World Leaders Must Reboot Global Cooperation for Today and Tomorrow.
Final negotiations are underway in New York for this week’s Summit of the Future , where Heads of State will agree on reforms to the building blocks of global cooperation.
The United Nations has convened this unique Summit because of a stark fact: global problems are moving faster than the institutions designed to solve them.
We see this all around us. Ferocious conflicts and violence are inflicting terrible suffering; geopolitical divisions are rife; inequality and injustice are everywhere, corroding trust, compounding grievances, and feeding populism and extremism. The age-old challenges of poverty, hunger, discrimination, misogyny and racism are taking on new forms.
Meanwhile, we face new and existential threats, from runaway climate chaos and environmental degradation to technologies like Artificial Intelligence developing in an ethical and legal vacuum.?
The Summit of the Future recognizes that the solutions to all these challenges are in our hands. But we need a systems update that only global leaders can deliver.
International decision-making is stuck in a time warp. Many global institutions and tools are a product of the 1940s – an era before globalization, before decolonization, before widespread recognition of universal human rights and gender equality, before humanity travelled into space – never mind cyberspace.
The victors of World War II still have pre-eminence in the UN Security Council while the entire continent of Africa lacks a permanent seat. The global financial architecture is heavily weighted against developing countries and fails to provide a safety net when they face difficulties, leaving them drowning in debt, which drains money away from investments in their people.
And global institutions offer limited space for many of the major players in today’s world – from civil society to the private sector. Young people who will inherit the future are almost invisible, while the interests of future generations go unrepresented.
The message is clear: we cannot create a future fit for our grandchildren with a system built for our grandparents. The Summit of the Future will be an opportunity to re-boot multilateral collaboration fit for the 21st century.
The solutions we have proposed include a New Agenda for Peace focused on updating international institutions and tools to prevent and end conflicts, including the UN Security Council. The New Agenda for Peace calls for a renewed push to rid our world of nuclear arms and other Weapons of Mass Destruction; and for broadening the definition of security to encompass gender-based violence and gang violence.
It takes future security threats into account, recognizing the changing nature of warfare and the risks of weaponizing new technologies. For example, we need a global agreement to outlaw so-called Lethal Autonomous Weapons that can take life-or-death decisions without human input.
Global financial institutions must reflect today’s world and be equipped to lead a more powerful response to today’s challenges – debt, sustainable development, climate action. That means concrete steps to tackle debt distress, increase the lending capacity of multilateral development banks, and change their business model so that developing countries have far more access to private finance at affordable rates.
Without that finance, developing countries will not be able to tackle our greatest future threat: the climate crisis. They urgently need resources to transition from planet-wrecking fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy.
And as leaders highlighted last year, reforming the global financial architecture is also key to jump-starting desperately needed progress on the Sustainable Development Goals.
The Summit will also focus on new technologies with a global impact, seeking ways to close the digital divide and establish shared principles for an open, free and secure digital future for all.
Artificial Intelligence is a revolutionary technology with applications and risks we are only beginning to understand. We have put forward specific proposals for governments,?together with?tech companies, academia and civil society,?to work on?risk management frameworks for AI and on monitoring and mitigating its harms, as well as sharing its benefits. The governance of AI cannot be left to the rich; it requires that all countries participate, and the UN is ready to provide?a platform to bring people together.
Human rights and gender equality are a common thread linking all these proposals. Global decision-making cannot be reformed without respect for all human rights and for cultural diversity, ensuring the full participation and leadership of women and girls. We are demanding renewed efforts to remove the historic barriers – legal, social and economic – that exclude women from power.
The peacebuilders of the 1940s created institutions that helped prevent World War III and ushered many countries from colonization to independence. But they would not recognize today’s global landscape.
The Summit of the Future is a chance to build more effective and inclusive institutions and tools for global cooperation, tuned to the 21st century and our multipolar world. ? ?
I urge leaders to seize it.?
Consultor em Melhoria Contínua, Qualidade e Produtividade na Gest?o Sustentável
3 周United Nations and António Guterres human beings urgently need to EVOLVE, stop being FOOL and stop investing US$ trillions in weapons, drugs, conflicts, wars, fossil fuels, space tourism, deforestation, planned obsolescence and other nonsense, and use these US$ trillions to end HUNGER, the lack of DRINKING WATER and the HUMANITARIAN CRISIS, end social inequality and pollution, improve health, education, housing and basic sanitation, to mitigate the effects of global warming and climate change, to depollute rivers, seas, oceans and landfills, invest in reforestation, in having more trees and green areas in cities, invest in clean, safe and renewable energy sources such as wind, solar, tidal, wave, geothermal, nuclear fusion which is safer and does not generate CO2 and nuclear waste and in solar and wind microgeneration in homes and businesses, invest in green hydrogen, in electric vehicles fueled only by clean, safe and renewable energy sources and green hydrogen, electric vehicle charging stations powered only by clean, safe and renewable energy sources and green hydrogen, investing in rainwater harvesting
Rick Gillespie’s AI Methodology (IT IS FREE!!!)?????????
1 个月Your call for reform at the Summit of the Future is timely and essential. As AI continues to reshape global cooperation, we must ensure that it serves our common future. I’ve developed an AI governance methodology rooted in universal truths from Aristotle, Socrates, and Wittgenstein, which can help create a transparent, ethical, and inclusive foundation for AI systems. By embedding real-time oversight, ethical inquiry, and bias mitigation, this methodology ensures that AI not only addresses modern challenges but does so in a way that upholds human dignity and fairness across borders. As we build for future generations, it’s critical that AI governance is aligned with universal human values.
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Curator at Acad.interfaith Kenya-Swiss-Turk Curatorium UN Civil Society Africa
1 个月and we Dit it - UNGA NY 2019 and 2020 SDG awarded Pioneers