Citizens’ participation key to an inclusive and sustainable future
Participants in the Fourth World Conference on Women share a headset to listen to the proceedings in Beijing, China in 1995. UN/DPI 061727/Chen Kai Xing. All rights reserved.Participation of citizens in
deciding their future is fundamental to achieving inclusive societies and is a
critical element of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
With 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) at its core, the Agenda – which
was adopted by 193 countries in 2015 – set out a plan of action that seeks to
end poverty, combat inequalities and protect the environment in all countries.
It aims to achieve development in an
integrated way – economically, socially and environmentally – that meets the
needs of present generations without compromising the ability of future generations
to participate in the processes that impact their lives.
Of these goals, SDG 16 specifically
aims at building peaceful and inclusive societies, providing access to justice
for all and developing accountable institutions, while ensuring participatory
and representative decision-making at all levels. Since the adoption of the
Agenda, countries have started using various foresight exercises to set their own national targets
guided by the global level of ambition to meet the SDGs.
Rising
inequalities
One of the key imperatives for
achieving inclusive and sustainable development is the reduction of inequality.
Inequality is a multidimensional concept which is understood not only in terms
of the distribution of income between individuals (‘vertical inequality’), but
can also be found in political, social, cultural and environmental domains and
may relate to inequality between groups (‘horizontal inequality’) characterized
by gender, class, race, ethnicity, age or religious affiliation.
Rising inequalities, both vertical
and horizontal, have led to an upsurge in large-scale protests and social
movements around the world in recent years. These protests have taken place in
a broader context of democratization that has accelerated over the past three
decades in many parts of the world, and has been accompanied by people’s
enhanced ability to voice opinions with greater possibilities for accountability
at regional, national and local levels. Many people today live in democratic
states, and decentralization has been increasing, notably in India and several
Latin American countries.
Brazil and India, for example, have
institutionalized citizens’ participation through their constitutions, which
opens up space for people to participate in the formulation, management and
monitoring of policies so that they better reflect citizens’ needs. Many
governments have also used affirmative action policies to promote greater
access of disadvantaged or underrepresented groups to public institutions and
ensure the equal right to participation and representation of all groups.
Caution, however, is needed as to
how these policies are implemented as they can alienate other groups and thus
run the risk of generating tensions. While citizens’ empowerment and
participation has been growing, there has been deterioration in the quality of
democracy in recent years, manifest in the failing traditional political party
system, the growing disconnect between elites and ordinary people, and the rise
of populist parties, notably in some advanced democracies.
Between 2006 and 2016, for example,
almost half of the 167 countries covered by the Economist Intelligence Unit’s
Democracy Index registered a decline in their overall scores, with the biggest
regressions observed in eastern Europe, North America and western Europe. In
fact, the overwhelming demand of protesters in recent demonstrations has been
not so much for economic justice per se, but for real democracy.
While the legal foundation is an
important mechanism to ensure people’s engagement in decisions that affect
their lives, more effective approaches are needed to recognize the diversity,
identities and abilities of local actors to participate in these processes and
improve institutional arrangements that enable them to do so.
Such processes of empowered participation
may challenge existing structures and relations of power, yet they are crucial
for both fair decision-making and equitable outcomes. More collaborative and
participatory processes can in turn facilitate the mobilization of resources at
the local level, pool competencies and create synergies that otherwise won’t exist.
The
gender dimension of equality and participation
Gender equality and women’s
participation in decision-making are critical to inclusive and sustainable
development. Although overall gender gaps in political representation have
narrowed globally, women continue to face disadvantages in participation in
private and public decision-making. For example, women have gained ground in
parliamentary representation in nearly 90 percent of 174 countries
over the past two decades, with the average proportion of women in parliament
having nearly doubled during the same period. Yet still only one in five
members are women. Across all regions, women’s representation in leadership
positions falls short of the global 30 percent target endorsed by the United
Nations Economic and Social Council in 1990 and reaffirmed in the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action in 1995.
The main reasons behind women’s
limited opportunities and abilities to participate in decision-making lie in
persistent discriminatory laws and practices reinforced by deeply entrenched
social norms and unequal power relations that prevail in many countries.
Furthermore, women’s rights have not been adequately supported by institutional
mechanisms such as financing or political commitment to gender equality. As a
result, some of the structural issues that many women face, including violence
or unpaid care and domestic work, remain unresolved. These challenges hinder
women’s empowerment in economic, social and political domains and hold back
progress for women, communities and countries.
At the same time, while providing
opportunities for political participation is important for women’s empowerment,
it is not sufficient to achieve real gender equality. For example, women’s
presence in the governance structures carries the potential to change
discriminatory practices, but if the women in question are drawn from a narrow
elite with no grassroots constituency to represent, their presence will be merely a token one.
Unless provision is made to ensure
that policy changes are implemented in ways that allow women to participate and
hold policymakers and other relevant actors accountable for their actions,
substantial gender equality and broad-based women’s empowerment is unlikely to
be achieved. In this sense, women’s empowerment entails not only access and
opportunities to decision-making but also the women’s agency or ability to make
choices and decisions and act upon them in ways that challenge social norms and
unequal power relations.
The
way forward: collective action and multi-stakeholder participation
Collective action at all levels and
balanced multi-stakeholder participation
are prerequisites for generating more sustainable solutions.
In a world of interdependence, no
country acting alone can fully manage the range and scale of risks and challenges that exist today. Multilateral
engagement provides significant opportunities to tackle these challenges, which
in turn depends on strong institutional frameworks and governance mechanisms
that establish a foundation for the design and implementation of international
collective action. Yet formal institutions of global governance are being
challenged, both by global forces and by national movements.
The complexity of today’s world
means that all resources need to be utilised to ensure the inclusiveness of
participation. Henceforth, it is essential to ensure that the poorest and most
vulnerable populations, both in developed and developing countries, are able to
exercise their rights, have their voices heard, and benefit from development
gains.
Public policy that purports to
facilitate participation should be concerned as much with civil and political
freedoms (such as the right to expression and collective bargaining) that
enhance the capacity of disadvantaged groups, including women, to organise and
mobilize, as with engaging civil society, community-based organisations and
local people in decision-making processes.
Meaningful broad-based participation
should therefore be not only about giving disadvantaged individuals or groups a
voice at the table; it must be about strengthening their capacity to influence
decision-making processes and exercise their claims on external actors and
institutions that affect their lives.
While the future is impossible to
predict, as multiple crises and disasters including volatility in the global
economy and continued uncertainties and disruptions in people’s lives in recent
decades have acutely demonstrated, there is a challenge – and also an
opportunity – for a sophisticated policy response of preparedness, investment
and cooperation. In this sense, foresight is a tool that can help governments, communities and people to better prepare for potential risks and identify strategic opportunities for new development pathways.
Sustainable development can be
achieved only if the development process is inclusive and participatory,
placing people at its heart and involving a broad alliance of governments,
international organisations, civil society, academia and the private sector, all working
together to secure the world we want for present and future generations.