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Preface
The international community has long recognised that
desertification is a major economic, social and environmental
problem of concern to many countries in all regions
of the world. In 1977, the United Nations Conference
on Desertification (UNCOD) adopted a Plan of Action
to Combat Desertification (PACD). Unfortunately, despite
this and other efforts, the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) concluded in 1991 that the problem
of land degradation in arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid
areas had intensified, although there were "local
examples of success".
As a result, the question of how to tackle desertification
was still a major concern for the United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development (UNCED), which was
held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. The Conference supported
a new, integrated approach to the problem, emphasising
action to promote sustainable development at the community
level. It also called on the United Nations General
Assembly to establish an Intergovernmental Negotiating
Committee (INCD) to prepare, by June 1994, a Convention
to Combat Desertification, particularly in Africa.
In December 1992, the General Assembly agreed and
adopted resolution 47/188.
Working to a tight schedule, the Committee completed
its negotiations in five sessions. The Convention
was adopted in Paris on 17 June 1994 and opened for
signature there on 14-15 October 1994. It entered
into force on 26 December 1996, 90 days after the
fiftieth ratification was received. Over 179 countries
were Parties as at March 2002. The Conference of the
Parties (COP), which is the Convention's supreme governing
body, held its first session in October 1997 in Rome,
Italy; the second in December 1998 in Dakar, Senegal;
the third in November 1999 in Recife, Brazil; the
fourth in December 2000 in Bonn, Germany; and the
fifth in October 2001 in Geneva, Switzerland. As of
2001, COP sessions will be held on a biennial basis.
Prologue
Part
I (Introduction), Part
II (General Provisions), Part
III (Action Programmes), Part
IV (Institutions), Part
V (Procedures), Part
VI (Final Provisions)
Annex
I (Africa), Annex
II (Asia), Annex
III (Latin America and the Caribbean), Annex
IV (Northern Mediterranean), Annex
V (Central and Eastern Europe)
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