information and services in the event of disasters must be based on good governance and science-based policies, which should be an integral part of other equally important policies on awareness-raising and capacity-building, data management, infrastructure and services and resource mobi... | operative |
E-RES-2018-14-fr-parsed | 31. The Committee of Experts on Global Geospatial Information Management must play a leading role in the development of the global geospatial information and services development agenda and in promoting the use of geospatial information and services to address global problems, thus being well placed to contribute to se... | operative |
E-RES-2018-14-fr-parsed | 32. The relevant United Nations entities should contribute to the implementation of the core principles of the Strategic Framework and should establish a monitoring and evaluation system to ensure the relevance of projects, programmes and activities implemented by Governments and public bodies to international agreemen... | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 5. Decides also that the high-level segment of the Fourteenth Congress shall be held during the first two days of the Congress in order to enable Heads of State or Government and Ministers to discuss the main theme of the Congress and to promote useful exchanges; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 7. Takes note with appreciation of the draft discussion guide prepared by the Secretary-General, in cooperation with the institutes of the United Nations crime prevention and criminal justice programme network, for the regional preparatory meetings and the Fourteenth Congress; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 8. Requests the Secretary-General to finalize the discussion guide in a timely manner, taking into account the recommendations of the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, as well as comments and other reactions from Member States, so that the regional preparatory meetings for the Fourteenth Congress can... | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 10. Urges Governments to participate actively in the regional preparatory meetings, as appropriate, and to invite their representatives to consider the substantive agenda items and themes of the workshops of the Fourteenth Congress and to make action-oriented recommendations to the Congress; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 13. Also reiterates its invitation to Member States to play an active role at the Fourteenth Congress by detaching legal and political experts, including practitioners who have received specialized training and practical experience in crime prevention and criminal justice; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 14. Requests the Secretary-General to encourage the participation of representatives of relevant organizations of the United Nations system in the Fourteenth Congress, bearing in mind the main theme, agenda items and topics of the workshops of the Congress; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 15. Also requests the Secretary-General to facilitate, subject to the availability of extrabudgetary resources, the participation of developing countries in the workshops, and encourages States, the institutes of the United Nations crime prevention and criminal justice programme network, other interested entities and t... | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 17. Requests the Secretary-General to prepare a plan for the documentation of the Fourteenth Congress, in consultation with the extended Bureau of the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 19. Requests the Secretary-General to appoint, in accordance with established practice, a Secretary-General and an Executive Secretary of the Fourteenth Congress to perform their functions in accordance with the rules of procedure of the United Nations congresses on crime prevention and criminal justice; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 20. Also requests the Secretary-General to provide the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime with the necessary resources from the programme budget for the biennium 2018-2019 and the programme budget for 2020 for the preparation and holding of the Fourteenth Congress; | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 22. Requests the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice to devote sufficient time, at its twenty-eighth session, to reviewing the progress made in the preparations for the fourteenth Congress, to make all necessary organizational and technical arrangements in a timely manner and to make its recommendations... | operative |
E-RES-2018-16-fr-parsed | 23. Requests the Secretary-General to ensure appropriate follow-up to the present resolution and to report thereon to the General Assembly through the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice at its twenty-eighth session. | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 1. Calls for the full opening of border crossings in the Gaza Strip, in accordance with Security Council resolution 1860 (2009), to ensure the access of humanitarian personnel and the regular movement of persons and goods, and for the lifting of all restrictions on the freedom of movement imposed on the Palestinian peo... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 2. Stresses the need to preserve the territorial continuity, unity and integrity of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and to ensure the free movement of persons and goods throughout the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and to and from the outside world; | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 3. Also stresses the need to preserve and strengthen Palestinian national institutions and infrastructure to ensure the provision of essential public services to the Palestinian civilian population and to contribute to the promotion and protection of human rights, including economic and social rights; | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 5. Calls upon Israel to rehabilitate and replace civilian property, critical infrastructure, agricultural land and administrative services damaged or destroyed as a result of its military operations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory; | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 7. Calls upon all parties to respect the rules of international humanitarian law and to refrain from resorting to violence against the civilian population, in accordance with the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 12 August 1949; 2 | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 8. Reaffirms the inalienable right of the Palestinian people and the Arab population of the occupied Syrian Golan to all their natural and economic resources, and calls upon Israel, the occupying Power, not to exploit, endanger, destroy or exhaust them; | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 9. Calls upon Israel, the occupying Power, to cease the destruction of homes and property, economic institutions, agricultural lands and orchards in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, as well as in the occupied Syrian Golan, and to prevent Israeli settlers from engaging in such illegal activi... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 10. Also calls upon Israel, the occupying Power, to cease immediately the exploitation of natural, mining and water resources, inter alia, and to put an end to the dumping of all kinds of waste in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and in the occupied Syrian Golan, which poses a dangerous thr... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 12. Reaffirms that the establishment and expansion of Israeli settlements and related infrastructure in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and in the occupied Syrian Golan are illegal and constitute a major obstacle to economic and social development and the establishment of peace, and calls ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 13. Calls for the accountability of Israeli settlers who have committed illegal acts in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, recalls in this regard Security Council resolution 904 (1994) of 18 March 1994, and stresses the need to implement it; | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 14. Calls for urgent attention to the suffering and rights of prisoners and detainees under international law, and calls for efforts by both parties to continue to release prisoners and detainees, and deplores the practice of holding the remains, and calls for their return to families, where this has not yet been done,... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 15. Reaffirms that Israel's continued construction of a wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including in and around East Jerusalem, is contrary to international law and leads to the isolation of East Jerusalem, carves the West Bank and seriously undermines the economic and social development of the Palestinian ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 16. Calls upon Israel to respect the provisions of the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War and to facilitate the passage through Qouneitra of Syrian citizens in the occupied Syrian Golan wishing to visit their family members residing in the territory of their mother country, ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 17. Stresses the importance of the work of the United Nations bodies and agencies present in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and of the United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process and Personal Representative of the Secretary-General to the Palestine Liberation Orga... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 18. Welcomes the commitment of the Secretary-General and the United Nations Special Coordinator to participate, in cooperation with relevant partners, in addressing urgent humanitarian, economic development and infrastructure needs, including in the implementation of projects endorsed by the Special Liaison Committee f... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 19. Expresses its appreciation to Member States, the United Nations system and intergovernmental, regional and non-governmental organizations that have provided and continue to provide economic and humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian people, thereby contributing to the improvement of their dire economic and soci... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 20. Reaffirms the importance of intensifying and reinvigorating the negotiations of the peace process on the basis of the relevant United Nations resolutions, including resolutions 242 (1967), 338 (1973), 425 (1978), 1397 (2002), 1515 (2003), 1544 (2004), 1850 (2008) and 2334 (2016) of the Security Council, the Madrid ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 21. Requests the Secretary-General, through him, to submit to the General Assembly at its seventy-third session a report on the implementation of the present resolution and to continue to include in the report of the United Nations Special Coordinator an updated status of the living conditions of the Palestinian people... | operative |
E-RES-2018-20-fr-parsed | 22. Decides to include in the agenda of its 2019 session the item entitled "Economic and social repercussions of the Israeli occupation on the living conditions of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and of the Arab population in the occupied Syrian Golan". | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 1. The year 2018 marks the sixtieth anniversary of the establishment of the Economic Commission for Africa. The opportunity is open to reflection on the role of the Commission as a protagonist of the African institutional landscape in the face of the challenges of the continent's development. Significant progress has b... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 2. The realignment of the Commission's activities in line with the requirements of the Member States is an essential element of our success and raison d'être. As part of the implementation of its mandate, the Commission has carried out periodic reviews of the state of African development, placing on its organizational ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 4. The characteristics of this regional growth mean that large segments of the population continue to suffer from poverty and vulnerability. The deep inequalities that persist throughout the continent have economic, social and political consequences. | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 9. The role of the private sector in financing Africa's development will continue to grow in importance and can provide the continent with the innovative and efficient means to develop its infrastructure and other solutions, and most importantly, by relying on private financing, Africa will be able to mobilize the tril... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 10. The level of poverty and inequality, regardless of how it is measured, remains very high in most of the continent. Accelerated rates of poverty reduction and persistent inequalities across the continent will contribute to social and political stability, stimulate economic growth, improve productivity and raise livi... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 11. The commitment of African Governments to implement the regional integration programme and, more generally, to accelerate economic integration, including through the establishment of the African Continental Free Trade Area and the implementation of the Plan of Action for the intensification of intra-African trade, i... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 14. The Commission's contribution to the implementation of the 2030 Agenda and Agenda 2063 is structured around the three key aspects of its work: its advocacy function, its think tank function and its operational function, as set out below: | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | (a) The advocacy function is to convene, at the regional level and for specific purposes, intergovernmental and multi-stakeholder platforms that are widely open to ownership by member States, regional organizations and development banks, as well as to identify agreed development frameworks, standards and action plans, ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 17. The Commission's vision, which is based on the formulation of ideas and actions to promote an autonomous, inclusive and transformed Africa, is informed by the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and Agenda 2063 of the African Union, which is based on the Commission's three fundamental functions: its role as a t... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 20. The strategic directions will be implemented on the basis of the Commission ' s programmes by the Commission ' s divisions, and in its activities the Commission intends to go beyond the focus on the public sector and to actively include in its operational modalities and action ideas and measures aimed at deepening ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 21. The Commission will also work with member States on both normative and practical aspects of their state-building, through the establishment of strong governance systems, including by placing greater emphasis on issues of vulnerability, risk and capacity in conflict and post-conflict countries, with a view to streng... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 23. The modalities for implementation will be aligned with the role of the Commission as a policy think tank dedicated to multisectoral research and analysis in relation to the three pillars of sustainable development; they will also be consistent with the Commission's role as a forum for mobilizing platforms and inter... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 24. The five subregional offices of the Commission will specialize in certain areas, which will enable them to address more effectively the development concerns and challenges faced by member States in their respective subregions; the capacities and resources of the African Institute for Economic Development and Planni... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 25. The following changes to the Commission ' s programmes are planned:
(a) Subprogramme 1: The previous emphasis on macroeconomic policy will be expanded to include economic governance issues and support for the African Peer Review Mechanism, which was previously under the capacity development subprogramme, and the pr... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 26. The repositioning of the Commission is being undertaken in response to the changing global and regional dynamics, including the new African macroeconomic environment, the global and continental development frameworks, or the reforms envisaged by the United Nations, and the proposed strategic directions and programm... | operative |
E-RES-2018-23-fr-parsed | 27. The implementation of those proposals would enable the Economic Commission for Africa to become more effective and efficient in serving the rest of the United Nations, its member States and regional institutions, and would enable it to take the Secretary-General's lead in the reform of the Secretariat and the empha... | operative |
E-RES-2018-25-fr-parsed | 2. Notes with satisfaction the announcement by the Government of Indonesia that it will lead and support the transformation of the Centre into a new intergovernmental organization not affiliated with the United Nations system and that other members of the Governing Council have proposed to support this transition proce... | operative |
E-RES-2018-25-fr-parsed | 7. Requests the Executive Secretary:
(a) To take all necessary administrative and legal measures, as appropriate, by 30 June 2018, to assist the Centre, previously a subsidiary body, in its transformation into a new organization;
(b) To cooperate with the new organization and to continue this partnership, as appropriat... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 2. Welcomes the constructive and multi-stakeholder participation of all stakeholders in the comprehensive review of progress made in the implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit on the Information Society; 1 | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 3. Reaffirms its commitment to the full implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit and the vision of the post-2015 information society defined ten years after the World Summit; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 5. Calls for close alignment of the follow-up to the outcomes of the World Summit with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development 5 , in line with the request contained in General Assembly resolution 70/125, with a focus on the cross-sectoral contribution of digital technologies to the achievement of sustainable devel... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 7. Recognizes that the information and communications technology infrastructure is essential for achieving the goal of digital access and that digital gaps remain between income and age groups, geographical regions and between women and men, therefore reaffirms its commitment to target 9.c of the 2030 Agenda, which aim... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 8. Welcomes the remarkable development and dissemination, through the public and private sectors, of digital technologies, which have spread throughout the world and have created new opportunities for social interaction, created new business models and contributed to the economic growth and development of all other sec... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 9. Notes with concern that there are still significant digital gaps between and within countries and between women and men, which need to be bridged, inter alia, by creating more favourable conditions and strengthening international cooperation in order to improve affordability, access, education, capacity-building, mu... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 10. Encourages the Commission on Science and Technology for Development to continue to give due attention to the impact of major rapid developments in technology on the achievement of sustainable development goals, within its various mandates and available resources, in accordance with the provisions of General Assembl... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 11. Welcomes the holding of World Press Freedom Day, proclaimed by the General Assembly and organized on 3 May 2018 under the auspices of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 13. Notes the continued implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit, in particular its multi-stakeholder nature, the role played in this regard by the lead agencies that facilitate the implementation of policy directions, and the role of the regional commissions, the regional review projects resulting from the W... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 14. Recognizes the values and principles of cooperation and dialogue among the various stakeholders that have traditionally characterized the follow-up to the outcomes of the World Summit and are clearly recognized in the 2030 Agenda, and notes that many activities in support of the goals of the World Summit and the su... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 15. Encourages the World Summit follow-up and review teams and the Technology Facilitation Mechanism, including the Multi-stakeholder Collaborative Forum on Science, Technology and Innovation for Sustainable Development, to continue to collaborate, and stresses the importance of such collaboration; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 16. Takes note of the reports of many United Nations entities submitted to the Commission on Science and Technology for Development in the context of the preparation of the annual report of the Secretary-General of the United Nations and published on its website, as requested in General Assembly resolution 2007/8 of 25... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 17. Also takes note of the implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit at the regional level with the assistance of the regional commissions, as recognized by the Secretary-General in his report on progress made in the implementation of and follow-up to the outcomes of the World Summit at the regional and intern... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 18. Reaffirms the importance of continuing to coordinate the multi-stakeholder implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit through effective tools, with the aim of fostering collaboration and partnership among all stakeholders, including international organizations, sharing information from key agencies and othe... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 19. Encourages all stakeholders to continue to feed into the database on the achievement of the goals agreed at the World Summit managed by the International Telecommunication Union, and invites United Nations entities to update information on their initiatives contained in the database; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 20. Stresses the urgent need to integrate the recommendations contained in the outcomes of the World Summit into the revised guidelines for United Nations country teams on the preparation of the common country assessments and the United Nations Development Assistance Frameworks, including the inclusion of a component o... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 21. Recalls General Assembly resolution 60/252 of 27 March 2006, in which the Assembly requested the Council to monitor system-wide the implementation of the outcomes of the Geneva and Tunis phases of the World Summit; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 23. Invites all States to refrain, in their efforts to build the information society, from taking unilateral measures that would be contrary to international law and the Charter of the United Nations, impede the full economic and social development of the countries concerned and undermine the well-being of their inhabi... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 24. Welcomes the fact that the rapid growth in mobile and broadband telephony since 2005 is expected to provide nearly two thirds of the world's population with access to information and communications technologies, 95 per cent of the world's population with mobile cellular networks (7.74 billion mobile telephone subsc... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 25. Notes with deep concern that many developing countries do not have affordable access to information and communication technologies and that the promise of development of science and technology, including information and communications technologies, has not yet been realized for the majority of the poor, and stresse... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 26. Recognizes that, while information and communication technologies offer new opportunities, they also pose new challenges, and that there is an urgent need to address the main obstacles to developing countries' access to new technologies, such as lack of enabling conditions, inadequate resources, infrastructure, edu... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 27. Recognizes the rapid growth of broadband access networks, especially in developed countries, and stresses the urgent need to bridge the digital divide between and among high-income, middle-income, low-income and other regions in terms of the availability and affordability of broadband, as well as quality of access ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 28. Recognizes that the ongoing transition to a mobile technology-dominated communications environment profoundly alters the business models of operators and requires a rethinking of the individual and collective use of networks and devices, as well as public strategies and ways of putting communications networks at th... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 29. Recognizes that, despite all developments and advances in some respects, information and communications technologies and their applications in many developing countries remain inaccessible or unaffordable to the majority of the population, especially in rural areas; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 30. Also recognizes that the number of Internet users is increasing and that, in some cases, the digital divide and the knowledge gap are changing in nature, focusing less on the availability of access than on the quality of access and on the information and know-how that users can obtain and the benefits that they can... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 31. Stresses in this regard the critical importance of multilingualism and local content in the information society, and calls upon all stakeholders to encourage the creation of and access to educational, cultural and scientific content online, with a view to promoting the quality of access and ensuring that everyone, ... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 32. Recognizes the importance of building human capacity, creating an enabling environment and resilient digital infrastructure, promoting multi-stakeholder partnerships and assisting countries to make greater use of information and communication technology opportunities for achieving sustainable development goals, and... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 33. Urges continued efforts to make the best use of e-commerce to promote development through initiatives such as "eTrade for All", which provides for a new strategy for trade development through e-commerce by facilitating the use of technical assistance for developing countries to strengthen the capacity to access e-c... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 35. Welcomes the holding of the first and second sessions of the Intergovernmental Group of Experts on Electronic Commerce and the Digital Economy, takes note of the agreed recommendations of the first session 6 and looks forward to the second session; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 36. Takes note of the global report of the Commission on Broadband for Sustainable Development entitled The State of Broadband 2017: Broadband Catalysing Sustainable Development, and notes with interest the ongoing efforts of the Commission to convince the highest level of the need to create conditions conducive to bro... | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 37. Also takes note of the launch by the Commission "Broadband for Sustainable Development" of the 2025 targets to "connect the other half of the world", that is, the 3.8 billion people who still do not have access to the Internet; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 38. Recognizes that the digital economy can do a great deal for the social well-being, the implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit and the achievement of sustainable development goals; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 39. Welcomes the numerous initiatives taken by the United Nations system to facilitate the implementation of the policy directions agreed at the World Summit, and calls upon all the facilitating agencies to continue their efforts in this regard; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 40. Also welcomes the work of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization within the framework of the Information for All Programme, which aims to assist Member States in taking the necessary steps to bridge the digital divide and promote equitable knowledge societies; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 42. Recognizes the work done by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations to promote digital inclusion in Africa and other regions of the world with a view to contributing to poverty reduction and food security; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 44. Notes with appreciation the work of the Global eHealth Observatory, an entity of the World Health Organization, including its studies on how mobile health, telehealth, electronic medical records and e-learning tools can contribute to achieving universal health coverage; | operative |
E-RES-2018-28-fr-parsed | 45. Notes with deep concern that women are less likely than men to use the Internet at a rate of 12 per cent, and even 33 per cent in the least developed countries, draws attention to the gender digital divide, which persists in terms of access to and use of digital technologies, including education, employment and oth... | operative |
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