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The World Summit on Sustainable Development has generated new momentum for achieving sustainable development goals. The Johannesburg Plan of Implementation focuses on enhanced implementation through meeting specific targets and commitments, greater integration of economic, social and environmental dimensions and better linkages between global deliberations and regional and national implementation.
This renewed emphasis on implementation creates new challenges to the United Nations system in terms of inter-agency co-ordination.
The United Nations System Chief Executives Board (CEB) has taken the lead in coordinating system-wide follow-up activities, highlighting a number of broad principles to guide the elaboration of inter-agency collaborative arrangements. In the light of those principles, CEB took steps through its High-Level Committee on Programmes to establish or strengthen inter-agency collaborative arrangements in the key areas of freshwater, water and sanitation, energy, oceans and coastal areas, and consumption and production patterns. Specific actions taken include the following:
At its twelfth session, the Commission on Sustainable Development reviewed inter-agency mechanisms in the context of its multi-year programme of work. The Commission stressed the importance of collective and cooperative work among United Nations agencies at the global, regional, sub-regional, and field levels, based on their mandates and comparative advantages. Such cooperation should help avoid inter-agency duplication while ensuring synergies and complementarities, and enhancing capacity-building in developing countries.
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