| First
Meeting, UNESCO,
Paris,
29-30 October 2001
We
affirm that no countries seriously committed
to education for all will be thwarted
in their achievement of this goal by a
lack of resources
-
We, the participants in the first
meeting of the High-Level Group on
Education for All (EFA), call upon
all EFA partners to redouble their
efforts to meet the goals and targets
of Education for All. The world has
changed considerably since the World
Education Forum in Dakar in April
2000 and the challenge ahead remains
daunting but not insurmountable. The
events of 11 September, 2001 have
further emphasized the absolute importance
of universal basic education of good
quality as an essential, if not sufficient,
condition for a healthier, more democratic
and more tolerant world
-
We
understand and stress the importance
of EFA in the context of the other
Millenium Development Goals. We
recommit ourselves to the six Dakar
goals which represent the expanded
vision of basic education in the
World Declaration on Education for
All. In fulfilment of our mandate
- to monitor and assess the extent
to which progress is being made
on the Dakar commitments; to advocate
for more extensive and better coordinated
action at the international and
national levels; and to promote
the expansion of resources (financial,
human, technical and material) to
meet each countrys requirements
to achieve the Dakar goals - we
call upon all partners to move forward
in this endeavour, motivated by
a greater sense of urgency and supported
by accelerated efforts.
Priorities
for Action
-
All
partners must act decisively on a
number of serious issues: the persistent
gender and other disparities; the
neglect of vulnerable and disadvantaged
groups, including individuals with
disabilities; the high number of non-literates;
the need for understanding and acceptance
of diversity; the undermining of education
systems and institutions by the HIV/AIDS
pandemic; and the critical situation
in countries in emergency, crisis,
post-conflict and other risk situations.
There is an urgent need to define
educational quality, its content and
outcomes including life-skills education.
As a dynamic force in social and economic
development, the education of girls
and women should receive special attention.
EFA must be accelerated in sub-Saharan
Africa - with due consideration to
the plan entitled the New Partnership
for Africa Development - South Asia
and the least developed countries,
where needs continue to be the greatest.
-
We
realize the importance of building
on the strength of each partner in
the movement, learning from successful
experiences, and applying systemic
reforms and innovative approaches
to the attainment of each Dakar goal,
including capacity-building and harnessing
new communication and information
technologies in the delivery of basic
education and teacher training and
upgrading. We emphasize the importance
of taking into account individual
country contexts.
Partnership
-
We underline the core responsibility
of governments for education, and
especially to provide free and compulsory
quality basic education for all. All
partners of the EFA movement should
endeavour to coordinate their efforts
under the leadership of governments
within the framework of cross-sectoral
poverty reduction strategies and education
sector planning. We encourage governments
to establish as broad-based a partnership
as possible, in particular to ensure
the full inclusion of teachers
organizations, and other non-governmental
and civil society organizations in
EFA policy formulation, implementation
and monitoring. The full participation
of local communities is equally important.
-
We
appreciate the steps already taken
to recognize the role of non-governmental
and other civil society organizations
in the EFA movement as partners at
the global level. EFA partners must,
however, play their broker role at
the national level in order that the
potential of NGOs and local communities
can be fully utilized. This includes
appropriate capacity-building of NGOs
and others to fulfil their role. Furthermore,
the private sector needs to be called
upon to contribute to the thinking
and actions of the EFA movement, and
must be adequately represented in
relevant forums.
-
We
consider it to be vital that our shared
efforts be fully coordinated among
all partners of the EFA movement.
Existing and new initiatives on EFA
in the funds and programmes of the
United Nations, the World Bank, IMF,
bilateral agencies, the Task Force
of senior G8 officials on Dakar Follow-up,
OECD/DAC and the European Commission,
must be well integrated, mutually
reinforcing and built on the comparative
advantage of each organization.
-
We
are encouraged by the partnerships,
innovative approaches and potential
impact of a range of coordinated activities
responding directly to specific Dakar
goals and special focus areas, including
flagships. Such multi-partner initiatives
and programmes must be carefully synchronized
with national priorities, form part
of national EFA action plans, be properly
coordinated by governments and pay
special attention to the educational
needs of out-of-school children.
The Global
Initiative
-
We
need to establish an urgent consensus
on all six elements of the global
initiative, as described in the Dakar
Framework for Action. Each element
of the global initiative, individually
and collectively, must be supportive
of national EFA efforts. EFA is critically
important for poverty reduction and
sustainable development. EFA goals
must be pursued as part and parcel
of national poverty reduction strategies,
and education plans developed and
implemented in the context of macro-economic
frameworks and policy reform. Strategic
alliances with the World Bank and
the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
are crucial in this regard.
-
We
acknowledge the importance of non-financial
constraints to the development of
EFA and support the broader understanding
of resources, not just as financial,
but as human, material and organizational
as well. Increased resource mobilization
must go hand in hand with effective
resource utilization and management
by all governments and organizations.
Nationally, governments must reinforce
national resolve, increase their budget
allocations for EFA, address efficiency
and capacity constraints, and use
international assistance strategically.
Internationally, all potential financial
sources must be exploited and new
creative ways of funding EFA be found,
for example through increased South-South
collaboration and partnership with
the private sector. We continue to
be alarmed by the insignificant proportion
of overall bilateral and multilateral
assistance provided for basic education.
The fulfilment of the Dakar commitment
also requires a reversal of the decline
in overall ODA, particularly for the
least developed countries, sub-Saharan
Africa and South Asia.
Recommendations
-
We
propose that the following immediate
actions be taken:
-
Countries must, within poverty
reduction strategies, accelerate
progress towards sector plans
which encompass all EFA goals
and take into due consideration
both content and process. The
plans, which would be the basis
for national and international
coordinated efforts, must be
in place by 2002. They must
reflect the gaps - results,
capacity, policy and financing
(domestic and external) - related
to the achievement of EFA goals.
- Building
on existing structures, partners
at the country level must develop
criteria and mechanisms for
reviewing and mobilizing resources
for the plans. The Dakar resource
commitment should be part of
all processes to develop Poverty
Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP)
and the Heavily Indebted Poor
Countries Initiative (HIPC).
Many countries will have their
plans agreed to and funded,
through domestic and external
resources, at the country level.
Where this is not the case,
the World Bank should, where
feasible, take the lead in identifying
the resource gaps. Where the
World Bank cannot do so, the
task will be taken forward by
the United Nations Agencies.
All partners should find new
and creative ways to fill the
resource gaps.
- A
strategy to operationalize the
Dakar Framework must be developed
by March 2002 by a Task Force
constituted by representatives
of all partners. The strategy
would identify: major actions
to be taken within specified
time-lines; general roles and
responsibilities of partners;
linkages among activities, including
a clear description of how flagships
are integrated into country-level
activities; and a consensus
on the global initiative. Once
the content and scope of a global
initiative are agreed, it should
be implemented with immediate
effect and progress presented
to and reviewed by the High-Level
Group.
-
An
authoritative, analytical, annual
EFA Monitoring Report should
be produced drawing upon national
data - quantitative and qualitative-
and assessing the extent to
which both countries and the
international community are
meeting their Dakar commitments.
As a matter of urgency, UNESCO
should convene key partners
to discuss how the report can
best be prepared, managed and
resourced. The UNESCO Institute
for Statistics has an important
role in the development of the
report.
-
Taking
into account the experiences
of the first meeting of the
High-Level Group, we call upon
UNESCO to ensure focused and
operational discussions and
continuity in the important
work of the Group.
|