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United Nations Economic and Social Council

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Template:Infobox legislature The United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) is one of six principal organs of the United Nations, responsible for coordinating the economic and social fields of the organization, specifically in regards to the fifteen specialized agencies, the eight functional commissions, and the five regional commissions under its jurisdiction.

ECOSOC serves as the central forum for discussing international economic and social issues, and formulating policy recommendations addressed to member states and the United Nations System.[1] It has 54 members.[2] In addition to a rotating membership of 54 UN member states, over 1,600 nongovernmental organizations have consultative status with the Council to participate in the work of the United Nations.[3]

ECOSOC holds one four-week session each year in July, and since 1998 has also held an annual meeting in April with finance ministers of heading key committees of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Additionally, the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF), which reviews the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, is convened under the auspices of the Council every July.[4]

The members of ECOSOC are responsible for electing the executive board of UNICEF, the council of the United Nations Development Programme, the committee of UNHCR, and various commissions and other bodies under its jurisdiction. ECOSOC is also responsible for tasks such as reviewing and updating the UN list of least developed countries.[5][6][7]

President

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The president of the Council is elected for a one-year term and chosen from the small or medium sized states represented on the Council at the beginning of each new session.[8] The presidency rotates among the United Nations Regional Groups to ensure equal representation.[9]

His Excellency Bob Rae was elected the eightieth President of the Economic and Social Council for the 2025 Session on 25 July 2024. Paula Narváez, Representative of Chile, was elected as the seventy-ninth president of the Council on 27 July 2023. She succeeded Lachezara Stoeva, who was elected as the seventy-eighth president of the Council on 25 July 2022,[10] succeeding Collen Vixen Kelapile of Botswana.[11]

Members

Template:See also The Council consists of 54 Member States, which are elected yearly by the General Assembly for overlapping three-year terms. Seats on the Council are allocated ensuring equitable geographic rotation among the United Nations regional groups.[12][13] Outgoing members are eligible for immediate re-election, and some seats are held by de facto permanent members.

History

In 1945 when the United Nations Charter was originally signed, the Economic and Social Council consisted of 18 seats. The formal concept of the United Nations Regional Groups did not yet exist, and unlike the Security Council, there was no "gentlemen's agreement" between the superpowers to assign ECOSOC seats. Regardless, with 4 exceptions out of 102 elections (see list), a relatively stable pattern emerged and held until 1960:[14]Template:Efn

As the number of United Nations members grew with decolonization, the pattern began to break down starting in 1961, with nations in Africa winning elections to seats formerly held by Western Europe and the Republic of China (Taiwan).[14]Template:Efn

In 1965, the Charter was amended to increase the size of ECOSOC to 27 seats, and the Regional Groups were formally introduced. The seat distribution became:[15]

In 1973, the Charter was amended again to increase the size of ECOSOC to 54 seats. The seat distribution became:[15]

Current members

Term African States Asia-Pacific States Eastern European
States
Latin American &
Caribbean States
Western European &
Other States
2025 – 2027[16] Template:Flag
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2024 – 2026[17][18] Template:Flag
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2023 – 2025 Template:Flag
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Total Countries

54

14 11 6 (currently 5, 1 vacant) 10 13

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Observer Inter-Governmental Autonomous Organisations

Participation on a continuing basis:[19] Template:Columns-list

Participation on an ad hoc basis:[19] Template:Columns-list

Commissions

Functional commissions

Active

The following are the active functional commission of the Council:[20][21]

Disbanded

The following commissions were disbanded by the Council and replaced by other bodies:

Regional commissions

The following are the active regional commissions of the Council:[21]

The key goal of the regional commissions is to “raise the [regional] level of economic activity”; none of the regional commission has in its founding mandate a reference to sustainability or to the environmental dimension of development.[26]

All UN regional commissions have expanded their activities to work toward achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). They increasingly include a concern for the environmental and social dimensions of development, along with their traditional economic focus. They have set standards for SDG implementation by providing (financial) support through reporting guidelines, performance indicators, and other managerial tools. However, their limited resources force them to prioritize; diverse sets of priorities in the region only partially overlap with the SDGs.[26]

The regional commissions seek to link the global ambitions of the SDGs with regional actors, contexts, and priorities. In practice, however, when it comes to agenda setting, the regional commissions mostly seek to balance the new global agenda with their regional priorities and prior agendas.[26]

Committees and other bodies

The following are some of the other bodies that the Council oversees in some capacity:[21]

Standing committees

Expert bodies

Other subsidiary bodies

  • System Chief Executives Board for Coordination (CEB)
  • High-Level Committee on Management (HLCM)
  • High-Level Committee on Programmes (HLCP)

Specialized agencies

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The specialized agencies of the United Nations are autonomous organizations working within the United Nations System, meaning that while they report their activities to the Economic and Social Council, they are mostly free to their own devices. Some were created before the United Nations existed and were integrated into the system, others were created by the League of Nations and were integrated by its successor, while others were created by the United Nations itself to meet emerging needs.[27] Each agency must negotiate with the Council as to what their relationship will look and work like. This leads to a system where different organizations maintain different types of relationships with the Council.[28][29] For example, Template:Clarify span the members of ECOSOC were responsible for granting a state admission to UNESCO,[30][31] but now this is done by the members of UNESCO themselves.

The following is a list of the specialized agencies reporting to the Council:[32]

Template:AnchorWorld Economic & Social Survey 2011: Great Green Technological Transform

In a report issued in early July 2011, the UN called for spending nearly US$2  trillion on green technologies to prevent what it termed "a major planetary catastrophe", warning that "It is rapidly expanding energy use, mainly driven by fossil fuels, that explains why humanity is on the verge of breaching planetary sustainability boundaries through global warming, biodiversity loss, and disturbance of the nitrogen-cycle balance and other measures of the sustainability of the earth's ecosystem".[33]

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon added: "Rather than viewing growth and sustainability as competing goals on a collision course, we must see them as complementary and mutually supportive imperatives". The report concluded that "Business as usual is not an option".[34]

Reforms

The governance of the multilateral system has historically been complex and fragmented. This has limited the capacity of ECOSOC to influence international policies in trade, finance, and investment. Reform proposals aim to enhance the relevance and contribution of the council. A major reform was approved by the 2005 World Summit based on proposals submitted by secretary-general Kofi Annan.[35] The Summit aimed to establish ECOSOC as a quality platform for high-level engagement among member states and with international financial institutions, the private sector, and civil society on global trends, policies, and action. It resolved to hold biennial high-level Development Cooperation Forums at the national-leadership level, transforming the high-level segment of the Council to review trends in international development cooperation and promote greater coherence in development activities. At the Summit it was also decided to hold annual ministerial-level substantive reviews to assess progress in achieving internationally agreed on development goals (particularly the Millennium Development Goals). These "Annual Ministerial Reviews" will be replaced by the High-Level Political Forum from 2016 onwards after the new post-MDG/post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals are agreed upon.[36]

Subsequent proposals by the High-Level Panel Report on System-Wide Coherence in November 2006 aimed to establish a forum within the ECOSOC as a counter-model to the exclusive clubs of the G8 and G20. The Forum was to comprise 27 heads of state (L27, corresponding to half of ECOSOC's membership) to meet annually and provide international leadership in the development area. This proposal however, was not approved by the General Assembly.[37]

Society and culture

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The Economic and Social Council Chamber in the United Nations Conference Building was a gift from Sweden. It was conceived by Swedish architect Sven Markelius, one of the 11 architects in the international team that designed the UN headquarters. Wood from Swedish pine trees was used in the delegates' area for the railings and doors.[38]Template:Rp The pipes and ducts in the ceiling above the public gallery were deliberately left exposed; the architect believed that anything useful could be left uncovered. The "unfinished" ceiling is a symbolic reminder that the economic and social work of the United Nations is never finished; there will always be something more that can be done to improve living conditions for the world's people.[38]Template:RpTemplate:Citation needed

See also

Notes

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References

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External links

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  1. Template:Cite web
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  5. UN Document E/1981/81 Resolutions and decisions of the Economic and Social Council, organizational session for 1981, New York, 3-6 February 1981, 1st regular session of 1981, New York, 14 April - 8 May 1981. "1981/134. Elections, appointments and nominations to subsidiary and related bodies of the Council"
  6. UN Document A/RES/61/136 Enlargement of the Executive Committee of the Programme of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
  7. UN Document E/2007/99 Resolutions and decisions of the Economic and Social Council : organizational session for 2007, New York, 17 and 22 January, 6, 9 and 15 February, 2 and 15 March and 16 April 2007; resumed organizational session for 2007, New York, 25 and 26 April and 24 May 2007; substantive session of 2007, Geneva, 2-27 July 2007; resumed substantive session of 2007, New York, 4 and 17 October 2007 "2007/201. Elections, nominations, confirmations and appointments to subsidiary and related bodies of the Economic and Social Council"
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  14. 14.0 14.1 Gregg, Robert W. “The Economic and Social Council: Politics of Membership.” The Western Political Quarterly, vol. 16, no. 1, 1963, pp. 109–32. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/445962. Accessed 5 Mar. 2024.
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  19. 19.0 19.1 ECOSOC observers, Part V Template:Webarchive
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  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 Template:Cite journal Text was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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  30. Sharp, Walter R. “Decisionmaking in the Economic and Social Council.” International Organization, vol. 22, no. 4, 1968, pp. 881–901. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2705848. Accessed 14 Sept. 2024.
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  35. Ian Williams, "Annan has paid his dues". The Guardian, 19 September 2005
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  38. 38.0 38.1 Template:Cite web