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Date
: 20/02/2006
Source: Department of Social Development
Title: Skweyiya: UNESCO International Forum on Social Science -
Policy Nexus
Address by Dr Zola Skweyiya, President of the Management of Social
Transformations (MOST) Programme and Minister of Social Development
in South Africa, at the opening ceremony of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO)
International Forum on the Social Science - Policy Nexus, Buenos
Aires, Argentina
Minister Daniel Filmus,
Unesco Deputy Director-General, Mr Marcio Barbosa
Partcipants,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
Let me first express my heartfelt appreciation to the governments
and peoples of the Republic of Argentina and the Eastern Republic
of Uruguay for making possible a flagship event of the current
phase of the MOST Programme at UNESCO.
Your invitation to all of us to come and participate in an
innovative dialogue between social science research and social
policy elicited a substantial global response and is a testament to
the importance of the task at hand. It is also a testament to the
significance we all attached to the grounding of this International
Forum in the cities of Buenos Aires, Montevideo, Cordoba and
Rosario. We acknowledge your foresight about the urgent need for
rigorous social science research and effective social policies. We
applaud your generosity and as we get down to the business of this
Forum, we will not forget to delight in your hospitality.
The breath of the issues that will be discussed in this Forum
specify key aspects of the challenge of social transformation that
we face at the turn of the 21st century. Personally, I come from a
country and continent where the eradication of poverty, the
creation of employment and decent work and the engendering of
social cohesion are an uphill and long term task. The outcomes of
this International Forum are of day-to-day importance for millions
of our people and we therefore approach this Forum with conviction,
determination and hope.
We see our participation in the MOST Programme and in this
International Forum as an opportunity to put issues of extreme
poverty at the forefront of the agenda. Progressive social
transformation and social development require solidarity and we are
here in mutual solidarity.
As a premise to the business of this International Forum, we should
recall that both the Lisbon and Vienna Declarations on Social
Sciences emphasise the vital contribution of social science to the
social development objectives of the international community. So
collectively, our task is to ensure an adequate response to the
social transformations occurring across the globe. The variety and
depth of these social transformations and the challenge of
accomplishing the goals of the World Summit on Social Development,
puts into sharp relief the worldwide inadequate funding of the
social sciences. They also focus our attention on the value of
evidence-based policy, the value of structured multi-stakeholder
consultation processes, and the value of research and policy
networks. These research and policy networks should acknowledge the
fact that economics is a social science. There is an economic logic
to all social policy and all economic policies have social
consequences.
I am convinced that the support of the MOST Programme for the
activation of regional networks of Ministers of Social Development
has the potential in the long run to change the landscape and
horizon on all these issues. The Network of Ministers of Social
Development in the Latin American and Caribbean region has been a
model for the emerging networks in other parts of the world and we
continue to learn from the innovative practices in this
region.
The Network of Ministers in the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) held their first meeting in November 2004 and the
Ministers in the Economic Community of West African States held
their first meeting in January 2006. It is our expectation that
these Networks of Ministers will further the agenda and practice of
social development in our respective regions and engender further
South-South co-operation.
I am also convinced that the active participation of policy
activists from civil society in this International Forum and its
agenda are of similar importance. The existent and emerging
networks of social science researchers and policy activists across
the globe should seize the opportunities created by this new
dynamic on the social policy front.
Let me conclude these brief opening remarks by noting that it is
often said that we have the means at hand to ensure that nearly
every country can make good on the promises of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs). The actions flowing from the Buenos Aires
Declaration of the International Forum on the Social-Science -
Policy Nexus should contribute to the deployment of these means and
the fulfilment of the promises. I thank all of you for your support
of the International Forum on the Social-Science - Policy Nexus.
Going forward, we must work to open more space for stimulating
engagement and sustained, concerted action.
Issued by: Department of Social Development
20 February 2006