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VALUING DIVERSITY AND DIALOGUE: A NEW ALLIANCE BETWEEN CITIZENS AND GOVERNMENTS

MENA-OECD GOVERNANCE PROGRAMME AND ANNA LINDH EURO-MEDITERRANEAN FOUNDATION

Paris ● 7 JULY 2011

www.clubmadrid.org TheOur Club Members de Madrid D e m o c r a c y t h a t d e l i v e r s

Oscar Arias - President Costa Rica (1986-1990, 2006-2010) Alvaro Arzú - President Guatemala (1996-2000) Patricio Aylwin - President (1990-1994) - President Chile (2006-2010) Belisario Betancur - President (1992-1986) Kim Campbell - Prime Minister Canada (1993) Fernando Henrique Cardoso - President Brazil (1995-2003) Jean Chrétien - Prime Minister Canada (1993-2003) William J. Clinton - President USA (1993-2001) Leonel Fernández (l) – Pres. Dominican Rep. (1996-2000, 2004-) José María Figueres - President Costa Rica (1994-1998) Vicente Fox - President Mexico (2000-2006) Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle - President Chile (1994-2000) - President Colombia (1990-1994) Osvaldo Hurtado - President Ecuador (1981-1984) Luis Alberto Lacalle Herrera - President Uruguay (1990-1995) - President Chile (2000-2006) António Guterres - Prime Minister (1995-2002) - Prime Minister (1999-2008) Andrés Pastrana - President Colombia (1998-2002) Vaira Vike-Freiberga - President (1999-2007) Percival Noel J.Patterson - Prime Minister Jamaica (1992-2006) Václav Havel - President Czechoslovakia (1989-1992), Lionel Jospin - Prime Minister (1997-2002) Abdul-Kareem Al-Eryani - Prime Minister Yemen (1980-1983, 1998-2001) Javier Pérez de Cuéllar - President Peru (2000-2001) Sadig Al Mahdi - Prime Minister Sudan (1966-1967, 1986-1989) Jorge Quiroga - President Bolivia (2001-2002) - Canciller (1982-1998) - Prime Minister The (1994-2002) Joaquim Chissano - President (1986-2005) Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada – Pres.Bolivia (1993-1997,2002-03) Amine Gemayel - President Lebanon (1982-1988) Julio María Sanguinetti – Pres. Uruguay (1985-1990, 1995-2000) Milan Kučan - President Slovenia (1991-2002) Zlatko Lagumdzija - PM Bosnia and Herzegovina (2001-2002) Alpha Oumar Konare - President (1992-2002) Alejandro Toledo - President Peru (2001-2006) John Kufuor - President (2001-2009) Ernesto Zedillo - President Mexico (1994-2000) - Prime Minister The Netherlands (1982-1994) Ferenc Mádl - President (2000-2005) Antonio M. Mascarenhas Monteiro - President Cape Verde (1991-2001) Yasuo Fukuda - Prime Minister (2007-2008) Ketumile Masire - President Botswana (1980-1998) Inder Kumar Gujral - Prime Minister India (1997-1998) Tadeusz Mazowiecki - Prime Minister (1989-1991) Rexhep Meidani - President Republic of (1997-2002) Benjamin Mkapa - President (1995-2005) Han Seung-soo - Prime Minister Korea (2008-2009) Festus Mogae - President Botswana (1998-2008) Chandrika Kumaratunga - President Sri Lanka (1994-2005) – Pres. (1996-1998, 2006-2008) - Prime Minister Denmark (1993-2001) Olusegun Obasanjo - President Nigeria (1976-1979, 1999-2007) Hong-koo Lee - Prime Minister Republic of Korea (1994-1995) Fuad Siniora - Prime Minister Lebanon (2005-2009) Anand Panyarachun - Prime Minister Thailand (1991-1992) Mary Robinson - President Ireland (1990-1997) Fidel Valdez Ramos - President The Philippines (1992-1998) Petre Roman - Prime Minister (1989-1991) Cassam Uteem - President Mauritius (1992-2002) Jennifer Mary Shipley - Prime Minister New Zealand (1997-1999) Jorge Sampaio - President Portugal (1996-2006) Valdas Adamkus - President (1998-2003, 2004-2009) Mario Soares - PM Portugal (1976-1978, 1983-1985), Pres (1986-1996) Esko Aho - Prime Minister (1991-1995) Adolfo Suárez - President (1976-1981) Martti Ahtisaari - President Finland (1994-2000) Hanna Suchocka - Prime Minister Poland (1992-1993) José María Aznar - President Spain (1996-2004)

Carl Bildt - Prime Minister Sweden (1991-1994) President: Wim Kok Valdis Birkavs - Prime Minister Latvia (1993-1994) Vice-Presidents: César Gaviria, Jennifer Mary Shipley Kjell Magne Bondevik – PM (1997-2000, 2001-2005) 81 Full Members

Gro Harlem Brundtland - PM Norway (1981, 1986-1989, 1990-96) HONORARY MEMBERS Aníbal Cavaco Silva (l) – PM Portugal (1985-1995), Pres (2006-) From 57 countries - Secretary General of the UN (1997-2007) Philip Dimitrov - Prime Minister (1991-1992) Aun San Suu Kyi - Opposition Leader, Burma Vigdís Finnbogadottir - President (1980-1996) Represent 3.2 billion people Jimmy Carter - President of the USA (1977-1981) Felipe González - President Spain (1982-1996) - President of the EC (1985-1995) Mijaíl Gorbachov - President (1990-1991) 5 Nobel Peace Prize Laureates Alfred Gusenbauer - Chancellor (2007-2008)

The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

A SHARED SOCIETY is a socially cohesive society. It is stable, safe. It is where all those living there feel at home. It respects everyone’s dignity and human rights, while providing every individual with equal opportunity. It is tolerant. It respects diversity. A shared society is constructed and nurtured through strong political leadership The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

The term SHARED SOCIETY indicates the way of life, culture, values, customs practices and benefits of the society are not owned by any one group but belong to all. The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

I Locating Responsibility of Social Cohesion Within Government Structures

II Creating Opportunities for Consultation

III Monitor Structures and Policies to Ensure they support Shared Societies

IV Ensure the Legal Framework Protects the Rights of Individuals

V Deal with Inequalities and Disadvantages of those Discriminated Againsts

VI Ensure that Physical Environment Creates Opportunities for Interaction

VII An Education System that Demonstrates a Commitment to Shared Societies

VIII Initiate a Process to Encourage the Creation of Shared Vision of Society

IX Promote Respect and Understanding and Appreciation of Diversity

X Take Steps to Reduce Tension and Hostility The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

The Virtous Circle of Shared Societies

ECONOMIC WELL-BEING

DEVELOPING CONSOLIDATED SHARED SOCIETY SHARED SOCIETY

APPROPIATE ECONOMIC FRAMEWORK The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

Guiding Principles on the Economics of Shared Societies

1. Shared Societies, in which diverse groups and individuals are economically integrated and utilise their skills and talents tend to be more stable societies, which enjoy higher economic growth than divided societies

2. If groups and individuals are economically marginalised they have no reason to feel a sense of belonging to the state and are less likely top support the state and contribute to the wellbeing of all.

3. The costs of investing in a Shared Society and ensuring that marginalised groups feel they have a full place in society is more than compensated for by the contribution they can make.

4. Leaving groups and individuals on the margins of society is not cost- free, as it creates social, political and security problems which are avoidable, unnecessary and costly

The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

Guiding Principles on the Economics of Shared Societies

5. National and local economic policies and programmes play a major role in creating an inclusive dynamic for all groups.

6. National and local economic policies and programmes too often mainly benefit those who are already successful and influential, and as a result reinforce social divisions.

7. The international economic frameworks and the institutions that support them need to be reformed to ensure a fair, equitable and sustainable international economic order and business practices, and encourage appropriate national policies leading to Shared Societies and greater economic wellbeing world wide.

8. Existing international economic frameworks need to ensure that wealthier countries and vested interests do not benefit at the expense of poorer states and marginalised groups within all states. The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

Guiding Principles on the Economics of Shared Societies

9. Well intentioned economic policies often fail to benefit marginalised sectors and integrate them into society because of unintended consequences. They can be subverted by influential sectoral interests

10. Economic policies are more likely to benefit those who are marginalised and integrate them into a Shared Society if marginalized groups are involved in the planning and implementation of policies and programmes and if there is a mechanism to screen policies and programmes for their differential impact on each sector of society The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

Impact of the influence of ethnic groups on economic policy making • A population that finds its preferences represented in the policy process is more likely to support implementation of resultant policy.

• The policy quality is likely to improves with greater variety in input.

• Including a greater number of ethnic groups increases the number of potentially ethnic partisan veto players in the policy process – thereby generating increased policy stability in the long term.

After Jóhanna Kristín Birnir and David M. Waguespack Ethnic inclusion and economic growth Party Politics March 2011 17: 243-260,

The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

Shared Societies:Why Not?

http://www.clubmadrid.org/en/programa /the_shared_societies_project

The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

Call to Action for Leadership on Shared Societies

There is no other option, no excuse for avoiding the imperative to build social cohesion. We cannot wait! We believe in the respect for the dignity of every individual, human rights and the rule of law in equality, fairness, and a democracy without discrimination and equal opportunities for all We call to action our leaders and other sectors of society … THANK YOU

GRACIAS

MERCI The Shared Societies Project: B u i l d i n g a W o r l d S a f e f o r D i f f e r e n c e

Participation in Decisions High Levels of Equality Low Levels of Respect for Crime Human Rights High SharedAccess Societies to Social Capital Job & Services Low Levels of of High Levels Intercommunity Respect for of Social Integration Tension Personal Dignity

Comparative Size of High Social Trust Security Services