110 likes | 278 Views
National and Regional Preparations for MEA Meetings. Session Three Felix Dodds. What you need to address. Learn about national and regional preparations for UN meetings. Explore possible roles for NGOs and civil society. National and regional reporting processes
E N D
National and Regional Preparations for MEA Meetings Session Three Felix Dodds
What you need to address • Learn about national and regional preparations for UN meetings. • Explore possible roles for NGOs and civil society. • National and regional reporting processes • Coordinating networks - are you in the club or outside? How to get information and onto list-serves etc • Advice for effective NGO contributions
Diary for MEA • January: Contact the international NGO coalition • February: Arrange a meeting of the country’s NGOs or stakeholders • March and April: More national meetings • May-July:Input to regional / global coalition positions • August: Informal meetings with national government • September: Formal meeting with national government • October:Initiate a debate in parliament on the issue • November: Meetings with government • December: Meeting of the MEA
What are the possible roles and input of civil society at these levels? • By having fluid relationships with national executive administration as well as with regional administrative bodies; • By participating in national and regional official or non-official committees; • By providing individual input of an organization into national and regional preparations;
What are the possible roles and input of civil society at these levels? • By furnishing technical information to national authorities and regional bodies on subjects of a particular MEA; • By providing specific input into drafting of national reports and regional inputs; and/or • By contracting with national governments and regional bodies to generate national or regional reporting or preparations.
Guidelines on effective NGO contributions • Be focused and targeted • Offer specific language and proposals • Be clear • Time is of the essence • Build your information and knowledge
National and regional reporting processes • Know the timelines • Know the officials • Contact the UN relevant official to find out if you can submit independently • Consider a shadow report • If it is a regional report eg UNECE then cooperate with other stakeholders in the region
Guidelines on effective NGO contributions • Coalesce within civil society • Coordinate at the national level • Ensure that national instructional structure permits civil society groups’ participation • Work with different strata and sectors of government's • Build a relationship with sub-national areas of government
Summary • Participation by, and consultation with, non-state actors in national preparations for MEAs is an issue of rights under Principle 10 of the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development. • Contributions by civil society can provide information, points of view, research input, and sub-national contributions to the MEA national reporting process. • To be effective, ensure your contributions are targeted, timely, and well grounded by evidence and experience.
Summary • Working in coalition with other civil society stakeholders, and with a wide range of government departments can advance the uptake of your positions. • Even if divergences in opinion arise (e.g. between government and civil society), the process of participation should be considered constructive. • Civil society input to national preparations can result in more fluid and improved processes of MEA negotiation and application.
Exercise: Insider vs. outsider roles • Outsider: Marches in the streets to protest a certain issue or official position. Pros? Cons? • Insider: Engaging in policy dialogues with decision-makers. Pros? Cons? • Outsider: Presenting an alternative/shadow report to an MEA meeting. Pros? Cons? • Insider: Lobbying for the insertion of text in declaration/report or other such documents. Pros? Cons?