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AGENDA
21 AND EDUCATION
PROMOTING EDUCATION, PUBLIC AWARENESS
AND TRAINING
36.1. Education, raising of
public awareness and training are linked to virtually all areas
in Agenda 21, and even more closely to the ones on meeting basic
needs, capacity-building, data and information, science, and the
role of major groups. This chapter sets out broad proposals, while
specific suggestions related to sectoral issues are contained
in other chapters. The Declaration and Recommendations of the
Tbilisi Intergovernmental Conference on Environmental Education
1/ organized by UNESCO and UNEP and held in 1977, have provided
the fundamental principles for the proposals in this document.
36.2. Programme areas described
in the present chapter are:
a. Reorienting education towards
sustainable development;
b. Increasing public awareness;
c. Promoting training.
PROGRAMME AREAS
A. Reorienting education towards
sustainable development
Basis for action
36.3. Education, including
formal education, public awareness and training should be recognized
as a process by which human beings and societies can reach their
fullest potential. Education is critical for promoting sustainable
development and improving the capacity of the people to address
environment and development issues. While basic education provides
the underpinning for any environmental and development education,
the latter needs to be incorporated as an essential part of
learning. Both formal and non-formal education are indispensable
to changing people's attitudes so that they have the capacity
to assess and address their sustainable development concerns.
It is also critical for achieving environmental and ethical
awareness, values and attitudes, skills and behaviour consistent
with sustainable development and for effective public participation
in decision-making. To be effective, environment and development
education should deal with the dynamics of both the physical/biological
and socio-economic environment and human (which may include
spiritual) development, should be integrated in all disciplines,
and should employ formal and non-formal methods and effective
means of communication.
Objectives
36.4. Recognizing that countries,
regional and international organizations will develop their
own priorities and schedules for implementation in accordance
with their needs, policies and programmes, the following objectives
are proposed:
o To endorse the recommendations
arising from the World Conference on Education for All: Meeting
Basic Learning Needs 2/ (Jomtien, Thailand, 5-9 March 1990)
and to strive to ensure universal access to basic education,
and to achieve primary education for at least 80 per cent
of girls and 80 per cent of boys of primary school age through
formal schooling or non-formal education and to reduce the
adult illiteracy rate to at least half of its 1990 level.
Efforts should focus on reducing the high illiteracy levels
and redressing the lack of basic education among women and
should bring their literacy levels into line with those of
men;
o To achieve environmental and development awareness in all
sectors of society on a world-wide scale as soon as possible;
o To strive to achieve the accessibility of environmental
and development education, linked to social education, from
primary school age through adulthood to all groups of people;
o To promote integration of environment and development concepts,
including demography, in all educational programmes, in particular
the analysis of the causes of major environment and development
issues in a local context, drawing on the best available scientific
evidence and other appropriate sources of knowledge, and giving
special emphasis to the further training of decision makers
at all levels.
Activities
36.5. Recognizing that countries
and regional and international organizations will develop their
own priorities and schedules for implementation in accordance
with their needs, policies and programmes, the following activities
are proposed:
e. All countries are encouraged
to endorse the recommendations of the Jomtien Conference and
strive to ensure its Framework for Action. This would encompass
the preparation of national strategies and actions for meeting
basic learning needs, universalizing access and promoting
equity, broadening the means and scope of education, developing
a supporting policy context, mobilizing resources and strengthening
international cooperation to redress existing economic, social
and gender disparities which interfere with these aims. Non-governmental
organizations can make an important contribution in designing
and implementing educational programmes and should be recognized;
f. Governments should strive to update or prepare strategies
aimed at integrating environment and development as a cross-cutting
issue into education at all levels within the next three years.
This should be done in cooperation with all sectors of society.
The strategies should set out policies and activities, and
identify needs, cost, means and schedules for their implementation,
evaluation and review. A thorough review of curricula should
be undertaken to ensure a multidisciplinary approach, with
environment and development issues and their socio-cultural
and demographic aspects and linkages. Due respect should be
given to community-defined needs and diverse knowledge systems,
including science, cultural and social sensitivities;
g. Countries are encouraged to set up national advisory environmental
education coordinating bodies or round tables representative
of various environmental, developmental, educational, gender
and other interests, including non-governmental organizations,
to encourage partnerships, help mobilize resources, and provide
a source of information and focal point for international
ties. These bodies would help mobilize and facilitate different
population groups and communities to assess their own needs
and to develop the necessary skills to create and implement
their own environment and development initiatives;
h. Educational authorities, with the appropriate assistance
from community groups or non-governmental organizations, are
recommended to assist or set up pre-service and in-service
training programmes for all teachers, administrators, and
educational planners, as well as non-formal educators in all
sectors, addressing the nature and methods of environmental
and development education and making use of relevant experience
of non-governmental organizations;
i. Relevant authorities should ensure that every school is
assisted in designing environmental activity work plans, with
the participation of students and staff. Schools should involve
schoolchildren in local and regional studies on environmental
health, including safe drinking water, sanitation and food
and ecosystems and in relevant activities, linking these studies
with services and research in national parks, wildlife reserves,
ecological heritage sites etc.;
j. Educational authorities should promote proven educational
methods and the development of innovative teaching methods
for educational settings. They should also recognize appropriate
traditional education systems in local communities;
k. Within two years the United Nations system should undertake
a comprehensive review of its educational programmes, encompassing
training and public awareness, to reassess priorities and
reallocate resources. The UNESCO/UNEP International Environmental
Education Programme should, in cooperation with the appropriate
bodies of the United Nations system, Governments, non-governmental
organizations and others, establish a programme within two
years to integrate the decisions of the Conference into the
existing United Nations framework adapted to the needs of
educators at different levels and circumstances. Regional
organizations and national authorities should be encouraged
to elaborate similar parallel programmes and opportunities
by conducting an analysis of how to mobilize different sectors
of the population in order to assess and address their environmental
and development education needs;
l. There is a need to strengthen, within five years, information
exchange by enhancing technologies and capacities necessary
to promote environment and development education and public
awareness. Countries should cooperate with each other and
with the various social sectors and population groups to prepare
educational tools that include regional environment and development
issues and initiatives, using learning materials and resources
suited to their own requirements;
m. Countries could support university and other tertiary activities
and networks for environmental and development education.
Cross-disciplinary courses could be made available to all
students. Existing regional networks and activities and national
university actions which promote research and common teaching
approaches on sustainable development should be built upon,
and new partnerships and bridges created with the business
and other independent sectors, as well as with all countries
for technology, know-how, and knowledge exchange;
n. Countries, assisted by international organizations, non-governmental
organizations and other sectors, could strengthen or establish
national or regional centres of excellence in interdisciplinary
research and education in environmental and developmental
sciences, law and the management of specific environmental
problems. Such centres could be universities or existing networks
in each country or region, promoting cooperative research
and information sharing and dissemination. At the global level
these functions should be performed by appropriate institutions;
o. Countries should facilitate and promote non-formal education
activities at the local, regional and national levels by cooperating
with and supporting the efforts of non-formal educators and
other community-based organizations. The appropriate bodies
of the United Nations system in cooperation with non-governmental
organizations should encourage the development of an international
network for the achievement of global educational aims. At
the national and local levels, public and scholastic forums
should discuss environmental and development issues, and suggest
sustainable alternatives to policy makers;
p. Educational authorities, with appropriate assistance of
non-governmental organizations, including women's and indigenous
peoples' organizations, should promote all kinds of adult
education programmes for continuing education in environment
and development, basing activities around elementary/secondary
schools and local problems. These authorities and industry
should encourage business, industrial and agricultural schools
to include such topics in their curricula. The corporate sector
could include sustainable development in their education and
training programmes. Programmes at a post-graduate level should
include specific courses aiming at the further training of
decision makers;
q. Governments and educational authorities should foster opportunities
for women in non-traditional fields and eliminate gender stereotyping
in curricula. This could be done by improving enrolment opportunities,
including females in advanced programmes as students and instructors,
reforming entrance and teacher staffing policies and providing
incentives for establishing child-care facilities, as appropriate.
Priority should be given to education of young females and
to programmes promoting literacy among women;
r. Governments should affirm the rights of indigenous peoples,
by legislation if necessary, to use their experience and understanding
of sustainable development to play a part in education and
training;
s. The United Nations could maintain a monitoring and evaluative
role regarding decisions of the United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development on education and awareness,
through the relevant United Nations agencies. With Governments
and non-governmental organizations, as appropriate, it should
present and disseminate decisions in a variety of forms, and
should ensure the continuous implementation and review of
the educational implications of Conference decisions, in particular
through relevant events and conferences.
Means of implementation
Financing and cost evaluation
36.6. The Conference secretariat has estimated the
average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities
of this programme to be about $8 billion to $9 billion, including
about $3.5 billion to $4.5 billion from the international community
on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude
estimates only and have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual
costs and financial terms, including any that are non-concessional,
will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and programmes
Governments decide upon for implementation.
36.7. In the light of country-specific
situations, more support for education, training and public
awareness activities related to environment and development
could be provided, in appropriate cases, through measures such
as the following:
t. Giving higher priority
to those sectors in budget allocations, protecting them from
structural cutting requirements;
u. Shifting allocations within existing education budgets
in favour of primary education, with focus on environment
and development;
v. Promoting conditions where a larger share of the cost is
borne by local communities, with rich communities assisting
poorer ones;
w. Obtaining additional funds from private donors concentrating
on the poorest countries, and those with rates of literacy
below 40 per cent;
x. Encouraging debt for education swaps;
y. Lifting restrictions on private schooling and increasing
the flow of funds from and to non-governmental organizations,
including small-scale grass-roots organizations;
z. Promoting the effective use of existing facilities, for
example, multiple school shifts, fuller development of open
universities and other long-distance teaching;
aa. Facilitating low-cost or no-cost use of mass media for
the purposes of education;
bb. Encouraging twinning of universities in developed and
developing countries.
B. Increasing public
awareness
Basis for action
36.8. There is still a considerable
lack of awareness of the interrelated nature of all human
activities and the environment, due to inaccurate or insufficient
information. Developing countries in particular lack relevant
technologies and expertise. There is a need to increase public
sensitivity to environment and development problems and involvement
in their solutions and foster a sense of personal environmental
responsibility and greater motivation and commitment towards
sustainable development.
Objective
36.9. The objective is to
promote broad public awareness as an essential part of a global
education effort to strengthen attitudes, values and actions
which are compatible with sustainable development. It is important
to stress the principle of devolving authority, accountability
and resources to the most appropriate level with preference
given to local responsibility and control over awareness-building
activities
Activities
36.10. Recognizing that
countries, regional and international organizations will develop
their own priorities and schedules for implementation in accordance
with their needs, policies and programmes, the following activities
are proposed:
. Countries should strengthen
existing advisory bodies or establish new ones for public
environment and development information, and should coordinate
activities with, among others, the United Nations, non-governmental
organizations and important media. They should encourage
public participation in discussions of environmental policies
and assessments. Governments should also facilitate and
support national to local networking of information through
existing networks;
a. The United Nations
system should improve its outreach in the course of a review
of its education and public awareness activities to promote
greater involvement and coordination of all parts of the
system, especially its information bodies and regional and
country operations. Systematic surveys of the impact of
awareness programmes should be conducted, recognizing the
needs and contributions of specific community groups;
b. Countries and regional organizations should be encouraged,
as appropriate, to provide public environmental and development
information services for raising the awareness of all groups,
the private sector and particularly decision makers;
c. Countries should stimulate educational establishments
in all sectors, especially the tertiary sector, to contribute
more to awareness building. Educational materials of all
kinds and for all audiences should be based on the best
available scientific information, including the natural,
behavioural and social sciences, and taking into account
aesthetic and ethical dimensions;
d. Countries and the United Nations system should promote
a cooperative relationship with the media, popular theatre
groups, and entertainment and advertising industries by
initiating discussions to mobilize their experience in shaping
public behaviour and consumption patterns and making wide
use of their methods. Such cooperation would also increase
the active public participation in the debate on the environment.
UNICEF should make child-oriented material available to
media as an educational tool, ensuring close cooperation
between the out-of-school public information sector and
the school curriculum, for the primary level. UNESCO, UNEP
and universities should enrich pre-service curricula for
journalists on environment and development topics;
e. Countries, in cooperation with the scientific community,
should establish ways of employing modern communication
technologies for effective public outreach. National and
local educational authorities and relevant United Nations
agencies should expand, as appropriate, the use of audio-visual
methods, especially in rural areas in mobile units, by producing
television and radio programmes for developing countries,
involving local participation, employing interactive multimedia
methods and integrating advanced methods with folk media;
f. Countries should promote, as appropriate, environmentally
sound leisure and tourism activities, building on The Hague
Declaration of Tourism (1989) and the current programmes
of the World Tourism Organization and UNEP, making suitable
use of museums, heritage sites, zoos, botanical gardens,
national parks, and other protected areas;
g. Countries should encourage non-governmental organizations
to increase their involvement in environmental and development
problems, through joint awareness initiatives and improved
interchange with other constituencies in society;
h. Countries and the United Nations system should increase
their interaction with and include, as appropriate, indigenous
people in the management, planning and development of their
local environment, and should promote dissemination of traditional
and socially learned knowledge through means based on local
customs, especially in rural areas, integrating these efforts
with the electronic media, whenever appropriate;
i. UNICEF, UNESCO, UNDP and non-governmental organizations
should develop support programmes to involve young people
and children in environment and development issues, such
as children's and youth hearings and building on decisions
of the World Summit for Children (A/45/625, annex);
j. Countries, the United Nations and non-governmental organizations
should encourage mobilization of both men and women in awareness
campaigns, stressing the role of the family in environmental
activities, women's contribution to transmission of knowledge
and social values and the development of human resources;
k. Public awareness should be heightened regarding the impacts
of violence in society.
Means of implementation Financing and cost evaluation
36.11. The Conference secretariat
has estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of
implementing the activities of this programme to be about
$1.2 billion, including about $110 million from the international
community on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative
and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been reviewed
by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including
any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide
upon for implementation.
C. Promoting training
Basis for action
36.12. Training is one of
the most important tools to develop human resources and facilitate
the transition to a more sustainable world. It should have
a job-specific focus, aimed at filling gaps in knowledge and
skill that would help individuals find employment and be involved
in environmental and development work. At the same time, training
programmes should promote a greater awareness of environment
and development issues as a two-way learning process.
Objectives
36.13. The following objectives
are proposed:
. To establish or strengthen vocational training programmes
that meet the needs of environment and development with
ensured access to training opportunities, regardless of
social status, age, gender, race or religion;
a. To promote a flexible and adaptable workforce of various
ages equipped to meet growing environment and development
problems and changes arising from the transition to a sustainable
society;
b. To strengthen national capacities, particularly in scientific
education and training, to enable Governments, employers
and workers to meet their environmental and development
objectives and to facilitate the transfer and assimilation
of new environmentally sound, socially acceptable and appropriate
technology and know-how;
c. To ensure that environmental and human ecological considerations
are integrated at all managerial levels and in all functional
management areas, such as marketing, production and finance.
Activities
36.14. Countries with the
support of the United Nations system should identify workforce
training needs and assess measures to be taken to meet those
needs. A review of progress in this area could be undertaken
by the United Nations system in 1995. 36.15. National professional
associations are encouraged to develop and review their codes
of ethics and conduct to strengthen environmental connections
and commitment. The training and personal development components
of programmes sponsored by professional bodies should ensure
incorporation of skills and information on the implementation
of sustainable development at all points of policy- and decision-making.
Countries and educational
institutions should integrate environmental and developmental
issues into existing training curricula and promote the exchange
of their methodologies and evaluations.
36.17. Countries should encourage all sectors of society,
such as industry, universities, government officials and employees,
non-governmental organizations and community organizations,
to include an environmental management component in all relevant
training activities, with emphasis on meeting immediate skill
requirements through short-term formal and in-plant vocational
and management training. Environmental management training
capacities should be strengthened, and specialized "training
of trainers" programmes should be established to support
training at the national and enterprise levels. New training
approaches for existing environmentally sound practices should
be developed that create employment opportunities and make
maximum use of local resource-based methods.
36.18. Countries should
strengthen or establish practical training programmes for
graduates from vocational schools, high schools and universities,
in all countries, to enable them to meet labour market requirements
and to achieve sustainable livelihoods. Training and retraining
programmes should be established to meet structural adjustments
which have an impact on employment and skill qualifications.
36.19. Governments are encouraged
to consult with people in isolated situations, whether geographically,
culturally or socially, to ascertain their needs for training
to enable them to contribute more fully to developing sustainable
work practices and lifestyles.
36.20. Governments, industry,
trade unions, and consumers should promote an understanding
of the interrelationship between good environment and good
business practices.
36.21. Countries should
develop a service of locally trained and recruited environmental
technicians able to provide local people and communities,
particularly in deprived urban and rural areas, with the services
they require, starting from primary environmental care.
36.22. Countries should
enhance the ability to gain access to, analyse and effectively
use information and knowledge available on environment and
development. Existing or established special training programmes
should be strengthened to support information needs of special
groups. The impact of these programmes on productivity, health,
safety and employment should be evaluated. National and regional
environmental labour-market information systems should be
developed that would supply, on a continuing basis, data on
environmental job and training opportunities. Environment
and development training resource-guides should be prepared
and updated, with information on training programmes, curricula,
methodologies and evaluation results at the local, national,
regional and international levels.
36.23. Aid agencies should
strengthen the training component in all development projects,
emphasizing a multidisciplinary approach, promoting awareness
and providing the necessary skills for transition to a sustainable
society. The environmental management guidelines of UNDP for
operational activities of the United Nations system may contribute
to this end.
36.24. Existing networks
of employers' and workers' organizations, industry associations
and non-governmental organizations should facilitate the exchange
of experience concerning training and awareness programmes
36.25. Governments, in cooperation
with relevant international organizations, should develop
and implement strategies to deal with national, regional and
local environmental threats and emergencies, emphasizing urgent
practical training and awareness programmes for increasing
public preparedness
36.26. The United Nations
system, as appropriate, should extend its training programmes,
particularly its environmental training and support activities
for employers' and workers' organizations.
Means of implementation
Financing and cost evaluation
36.27. The Conference secretariat
has estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of
implementing the activities of this programme to be about
$5 billion, including about $2 billion from the international
community on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative
and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been reviewed
by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including
any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide
upon for implementation.
Notes
4. Intergovernmental Conference
on Environmental Education: Final Report (Paris, UNESCO, 1978),
chap. III.
5. Final Report of the World Conference on Education for All:
Meeting Basic Learning Needs, Jomtien, Thailand, 5-9 March
1990 (New York, Inter-Agency Commission (UNDP, UNESCO, UNICEF,
World Bank) for the World Conference on Education for All,
1990).
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