<div><font size="2"><br>Date: 16 Jul 2007<br>Title: Social Transformation programme to promote policy making<br><br><br>Paris - The Management of Social Transformations (MOST) Programme will seek to provide a bridge between research, policy development and practice to promote policy making and implementation at all levels. Social Development Minister Zola Skweyiya, in his capacity as President of the Intergovernmental Council (IGC) addressed the three day 8th Session of the IGC in Paris, Monday. Dr Skweyiya said the programme's intended outcome was the realisation of values such as justice, freedom, human dignity and sustainable development, all of which required concerted actions aimed at moving societies away from welfare to sustained social development.
<br><br>The MOST programme is a UNESCO initiative and its primary purpose is to transfer relevant social sciences research findings and data to decision-makers and other stakeholders. It focuses on building efficient bridges between research, policy and practice and promotes a culture of evidence-based policy-making - nationally, regionally and internationally. As the only UNESCO programme which fosters and promotes social science research, it is placed in a pivotal position in the overall promotion of UNESCO's goals. In his opening address, Dr Skweyiya said the session offered delegates an opportunity to evaluate the body's mid-term progress towards the realisation of its overall objective, this being the establishment of MOST as an international source of reliable, relevant and user friendly research with evidence-based decision-making, across regions.
<br><br>He expressed a concern about the penetration levels of existing research at a local level, given that most people interacted with local government. "Consequently I believe that if MOST is to make the necessary impact, it ought to pay attention to popular means of information dissemination. "This necessarily requires us to strengthen and integrate our National Liaison Committees with existing coordinating and policy-making structures in our respective countries. "It will further require that we produce our information in a manner that ordinary citizens can interact with it.
<br><br>"In the context of the developing world, it requires of us to not only consider platforms and formats of communication but also our selected language choices," said Dr Skweyiya. He explained that to accelerate delivery in that area would require that stakeholders place added attention to developing and supporting local level social scientists and researchers. "In developing this sector we must ensure that the legacy we leave behind is a society which is multilingual and multicultural - and supports our overall goal of building tolerant and prosperous communities. "Such communities would render a global economic, political, social and cultural environment that will enable the people of the world to eradicate poverty and achieve social development," he said.
<br><br>Dr Skweyiya emphasised the importance of evidence-based policy-making in providing responses to the many social ills and challenges facing many parts of the world. "The role of MOST in this area and in these efforts remains crucial, and we hope that this IGC will elaborate further on this role," he said. He told delegates that as they deliberated on the management of social transformations, they must be conscious of the global context and its challenges. The minister said current 'social transformations' required thorough analysis and well-designed responses. "Research plays a critical role and is an indispensable aspect of these well-designed responses.
<br><br>"These responses have to to appropriately locate the developmental role of the state, while paying careful attention to globally constraining factors in the geopolitical economy," he explained. Dr Skweyiya added that the meeting must also seek to implement locally tailor-made solutions that promoted key social objectives while addressing the needs of people. "Quantitative development produces figures; social development produces human welfare.
<br><br>"The test of successful social development is a simple one: whether all our people enjoy genuine access to all basic services, from health to education and from housing to water. "This is why the concern for social development is common to all socially conscious governments," he said. D Skweyiya called on delegates to use the IGC of MOST and its many programmes as a vehicle towards that kind of social development. - BuaNews
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