by CGS | Sep 22, 2024 | Past Event (External)
CGS co-sponsored this Side Event for the Summit of the Future Action Day hosted by the Baha’i International Community.
At moments of profound crisis, optimism is a precondition for success. This rapid-fire roundtable is a platform to energize participants to take the first next steps towards better global governance.
Representatives from Member States, the United Nations System, and Civil Society concurrently express hope and concern, encouragement and hesitation, optimism and doubt regarding the Summit and its outcome documents, including the Pact for the Future. Hundreds of recommendations have been directed toward the Pact and its related processes, representing significant consensus around the need for change. Yet, success will be measured by how this Summit is able to prevent and respond to complex and growing risks. The challenges are well-known, yet it is hope and a commitment to the wellbeing of humanity, ultimately, that will sustain our efforts. We need a shared, optimistic narrative, alongside a sophisticated understanding of the challenges we face, in order to overcome inaction. As was learned at the UN Civil Society Conference in Nairobi, this is a prerequisite on the path toward a future of peace and prosperity.
Far from an exercise in idealism, the aim of this event will be to highlight and connect common aspirations and concrete suggestions in order to catalyze future action beyond the Summit itself. This event, to be hosted during the Action Days of the Summit of the Future, will provide an opportunity for Member State representatives, UN officials, and Civil Society actors to contribute to a narrative built on evidentiary optimism. Representatives from various areas of the international system will share what it is from the Pact for the Future that brings them hope in the face of the very real challenges before us. They will offer their reflections and reasons for optimism, highlighting one or two actions that they think have particularly strong potential and proposing next steps to take that action forward.
Side Event organized by: United Nations Futures Lab, United Nations University Center for Policy Research, Permanent Mission of Chile to the UN, Permanent Mission of Vanuatu to the UN, Baha’i International Community, Buddhist Tzu Chi, Citizens for Global Solutions, Climate and Sustainability, Climate Governance Commission, Club de Madrid, Coalition for the UN We Need, Foundation for European Progressive Studies, Geledes, Global Governance Forum, Global Governance Innovation Network, GWL Voices, International Alliance of Women, International Environment Forum, Oxfam International, Pathfinders for Peaceful Just and Inclusive Societies, Plataforma CIPO, Project Starling, SDGs Kenya Forum, Stimson Center, World Federalist Movement
by CGS | Sep 21, 2024 | Past Event (External)
CGS co-sponsored this Side Event for the Summit of the Future Action Day hosted by the ImPACT Coalitions.
The UN’s Summit of the Future in New York adopted a PACT for the Future which includes a chapter on the transformation of global governance. This side event during the UN’s Action Days ahead of the Summit is a space to learn about and discuss proposals in this field put forward by a number of ImPACT Coalitions to build on the outcomes of the Summit and continue fulfilling a vision for renewed global governance in the coming years.
How to build on the seeds planted in the PACT to continue addressing the planetary emergency, inequitable distribution of power, lack of inclusion, continued violations of peace and disarmament goals, and gaps in accountability and the rule of law? Where is a need to go further? The event will addresses future pathways to bring about a more effective, accountable and inclusive global governance architecture.
Program outline
Introductory remarks
- Mark Malloch Brown, advisor, Bretton Woods at 80 initiative, former UN Deputy Secretary-General; former UK State Minister
Firestarters from ImPACT Coalitions featuring:*
- Global Citizens’ Assembly and a UN Parliamentary Assembly: Aishwarya Machani, Iswe Foundation;
- promoting international courts and tribunals for accountability under international law, Rebecca Shoot, Citizens for Global Solutions
- UN declaration of planetary emergency, Planetary Emergency Platform and the Creation of a Global Environment Agency, Maja Groff, Climate Governance Commission
- UN Charter review conference: Natalia Nahra, UN Charter Reform Coalition
Reactions
- Mary Robinson, Chair of The Elders, Lead Co-Chair of the Climate Governance Commission, and Former President of Ireland
- Meena Syed, Director for UN Policy, Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Wrap-up and way forward
Moderated by Heba Aly
This Side Event was organized by: ImPACT Coalition on Inclusive Global Governance; UN Charter Reform Coalition; ImPACT Coalition on Just Institutions and the International Criminal Court; Earth Governance ImPACT Coalition; ImPACT Coalition on The International Anti-Corruption Court; Government of Norway; Coalition for the UN We Need; Global Governance Innovation Network.
- Global Citizens Assembly: Folly, Maiara, Aishwarya Machani, Andrea Ordóñez Llanos, and David Steven. 2024. Strengthening Citizen Participation in Global Governance. United Nations Foundation, Iswe Foundation, Plataforma CIPÓ, Blue Smoke, Southern Voice (download).
- UN Parliamentary Assembly: Brauer, Maja, and Andreas Bummel. 2020. A United Nations Parliamentary Assembly: A Policy Review of Democracy Without Borders. Berlin: Democracy Without Borders (download)
- a UN declaration of planetary emergency, Planetary Emergency Platform and the Creation of a Global Environment Agency, and other recommendations of the Climate Governance Commission; 2023 Report, Governing Our Planetary Emergency (download) and Tackling the Planetary Emergency: Supporting a Declaration of Planetary Emergency at the UN General Assembly and the Convening of a Planetary Emergency Platform (download), Published by MEGA on August 19, 2024
- Promoting international courts and tribunals: Legal Alternatives to War (LAW not War), a global campaign to increase the use and effectiveness of the International Court of Justice and to achieve universal acceptance of its jurisdiction.
- A UN Charter Review conference: Policy Brief from the UN Charter Reform Coalition
by CGS | Sep 20, 2024 | Past Event
A Side Event in conjunction with the UN Summit of the Future by the ImPACT Coalition for Just Institutions and the International Court of Justice, convened by Citizens for Global Solutions. International law is the foundation on which a renewed effective multilateral system should function. International courts and tribunals have never been busier. And yet, we all are profoundly aware that atrocities continue in nearly every region. The international adjudication system is a continuous evolutionary process. Genuine commitment to this process is critical to realize the aspirations of the UN system: foremost the peaceful and just resolution of conflicts and end to impunity for atrocities. This side event will begin with a recognition of the successes of international judicial institutions as indispensable elements of the global peace and security architecture. We welcome the commitment to comply with the decisions of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the inclusion of atrocity crimes, including the Crime of Aggression, as critical priorities included in the Pact for the Future. At the same time, this enterprise must entail a critical analysis of the shortcomings of the global judicial architecture and the need for continuous support to realize the ambitions of the UN Charter and the promise of “never again.”
An esteemed panel will consider the innovations and advancements of the International Criminal Court, the ICJ, and other courts and tribunals. An interactive dialogue will explore what should come next to achieve the full universality and effectiveness of these institutions, and to confront threats to their independence and integrity as indispensable elements of the global peace and justice architecture beyond the Summit of the Future.
Speakers
Jim Goldston, Executive Director, Open Society Justice Initiative
Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, Professor of Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and Director of the Benjamin B. Ferencz Human Rights and Atrocity Prevention Clinic and the Cardozo Law Institute in Holocaust and Human Rights.
Matias Hellman, Acting Head of Outreach, International Criminal Court (ICC)
Akila Radhakrishnan, Senior Advisor, Atlantic Council, former Executive Director, Global Justice Center
Jennifer Trahan, Clinical Professor, NYU Center for Global Affairs, and Director of their concentration in Human Rights and International Law; Convenor of the Global Institute for the Prevention of Aggression
Rebecca A. Shoot, Executive Director, Citizens for Global Solutions
by CGS | Aug 21, 2024 | Past Event
Hay un reconocimiento amplio que el mundo enfrenta un momento de crisis medioambiental profunda. Aun así, la naturaleza existencial de esta amenaza puede dar una impresión falsa de que actores responsables no puedan ser identificados o que estén más allá del alcance de la justicia global. Recientemente, hemos visto desarrollos prometedores en el intento para lograr la responsabilidad por daños atroces a la humanidad y al planeta. Este evento se llevará a cabo en español solamente.
by CGS | Aug 21, 2024 | Past Event
The ImPACT Coalition on Just Institutions and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) hosted two webinars in cooperation with the ImPACT Coalition on Earth Governance exploring judicial pathways toward environmental justice. The ImPACT Coalitions were established as part of a civil society-led complement to the UN Summit of the Future process and tackle a diverse array of global governance issues.
To date, the ImPACT Coalition on Just Institutions and the ICJ has convened three webinars to raise greater awareness of the roles, successes, and interaction among international judicial institutions, and to support advocacy toward their greater universality and effectiveness.
This webinar addresses environmental justice issues. There is widespread recognition that the world faces a moment of profound environmental crisis. And yet, the existential nature of this threat may give a false impression that actors responsible cannot be identified or are beyond the arm of global justice. Recent years have seen hopeful developments in the attempt to achieve accountability for heinous harms to humanity and the planet.
These include: The advancement of both requests for Advisory Opinions and contentious cases on State responsibility for environmental degradation, including climate change, before the ICJ and International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS); Support for a new Crime of Ecocide to be included by amendment within the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), including a robust report by an independent expert panel, as well as the promulgation of a policy by the current Prosecutor to actively investigate and prosecute environmental crimes within the Court’s current jurisdiction; Seminal precedential rulings at the regional level, including the Inter-American Court and European Court systems; The historic completion of reparations payments after more than three decades, including for environmental damage, for the illegal invasion by Iraq of Kuwait in 1990; and Introduction of proposals for new judicial institutions with distinct subject matter jurisdiction capable of addressing the multifaceted and intersectional challenges of environmental crimes, including an International Environmental Court and International Anti-Corruption Court (IACC).
At the same time, experiments like a widely critiqued ICJ Environmental Chamber, active from 1993-1996, provide cautionary tales. This webinar, organized by Citizens for Global Solutions (CGS), with the Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, and the World Federalist Movement-Institute for Global Policy (WFM-IGP), probes potential pathways to environmental justice in international and regional courts and tribunals.
by CGS | Aug 10, 2024 | Past Event
Watch Session II with author, Dr. Emma Osong, and special Q&A; where we discussed her book, Unraveled: A Personal Journey into Conflict, War, and Diplomacy.
Dr. Emma’s book called the “Unraveled” where two worlds collide in this emotional journey provides a blueprint on how to promote peace and justice amid times of war. Emma Osong’s world was turned upside down when her daughter Praxie was told she would never walk again. Faced with the traumatic circumstances of her daughter’s condition, Osong draws comparisons between her daughter and her war-ravaged country of origin, Cameroon. Detailing the events in Cameroon and the struggles of its people trapped in decades of tyranny, Osong interweaves the history of a war-torn country with threads of a personal conflict.
Dr. Emma Osong is founder of Women for Permanent Peace and Justice (WPPJ). Emma has celebrated an extensive career in speaking, engineering, peacebuilding, and leadership. Speaking engagements include appearances on Voice of America (VOA), Equinox TV, ABC, and several podcasts and international conferences. As an accomplished aerospace systems engineer, she brings an informative and crucial voice to STE’A’M topics, encouraging young women in underdeveloped and developing countries to explore career paths within STEM fields. Emma’s goal is to create a world where women, men, and children all have the right to live dignified life.
For more information on current CGS World Citizen Book Club Sessions visit our CGS Book Club page.