You are here

Feed aggregator

The World Social Summit in Doha: Time to Act

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 18:45

Session of the Second World Summit for Social Development in Doha

By Isabel Ortiz
DOHA, Nov 12 2025 (IPS)

Qatar hosted the Second World Summit for Social Development from 4–6 November. According to the United Nations, more than 40 Heads of State and Government, 230 ministers and senior officials, and nearly 14,000 attendees took part. Beyond plenaries and roundtables, more than 250 “solution sessions” identified practical ways to advance universal rights to food, housing, decent work, social protection or social security, education, health, care systems and other public services, international labor standards, and the fight against poverty and inequality.

In these difficult times for multilateralism, the summit delivered a global agreement, the Doha Political Declaration, that many feared would not materialize. The UN Secretary-General António Guterres called the text a “booster shot for development,” urging leaders to deliver a “people’s plan” that tackles inequality, creates decent work and rebuilds social trust.

Isabel Ortiz

The summit inevitably invited comparison with the 1995 World Social Summit in Copenhagen, a genuinely visionary summit that set the bar high with 117 Heads of State and Government. Thirty years on, the Doha Declaration is largely a recommitment to earlier agreements. Its first drafts lacked vision and, while significantly improved, the text remains uninspiring. The drop in top-level attendance—from 117 to just over 40—was widely noted in the corridors of the Doha Convention Center. This absence, especially from high-income countries, raises questions about shared responsibility for the Doha consensus and for the universal Sustainable Development Goals.

Even so, veteran voices urged pragmatism. Both the Copenhagen Declaration and Doha’s recommitment are workable texts to advance social justice. While not the ideal many hoped for, the Doha outcome addresses the key issues—and, above all, constitutes an international consensus adopted by all countries amid a crisis of multilateralism.

Juan Somavía, former UN-Under Secretary General and a driving force behind the 1995 Summit, welcomed the Doha’s Declaration as a meaningful foundation to move the agenda forward. Roberto Bissio, coordinator of Social Watch and a lead participant in Copenhagen, added “Let’s revive hope in these turbulent times… Now in Doha our governments are renewing their pledges of three decades ago, and adding new commitments that we welcome, to reduce inequalities, to promote care and to ensure universal social protection, which is a Human Right.”

However, Somavia, Bissio and many UN and civil society leaders in Doha, also stressed the distance between pledges and delivery. The pressure mounted through the week. At the closing, UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said that the message from unions, civil society and youth was unequivocal: people expect results, not rhetoric. “The outcomes of this Summit provide a strong foundation,” she said. “What matters most now is implementation.”

The test now is whether governments will translate the Doha declaration into action: budgets, laws and programs that reach people. Magdalena Sepulveda, Director of UNRISD, called for bold political action: “What we need now is that states are going to take the political will to implement the Doha Declaration in a swift manner with bold measures.”

The trend, however, is moving the other way, as many governments adopt austerity cuts and have limited funding for social development. More than 6.7 billion people or 85% of the world’s population suffer austerity, and 84% of countries have cut investment in education, health and social protection, fueling protests and social conflict. “The concept of the welfare state is being eroded before our eyes in the face of an ideological commitment to austerity and a shrinking state” said Amitabh Behar, Executive Director of Oxfam International. “A wave of youth-led Gen Z protests is sweeping the world. A recurring slogan during the recent protests in Morocco was ‘We want hospitals, not stadiums’… Public services are being dismantled while wealth is hoarded at the top. The social contract will not survive this neglect.”

The good news is that governments do have ways to finance the Doha commitments. Austerity is not inevitable; there are alternatives. There are at least nine financing options for social development: raise progressive taxes (such as on corporate profits, finance, high wealth, property, and digital services); curb illicit financial flows; reduce or restructure debt; increase employers contributions to social security and formalize employment; reallocate spending away from high-cost, low-impact items such as defense; use fiscal and foreign-exchange reserves; increase aid and transfers; adopt more flexible macroeconomic frameworks; and approve new allocations of Special Drawing Rights. In a world awash with money yet marked by stark inequality, finding the funds is a matter of political will. In short: austerity is a choice, not a necessity.

History will not judge Doha by its communiqués but by whether the promises made—on rights, jobs and equity—reach people. Implementation is feasible, as there are financing options even in the poorest countries. If leaders go ahead, Doha will be remembered not as an echo of 1995, but as the moment words gave way to action.

Isabel Ortiz, Director, Global Social Justice, was Director at the International Labor Organization (ILO) and UNICEF, and a senior official at the UN and the Asian Development Bank.

IPS UN Bureau

 


!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+'://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js';fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');  
Categories: Africa

French MPs freeze Macron’s pension reform until after 2027 elections

Euractiv.com - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 18:34
The suspension will affect around 650,000 people in 2026 and a similar number in 2027
Categories: European Union

At least six die in crush at Ghana military recruitment event

BBC Africa - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 18:21
Thousands had turned up to El-Wak stadium, in the capital Accra, with hopes of being enlisted.
Categories: Africa

À Rennes, la gauche se met en ordre de bataille, loin de LFI

La Tribune - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 18:14
Face aux appétits des oppositions du centre et de la droite qui rêvent de faire tomber ce bastion socialiste, les écologistes soutiennent le principe d’une candidature commune avec le PS dès le premier tour. La maire Nathalie Appéré pourrait briguer un troisième mandat.
Categories: France

Irish watchdog opens content moderation probe into Elon Musk’s X

Euractiv.com - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 18:00
The investigation focuses on how the social media platform handles user appeals against content moderation decisions under the bloc's Digital Services Act
Categories: European Union

Why Did Asian Countries Give Trump So Much on Trade?

Foreign Policy - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:59
The new deals contain unusual concessions that could change the flow of goods in Asia.

L'Assemblée nationale vote largement la « suspension » de la réforme des retraites

La Tribune - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:59
L'Assemblée nationale a approuvé mercredi largement la « suspension » de la réforme des retraites, condition sine qua non de la non-censure du gouvernement de Sébastien Lecornu par les socialistes.
Categories: France

Réforme des retraites : ce que la suspension implique pour les salariés

La Tribune - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:52
Les députés ont voté ce mercredi en faveur de la suspension de la réforme des retraites ainsi que pour son élargissement aux carrières longues et à certaines catégories de la fonction publique jusqu'en 2028. La facture pourrait s'alourdir de 1,9 milliard sur les comptes de la Sécurité sociale en 2027.
Categories: France

EU lawmakers agree on quick fix for food chain rules

Euractiv.com - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:50
EU retailers fear the regulation could trap them in legal limbo
Categories: European Union

Énergies fossiles : la demande ne s’effondre pas, prévient l’AIE

La Tribune - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:46
Selon le dernier rapport annuel de l’Agence internationale de l’énergie, si la demande en renouvelables connaît une hausse sans précédent dans le monde, celle du pétrole ne va pas s'effondrer pour autant. Explications.
Categories: France

La stratégie de 2016 a échoué : Bouzred explique comment 2026 sera l’année du « concret » pour l’Algérie

Algérie 360 - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:44

L’économie algérienne semble tourner une page. En présentant, mardi soir à Alger, les grandes lignes du projet de loi de finances 2026, le ministre des […]

L’article La stratégie de 2016 a échoué : Bouzred explique comment 2026 sera l’année du « concret » pour l’Algérie est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

Trains de nuit Paris-Berlin : comment European Sleeper compte être rentable

La Tribune - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:37
Cette compagnie ferroviaire belgo-néerlandaise a annoncé ce mercredi lancer une ligne de trains de nuit entre Paris et Berlin à partir de mars 2026, pour compenser l’actuelle qui cessera ses allers-retours en décembre. Sans subvention de l’État français, le pari s’avère osé tant l’équilibre économique des lignes de trains de nuit est difficile à atteindre.
Categories: France

Chile Is Making an Unprecedented Right Turn

Foreign Policy - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:34
It’s Latin America’s traditional beacon of stability—and its next country to vote for the far right.

Communiqué de presse - La Présidente Roberta Metsola rend hommage à la mémoire des victimes des attentats de Paris en 2015

Parlement européen (Nouvelles) - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:33
A l'ouverture de la session plénière des 12 et 13 novembre, la Présidente Metsola et les députés ont honoré la mémoire des victimes des attentats islamistes du 13 novembre 2015 à Paris.

Source : © Union européenne, 2025 - PE
Categories: Union européenne

Désert médical : comment le bassin de Carcassonne endigue la disparition des médecins

La Tribune - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:31
L’accès aux soins continue de se dégrader dans de nombreux territoires en France, ruraux mais aussi urbains. Dans l’Aude, le nombre de praticiens se réduit comme peau de chagrin et les habitants du bassin de Carcassonne, pourtant préfecture du département, ont de plus en plus de mal à trouver un médecin traitant.
Categories: France

La majeure partie des contraceptifs de l’USAID stockés de manière inadéquate en Belgique seront détruits

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:30

Une grande partie des stocks de contraceptifs de l’Agence américaine pour le développement international (USAID), que la Belgique tentait de sauver depuis plusieurs mois, devra finalement être détruite après avoir été entreposée dans des conditions inadaptées. C’est ce qu’a confirmé le ministre flamand de l’Environnement, Jo Bouns, mercredi 12 novembre.

The post La majeure partie des contraceptifs de l’USAID stockés de manière inadéquate en Belgique seront détruits appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Categories: Union européenne

Damit sich Frauen über Armee und Zivilschutz informieren, muss die Verfassung geändert werden

NZZ.ch - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:25
Junge Schweizerinnen sollen künftig ebenfalls einen Orientierungstag der Armee und des Zivilschutzes besuchen müssen. Darüber muss das Volk entscheiden – und das wird dauern.
Categories: Swiss News

Taxation des très riches : l’Italie s’embrase sur la version italienne de la taxe Zucman

La Tribune - Wed, 12/11/2025 - 17:25
En pleine bataille budgétaire, l’Italie s'enflamme autour d’un impôt sur le patrimoine des très grandes fortunes, qui ressemble, à s’y méprendre, à la taxe Zucman française.
Categories: France

Pages