Joint Consultation Document - May 1998
Contents
A. |
Joint Message by
Dr. Klaus Töpfer, Director-General and head of the United Nations
Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat), and Dr. Heinrich Hoffschulte, Chairman
of the Expert Group on the World Charter |
B. |
Report on the Origins,
Aims and Proposed Preparation Process for the World Charter |
C. |
Initial Draft Text
of the World Charter of Local Self-Government |
D. |
Joint UNCHS/WACLAC
Expert Group on the World Charter |
Nairobi, 25 May 1998
UNCHS (Habitat)
PO Box 30030
NAIROBI
Kenya
Tel: +254 2 623066
Fax: +254 2 624250
E-mail: Rolf.Wichmann@unchs.org |
WACLAC
18 rue Saint Léger
1204 GENEVA
Switzerland
Tel: +41 22 310 3091
Fax: +41 22 310 3270
E-mail: camval@ville-ge.ch |
PART A
UNITED NATIONS CENTRE FOR
HUMAN SETTLEMENTS (Habitat)
WORLD ASSOCIATIONS OF
CITIES AND LOCAL AUTHORITIES
COORDINATION (WACLAC)
25 May 1998
TOWARDS A WORLD CHARTER OF LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT
This consultation document
represents the start of an important and ambitious partnership project
between the United Nations and the local levels of government. Its aim
is nothing less than to draw up an internationally agreed, adaptable framework
for the practice of local democracy, as a vital contribution to the improvement
of people's living conditions in all continents and regions.
At the second United Nations
Conference on Human Settlements - HABITAT II - held in Istanbul in June
1996, national governments committed themselves to the objective of decentralising
authority and resources (Habitat Agenda, para 45(c)). They also
recognised local authorities as the closest partners of central governments,
and as essential in the implementation of Agenda 21 and the Habitat
Agenda (Istanbul Declaration, para 12).
Since Habitat II, UNCHS (Habitat)
has further developed its already close working relationship with the international
associations of cities and local authorities in the framework of a Memorandum
of Understanding with WACLAC setting out mutual commitments to collaboration
in a number of key policy areas related to the implementation of the HabitatAgenda.
The preparation of the World Charter of Local Self-Government is one of
these joint undertakings. UNCHS (Habitat) and WACLAC are united in believing
that the underpinning of the recent and very welcome decentralisation and
democratisation trends in many countries, by the constitutional anchoring
of local self-government on the basis of internationally recognised principles,
can make a contribution of crucial importance to the effective and sustainable
implementation of the Habitat Agenda.
This document explains the
origins, the aims and the rationale for the preparation of the World Charter,
and sets out a first draft of the Charter itself. It also maps out
an extensive world-wide consultation and consensus-building process to
be launched from now on, culminating in the presentation of the final text
of the Charter for adoption by the United Nations Commission on Human Settlements
in 2001. The ultimate aim is the promulgation of the Charter by the United
Nations General Assembly on the occasion of the Special Session in that
year which will be dedicated to reviewing the implementation of the Habitat
Agenda.
National governments and international
organizations, local authorities and their associations, parliamentarians,
NGOs and civil society organisations of all kinds are warmly invited to
participate actively in the further development of this World Charter,
which we believe can make a unique and vital contribution to the fulfilment
of our shared Habitat goals.
Dr.
Klaus Töpfer
Director General and head,
United Nations Centre for
Human
Settlements (Habitat) |
Dr.
Heinrich Hoffschulte
Chairman
Expert Group on the World
Charter |
PART B
TOWARDS A
WORLD CHARTER OF LOCAL
SELF-GOVERNMENT
THE ORIGINS, AIMS AND PROPOSED PREPARATION
PROCESS
FOR THE WORLD CHARTER
Background
-
The World Assembly of Cities and
Local Authorities, held in Istanbul on 30-31 May 1996 on the eve of the
Second United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (HABITAT II), called
upon the international community to take steps "to draw up, in partnership
with the representative associations of local authorities, a worldwide
Charter of Local Self-Government setting out, for the guidance of all national
governments and international agencies, the basic principles which should
underlie any democratic local government system". It urged that the basis
of this Charter should reside in the principles of subsidiarity and proximity,
whereby decisions should be taken at the level closest to the citizens
(municipality or town) and that only those tasks which the local level
cannot effectively carry out alone should be referred to higher levels.
-
The debates at the World Assembly
had focused a good deal upon the constitutional position of local authorities
and their relationship with central governments in the discharge of their
functions. In this context, the positive experience of the European Charter
of Local Self-Government, adopted by the Council of Europe in 1985 as a
European Convention and now signed and ratified by a large majority of
the Council of Europe's 40 Member States, was strongly highlighted in the
debates.
-
The case for the promulgation
of a worldwide Charter by the United Nations was highlighted in the presentations
by the local authorities delegation at the hearing before Committee II
of the HABITAT II Conference on 4 June 1996, and this concern was recorded
in the official report of that hearing (para 11). The Chairperson's summary
of the hearing (para 23) referred to the matter as follows:
"The need for the development
of national laws and regulations that clearly specify the role and responsibilities
of local authorities vis-à-vis national Governments and provide
for effective decentralisation and local democracy, taking into account
the principles of autonomy, subsidiarity and proximity, was also highlighted.
In this context, it was suggested that the experience gained in the implementation
of the European Charter of Local Self-Government could be used as a basis
for developing a global charter that would set out the key principles underlying
a sound constitutional or legal framework for a democratic local government
system."
-
The preparation of a World Charter
of Local Self-Government figures among the aims specified in the Constitution
of the World Associations of Cities and Local Authorities Coordination
(WACLAC), the structure set up by the ten international local government
associations which had convened the World Assembly in response to the call
made by that Assembly for "an ongoing coordination to serve as the interlocutor
and institutional partner of the UN and its specialised agencies". WACLAC
envisaged that such a Charter would most effectively be drawn up in partnership
with national governments through United Nations machinery, with a view
to the final text being promulgated as an official United Nations Convention.
A Partnership Project
-
Following negotiations during
the immediate follow-up to HABITAT II and on the occasion of the 16th session
of the UN Commission on Human Settlements in April-May 1997, the Memorandum
of Understanding between UNCHS and WACLAC, signed in New York on 29 July
1997, commits both parties to undertake, as one of four priority activities,
work on the preparation of a World Charter:
'In view of strengthening
the role and capacity of local authorities to contribute effectively to
sustainable human and settlement development, the two parties hereby agree
to undertake a joint project entitled the "World Charter of Local Self-Government".
More specifically, WACLAC and UNCHS will constitute a joint task force
for this project to work on, inter alia:
-
joint fund-raising for the
project;
-
identification and compilation
of existing knowledge (documents, studies, reports, legislation, processes
etc) of relevance to local self-governance at the national and international
levels;
-
the organisation of an ad hoc
expert group meeting;
-
the organisation of regional
and/or sub-regional consultations;
-
the preparation of draft documents
to be submitted, through the Commission on Human Settlements, to the appropriate
bodies, commissions and committees of the United Nations.'
-
The present report is based upon
the results of a first ad hoc Expert Group Meeting held in Nairobi from
28 to 30 April 1998 in accordance with the above provisions of the Memorandum
of Understanding. This meeting reviewed the experience gained by some of
the international associations in this field, notably in the preparation
and subsequent application of the European Charter of Local Self-Government;
drew up an initial draft text for a possible World Charter; and prepared
proposals for an extensive consultation and consensus-building process
to be carried out during the period leading up to the five-year review
of the implementation of the results of the HABITAT II Conference by the
United Nations General Assembly in 2001.
The Precedent of the European
Charter of Local Self-Government
-
The first initiative for any form
of international recognition of the principles of local autonomy (in modern
times) was taken at the first General Assembly of the Council of European
Municipalities in Versailles in 1953. The "European Charter of Municipal
Liberties" adopted on that occasion reflected its proponents' commitment
to rebuilding post-war Europe on the basis of strong local institutions
enjoying a high degree of democratic autonomy. During the succeeding years
the CEM (now the Council of European Municipalities and Regions, European
Section of the International Union of Local Authorities) launched and supported
a series of initiatives to have this Charter adopted officially by the
European Institutions.
-
It took, however, until the late
1970s for this call to be answered, with the preparation by the Standing
Conference of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe (known as CLRAE),
the official representative institution for the local and regional levels
of government within the Council of Europe, of a Draft European Charter
of Local Self-Government. This text was formulated, following detailed
study by a representative committee with the assistance of a group of experts
on constitutional law, on the legal basis of a European Convention, and
was adopted by the CLRAE in 1981 and referred to the Committee of Ministers
of the Council of Europe for action. Approval of the principle of such
a Convention was secured from the 5th Conference of European Ministers
responsible for Local Government in 1982, and the text proposed by the
CLRAE was then referred to a committee of senior officials of the Member
States for detailed scrutiny (with the participation of local government
representatives appointed by the CLRAE).
-
The end result of this scrutiny
was the present text of the European Charter, which was drawn up in its
final form as a European Convention and opened for signature in 1985. The
Charter entered into force on 1 September 1988 upon its ratification by
four countries. It had by then already been signed by 16 countries, and
to date a further 18 signatures have been added. The Charter has now been
ratified by 30 European countries, and it has been used as a major guideline
by several of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, which have been
admitted to membership of the Council of Europe in recent years, in their
constitutions and/or their basic local government legislation. The principle
of local self-government is seen as such an essential component of the
Council of Europe's fundamental principles of democracy, human rights and
the rule of law that signature of the European Charter of Local Self-Government,
along with the European Convention on Human Rights, is henceforth a pre-requisite
for accession by new Member States.
Content of the European Charter
-
The European Charter commits the
parties to applying basic rules guaranteeing the political, administrative
and financial independence of local authorities. It is thus a demonstration,
at European level, of the political will to give substance at all levels
of territorial administration to the fundamental principles of democracy
upheld by the Council of Europe since its foundation in 1949. Indeed, it
embodies the conviction that the degree of self-government enjoyed by local
authorities may be regarded as a touchstone of genuine democracy.
-
The Charter sets out in ten concise
articles, together comprising 30 paragraphs, the key principles of local
self-government in the European context. It specifies the need for a constitutional/legal
foundation for local self-government, defines the concept and establishes
principles governing the nature and scope of local authorities' powers.
Further articles provide for due procedures to be followed regarding boundary
changes, for autonomy in relation to local authorities' administrative
structures and access to competent staff, and for proper conditions for
the holding of elective office. Further provisions aim at securing a clear
legal framework for any necessary supervision of the acts of local authorities,
and at ensuring that they have adequate access to resources to match the
tasks assigned to them, on terms which do not impair their basic autonomy.
Finally, the Charter covers the rights of local authorities to cooperate
together, including internationally, and to form associations, and provides
for the right of recourse to judicial remedy for the protection of local
autonomy.
-
In accordance with the intention
of securing a realistic balance between the safeguarding of essential principles
and the flexibility necessary to allow for the particular legal and institutional
characteristics of the various member states, the Charter requires contracting
parties to undertake to consider themselves bound by at least 20 of the
30 substantive paragraphs, at least 10 of which must be drawn from a specified
list of key provisions. States may thus exclude themselves from certain
provisions at the time of ratification, but may subscribe to them later
when the obstacles concerned have been removed. States may also limit the
application of the Charter to particular levels or categories of local
authorities, notably to meet the circumstances of countries with federal
structures.
-
The Charter does not provide for
an institutionalised system of control of its application, beyond a requirement
for parties to supply all relevant information concerning legislative or
other measures taken for the purpose of complying with the Charter. The
need for special supervision machinery, such as exists for certain other
European Conventions, was considered, but it was concluded that the existence
of the CLRAE as an official Council of Europe body representing the local
and regional authorities of all the member states and having direct access
to the Committee of Ministers would ensure adequate political control of
compliance.
-
In recent years CLRAE has embarked
upon a process of periodic review of the state of local autonomy in particular
member states, as a means of verifying compliance with the Charter's provisions.
It is assisted in this process by a recently constituted association of
academic experts, the European Local Government Association for Research
(ELGAR, also known as ARCOLE, Association pour la Recherche sur les Collectivités
Locales en Europe). Moreover, CLRAE henceforth uses the Charter on a permanent
basis as a template for the consideration of a wide variety of policy and
governance issues appearing on its agenda.
Towards a World Charter
-
It is perhaps a mark of the universality
and conciseness of the European Charter's provisions that there have been
no moves since its adoption to alter the text, and that the Charter has
been signed and (progressively) ratified by a significant number of countries,
including Eastern European transition countries which were not members
of the Council of Europe at the time of its drafting and so had no involvement
in that process. The existence of the Charter, even in the absence of formal
enforcement capability, may be taken to exert a degree of moral pressure
upon all European governments, and it is certain that any major breach
would receive extensive public attention in the CLRAE, and hence in the
Parliamentary Assembly and the Committee of Ministers of the Council of
Europe and in the media. While the initial drafting of the Charter was
regarded by some as a somewhat theoretical exercise of limited practical
relevance to the day-to-day conduct of central/local government relations,
recent history has proved the position to be otherwise. Few European mayors,
and probably few European governments, would now question the value of
having this internationally defined standard on the statute book as a constitutional
safeguard of local self-government.
-
The universal nature of most of
the principles in the European Charter was recognised by the International
Union of Local Authorities (IULA) in 1985 in the adoption at its World
Congress in Rio de Janeiro of a 'Worldwide Declaration on the Principles
of Local Self-Government', the drafting of which had drawn heavily upon
the European precedent. In 1993 IULA's Toronto Congress reaffirmed the
text of the Worldwide Declaration with an updated Preamble highlighting
its relevance to the marked decentralisation and democratisation trends
in many parts of the world. At the IULA World Congress in Mauritius in
April 1997, the experience to date with the European Charter and the Worldwide
Declaration was presented at a crowded plenary session intended to focus
attention upon the first steps towards the World Charter called for in
Istanbul. The final declaration of that Congress included a call to international
organizations and agencies and national governments Ato work together with
local governments and their national, regional and international associations
and networks to develop and promulgate through the United Nations, a World
Charter of Local Self-Government and to pursue its progressive implementation
in all continents through a World Decade of Local Government (2000-2009)".
Prior to that, the European Section of IULA, the "Council of European Municipalities
and Regions", in its conference at Thessaloniki in May 1996 just before
to the World Assembly of Cities and the Habitat II Conference in Istanbul,
requested the international community to take decisive steps towards a
"World Charter of Local Self-Government" and - thereby - help establish
an effective framework for the implementation of those tasks in international
plans of action which must be dealt with at the sub-national level.
-
The formulation of a World Charter
which is appropriate to the diverse circumstances and levels of development
of all United Nations Member States is inevitably a more complex undertaking
than the formulation of a regional Charter. Local self-government needs
to be seen in the global context as a vital component of the development
process and of the commitment to decentralisation policies made by the
Member States in the Habitat Agenda. However, there is some risk
that this cause may not be aided by the elaboration of principles which
cannot in practice be applied in certain situations of extreme shortage
of resources and infrastructure. On the other hand, the ready adoption
of the European Charter by many countries in transition which had played
no part in its drafting, and the acceptance by IULA and some other international
associations of a Worldwide Declaration embodying largely similar provisions,
suggest that certain universal principles of local democracy can be validly
defined and promulgated at the international level.
-
The Expert Group working under
the UNCHS/WACLAC Memorandum of Understanding took the view that the best
way forward towards the preparation of a World Charter would be to review
the existing knowledge and experience in all regions, taking into account
the terms of the European Charter, as the first and only multilateral legal
instrument to define and safeguard the principles of local autonomy, as
a practical starting point. Proceeding on this basis, the Expert Group
has prepared the initial draft of a World Charter which is set out in Part
C of this document.
-
The text follows the structure
of the European Charter as outlined in paras 11-12 above, with some updating
in the light of recent decentralisation trends in various countries. A
new Article is added on the subject of citizen participation and partnership
(Article 10), and the provision for cooperation between local authorities
and the formation of associations is expanded into two Articles dealing
respectively with the national and the international levels (Articles 11-12).
The Preamble relates the Charter to appropriate United Nations texts, including
Agenda 21, the Istanbul Declaration and the Habitat Agenda, and
a specific commitment is made (Preamble and Article 6) to gender equality.
-
The flexible approach in the European
Charter concerning the requirement for signature on the basis of commitment
to a minimum number of key provisions is also taken as a model, and the
provisions regarding signature, ratification and accession procedures in
Parts II and III are based upon existing United Nations conventions.
The Consultation Process
-
UNCHS and WACLAC now propose to
embark upon an extensive consultation process concerning these proposals
for a World Charter, the ultimate aim of which is to build a wide degree
of consensus around a refined version of the text, revised as necessary
in the light of the consultations, which would be presented to the 18th
session of the United Nations Commission on Human Settlements in 2001 for
adoption and referral to the Economic and Social Council. Subject to its
approval at these levels, it is envisaged that the World Charter could
then be promulgated at the General Assembly Special Session (Istanbul+5)
as one of a number of specific instruments designed to facilitate and codify
the implementation of the Habitat Agenda.
-
The consultation process is envisaged
as comprising the following elements:-
(1) early circulation of
this report among the international and regional associations of cities
and local authorities in membership of WACLAC and its consideration at
their respective statutory meetings and/or congresses;
(2) the inclusion in the draft
work programme for 2000-2001 of the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements
(Habitat) of joint work with the international associations of cities and
local authorities on the further development of the Charter;
(3) the organisation - in accordance
with para 2 of Resolution CHS 16/12, whereby the United Nations Commission
on Human Settlements has committed itself to 'provide opportunities for
partners to engage in a dialogue among themselves and with Governments
(which) may, as appropriate, serve as an input to the deliberations of
the Commission' - of a formal dialogue during the 17th session of the Commission
in May 1999 at which a local government delegation would present the aims
and projected content of the World Charter for initial debate with national
governments;
(4) the organisation during
1998 and 1999, in collaboration with selected host cities and their national
governments in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and possibly in the Arab States,
of special regional or sub-regional consultative meetings devoted to the
World Charter, involving representatives of national governments, local
authorities and other relevant actors. WACLAC would assist with the selection
of the host cities and would take all possible steps to assure broadly-based
representation of local government in each region;
(5) the inclusion of the proposal
for a World Charter as an item on the agendas of the regular consultative
meetings of Ministers and high ranking officials held in each region prior
to the 17th and 18th sessions of the United Nations Commission on Human
Settlements;
(6) appropriate consultations
with the Global Parliamentarians on Habitat and their regional groupings,
and with the relevant Foundations and NGOs, and their due association with
the formulation process in its entirety;
(7) periodic review by the
joint UNCHS/WACLAC Expert Group of the results of these consultations,
with the production (as necessary) of a first revision of the text of the
draft Charter in April 1999 in advance of the 17th session of the Commission,
and of a second revision in December 2000 with a view to its inclusion
in the official working documents for referral to the 18th session of the
Commission in May 2001.
-
UNCHS and WACLAC will henceforth
prepare a joint fundraising strategy with a view to establishing a specific
budget to cover the costs of conducting the above consultation and consensus-building
process in an efficient and transparent manner and to ensure the appropriate
level of representation of all interested partners throughout the process.
It is envisaged in this connection that the international associations
in membership of WACLAC will build the development of the Charter into
their forward programmes. UNCHS will dedicate some core resources to this
task in 1998-1999 in fulfilment of its commitment in the Memorandum of
Understanding with WACLAC, pending formal inclusion of the Charter in its
draft 2000-2001 work programme.
Conclusion
-
The adoption by the United Nations
General Assembly of the Habitat Agenda, including its Global Plan
of Action, in December 1996 provides the political mandate for advancing
work on a World Charter of Local Self-Government. Once adopted following
an extensive consultation process, the Charter will be designed to offer
an internationally agreed template for progressive but flexible implementation
of the Member States' commitment to decentralisation as set out in the
Istanbul Declaration and in the Habitat Agenda. The underpinning
of the recent decentralisation and democratisation trends in many countries
by the constitutional anchoring of local self-government on the basis of
internationally recognised principles can make a contribution of crucial
importance to the implementation of the Habitat Agenda. Providing
a clear and stable constitutional/legal basis for local government is an
essential foundation for establishing local authorities' position as partners
in the system of governance of all countries. This in turn will enable
them to fulfil their true role in leadership of their communities and in
the application of local people's energy, imagination and initiative to
the pursuit of the twin goals of adequate shelter for all and sustainable
human settlements development in an urbanising world.
PART C
25 May 98
INITIAL DRAFT TEXT
OF A WORLD CHARTER OF LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT
Preamble
The States Parties to the
present Charter:
-
Recognizing that many global problems,
as evidenced in Agenda 21 and the Habitat Agenda, must be dealt with at
the local level and cannot be successfully resolved without intensified
dialogue and cooperation between the State level and local authorities;
-
Recognizing local authorities
as the closest partners of central governments and as essential in the
implementation of Agenda 21 and the Habitat Agenda;
-
Recalling the principle, recognised
in article 21 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, that the will
of the people is the basis of the authority of governments at all levels;
-
Convinced that the principle of
subsidiarity is the basis for democratic and participatory development
and that any allocation of tasks and responsibilities should abide by this
principle;
-
Committed to promoting decentralization
through democratic local authorities and to strengthen their financial
and institutional capacities;
-
Convinced that gender equality
and social inclusion must go hand in hand with local democracy and participation
and that these goals are mutually reinforcing;
-
Further committed to facilitating
and enabling the broad-based participation of all people and their community
organizations in decision-making and in the implementation and monitoring
of human settlements strategies, policies and programmes;
-
Convinced that strong local democracy
through freely elected local authorities, together with professional standards
and conduct in local administration, offer the means of fostering public
accountability and strengthening our societies against corruption;
-
Convinced that the existence of
strong local authorities with clear roles and responsibilities and adequate
resources ensures services which are both effective and close to the citizens.
Have agreed as follows:
Article 1
The States Parties undertake
to consider themselves bound by the following articles in the manner and
to the extent prescribed in Article 14 of this Charter.
Part I
Article 2 - Constitutional
and legal foundation for local self-government
The principle of local self-government
shall be recognised in national legislation, and where practicable guaranteed
in the constitution.
Article 3 - Concept of local
self-government
-
Local self-government denotes
the right and the ability of local authorities, within the limits of the
law, to regulate and manage a substantial share of public affairs under
their own responsibility and in the interests of the local population.
-
This right shall be exercised
by councils or assemblies composed of members freely elected by secret
ballot on the basis of direct, equal, universal suffrage, and which may
possess executive organs responsible to them.
Article 4 - Scope of local
self-government
-
Local authorities shall have full
discretion to exercise their initiative with regard to all matters which
are not excluded by law from their competence nor assigned to any other
authority.
-
The basic powers and responsibilities
of local authorities shall be prescribed by the constitution or by law.
However, this provision shall not prevent the attribution to local authorities
of powers and responsibilities for specific purposes.
-
In accordance with the principle
of subsidiarity, public responsibilities shall generally be exercised by
those authorities which are closest to the citizen. In the same spirit,
any allocation of responsibility to another authority must be based on
the requirements of technical or economic efficiency.
-
Powers given to local authorities
shall normally be full and exclusive. They should not be undermined, and
may not be limited by another authority except as provided for by law.
-
Where powers are delegated to
them by a central or regional authority, local authorities shall be given
discretion in adapting their implementation to local conditions.
-
Local authorities shall be involved
in due time and in an appropriate way in the planning and decision-making
processes for all matters which affect them.
Article 5 - Protection of local
authority boundaries
Changes in local authority
boundaries shall not be made without prior consultation of the local communities
concerned, possibly by means of a referendum where this is legally permitted.
Article 6 - Appropriate
administrative structures and resources for the tasks of local authorities
-
Local authorities shall be enabled
to determine their own internal administrative structures, to adapt them
to local needs, and to ensure effective management.
-
Local authorities shall be supported
by higher levels of government in the development of administrative, technical
and managerial capacities and of structures which are responsive, transparent
and accountable.
-
The conditions of service of local
government employees shall be such as to permit the recruitment and retention
of high-quality staff on the basis of professional competenceand experience,
and of gender equality; to this end adequate training opportunities, remuneration
and career prospects shall be provided.
Article 7 - Conditions under
which responsibilities at local level are exercised
-
The conditions of office of locally
elected representatives shall guarantee free exercise of their functions.
-
They shall allow for appropriate
reimbursement of expenses incurred in the exercise of the office in question
as well as, where appropriate, compensation for loss of earnings or remuneration
for work done and corresponding social protection.
-
Any functions and activities which
are deemed incompatible with the holding of local elective office shall
be specified by law.
Article 8 - Supervision of
local authorities' activities
-
Any supervision of local authorities
may only be exercised according to such procedures and in such cases as
are provided for by the constitution or by law.
-
Any supervision of the activities
of local authorities shall aim only at ensuring compliance with the law
and with constitutional principles. In respect of tasks the execution of
which is delegated to local authorities, administrative supervision by
higher level authorities may however go beyond legal control to ensure
conformity with national policy.
-
Supervision of local authorities
shall be exercised when necessary in due proportion to the interests which
it is intended to protect.
-
If the constitution or national
law permits the suspension or dissolution of local councils or the suspension
or dismissal of local executives, this shall be done in accordance with
due process of law. Their functioning shall be restored within as short
a period of time as possible which shall be prescribed by law.
Article 9 - Financial resources
of local authorities
-
Local authorities shall be entitled
to adequate financial resources of their own, of which they may dispose
freely within the framework of their powers.
-
Local authorities' financial resources
shall be commensurate with their tasks and responsibilities.
-
A reasonable proportion of the
financial resources of local authorities shall derive from local taxes,
fees and charges of which they have the power to determine the rate.
-
Taxes which local authorities
shall be entitled to levy, or of which they receive a guaranteed share,
shall be of a sufficiently general, buoyant and flexible nature to enable
them to keep pace with their responsibilities.
-
The protection of financially
weaker local authorities requires a system of vertical and horizontal financial
equalisation.
-
Local authorities shall participate
in framing the rules governing the general apportionment of redistributed
resources.
-
As far as possible, financial
allocations to local authorities shall respect their priorities and shall
not be earmarked for specific projects. The provision of grants shall not
remove the basic freedom of local authorities to exercise policy discretion
within their own jurisdiction.
-
For the purpose of borrowing for
capital investment, local authorities shall have access to the national
and international capital markets.
Article 10 - Participation
of citizens and partnership
-
Local authorities shall be entitled
to define appropriate forms of popular participation and civic engagement
in decision-making and in fulfilment of their function of community leadership.
-
Local authorities shall be empowered
to establish and develop partnerships with all actors of civil society,
particularly non-governmental organizations and community-based organizations,
and with the private sector and other interested stakeholders.
Article 11 - Associations of
local authorities
-
Local authorities shall be entitled,
in exercising their powers, to form associations for the defence and promotion
of their common interests as well as in order to provide certain services
to their members, and to cooperate and form legal entities with other local
authorities in order to carry out tasks of common interest.
-
Other levels of government shall
consult associations of local authorities when preparing legislation affecting
local government.
Article 12 - International
cooperation
-
Local authorities' right of association
shall include that of belonging to international associations of local
authorities.
-
Local authorities shall also be
entitled, by law or international treaties, to cooperate with their counterparts
in other countries, including in transfrontier regions.
-
Local authorities shall be involved,
in the spirit of partnership, in the negotiation and implementation of
international plans of action concerning their roles and areas ofresponsibility.
Article 13 - Legal protection
of local self-government
Local authorities shall have
the right of recourse to judicial remedy in order to safeguard their autonomy
and to ensure compliance with the laws which determine their functions
and protect their interests.
Part II - Miscellaneous
provisions
Article 14 - Undertakings
-
Each State Party undertakes to
consider itself bound by at least twenty paragraphs of Part I of the Charter,
at least ten of which shall be selected from among the following paragraphs:
-
Article 2,
-
Article 3, paragraphs 1 and
2
-
Article 4, paragraphs
1,2 and 4,
-
Article 5,
-
Article 7, paragraph 1,
-
Article 8, paragraph 2,
-
Article 9, paragraphs 1, 2
and 3
-
Article 11, paragraph 1,
-
Article 13.
-
Each State Party, when depositing
its instrument of ratification or accession, shall notify to the Secretary-General
of the United Nations the paragraphs selected in accordance with the provisions
of paragraph 1 of this Article.
-
Any State Party may, at any later
time, notify the Secretary-General that it considers itself bound by any
paragraphs of this Charter which it has not already accepted under the
terms of paragraph 1 of this Article.
-
Such undertakings subsequently
given shall be deemed to be an integral part of the ratification or accession
of the State Party so notifying, and shall have the same effect as from
the thirtieth day after the date of the receipt of the notification by
the Secretary-General.
Article 15 - Authorities to
which the Charter applies
The principles of local self-government
contained in the present Charter apply to all the categories of local authorities
existing within the territory of the State Party. However, each State Party
may, when depositing its instrument of ratification or accession, specify
the categories of local or regional authorities to which it intends to
confine the scope of the Charter or which it intends to exclude from its
scope. It may also include further categories of local or regional authorities
within the scope of the Charter by subsequent notification to the Secretary-General
of the United Nations.
Article 16 - Provision of
information
Each State Party shall forward
periodically to the Secretary-General of the United Nations all relevant
information concerning legislative provisions and other measures taken
by it for the purposes of complying with the terms of this Charter.
Article 17 - Monitoring
For the purpose of assessing
progress in the implementation of the present Charter, a
monitoring committee shall be established by States Parties. This committee
shall include representatives of local authorities. Its secretariat shall
be provided by the United Nations.
Part III
Article 18 - Signature and
ratification
-
The present Charter shall be open
for signature by all States.
-
The present Charter is subject
to ratification. Instruments of ratification shall be deposited with the
Secretary-General of the United Nations.
-
The present Charter shall remain
open for accession by any State. The instruments of accession shall be
deposited with the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
Article 19 - Entry into force
-
The present Charter shall enter
into force on the thirtieth day following the date of deposit
with the Secretary-General of the United Nations of the twentieth instrument
of ratification or accession.
-
For each State ratifying or acceding
to the Charter after the deposit of the twentieth instrument of ratification
or accession, the Charter shall enter into force on the thirtieth day after
the deposit by such State of its instrument of ratification or accession.
Article 20 - Territorial clause
-
Any State Party may, at the time
of signature or when depositing its instrument of ratification or accession,
specify the territory or territories to which this Charter shall apply.
-
Any State Party may at any later
date, by a declaration addressed to the Secretary-General of the United
Nations, extend the application of this Charter to any other such territory
specified in the declaration. In respect of territory the Charter shall
enter into force on the thirtieth day after the date of receipt of such
declaration by the Secretary-General.
-
Any declaration made under the
two preceding paragraphs may, in respect of any territory specified in
such declaration, be withdrawn by a notification addressed to the Secretary-General.
The withdrawal shall become effective on the thirtieth day after the date
of receipt of such notification by the Secretary-General.
Article 21 - Denunciation
A State Party may denounce
the present Charter by written notification to the Secretary-General of
the United Nations. Denunciation becomes effective one year after the date
of receipt of the notification by the Secretary-General.
Article 22 - Notifications
The Secretary-General of the
United Nations is designated as the depositary of the present Charter.
The Secretary General shall
notify the member States of the United Nations of:
-
any signature;
-
the deposit of any instrument
of ratification or accession;
-
any date of entry into force of
this Charter in accordance with Article 19;
-
any notification received in application
of the provisions of Article 14, paragraphs 2 and 3;
-
any notification received in application
of the provisions of Article 15;
-
any other act, notification or
communication relating to this Charter.
Article 23 - Authenticity of
text
The original of the present
Charter of which the Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish
texts are equally authentic, shall be deposited with the Secretary-General
of the United Nations.
In witness thereof the undersigned
plenipotentiaries, being duly authorized thereto by their respective Governments,
have signed the present Charter.
PART D
JOINT UNCHS/WACLAC EXPERT GROUP
ON THE WORLD CHARTER OF LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT
International Associations
of Local Authorities
Dr. Heinrich Hoffschulte |
President, German
Section, IULA-Council of European Municipalities and Regions, formerly
Oberkreisdirektor, Kreis Steinfurt, Germany |
Mr. Mbaye-Jacques
Diop |
Député-Mayor
of Rufisque, Senegal
President of the Parliamentary
Commission on Laws,
General Administration and
Human Rights
Deputy Secretary General,
Union of African Towns |
Mayor Rodrigo González
Torres |
Mayor of Viña
del Mar, Chile
Vice-President of the Association
of Chilean Municipalities |
Col. Max Ng'andwe |
Councillor of Kabwe,
Zambia
President, Local Government
Association of Zambia
President, IULA Africa Section |
Mayor Jesse M.
Rebredo |
Mayor of Naga,
Philippines
President of the Philippines
Association of Municipalities |
Mme Marie-Claude
Tabar-Nouval |
Head of the Urban
Development Department, United Towns Organisation |
Prof. Rusen Keles |
Ernst Reuter Centre
for Urban Studies, University of Ankara, representing the European Local
Government Association for Research (ELGAR/ARCOLE) |
UNCHS |
|
Mr. Mark Hildebrand |
Director, Office
of Programme Coordination |
Mr. Daniel Biau |
Acting Chief, Technical
Cooperation Division |
Ms. Christine Auclair |
Advisor, Indicators
Programme |
Mr. Gunther Karl |
Coordinator, Statistics
Programme |
Mr. Shekou Sesay |
Inter-Regional
Advisor (Land) |
Ms. Seyda Turkmemetogullari |
Partner Liaison
Officer |
Mr. Nicholas You |
Manager, Best Practices
and Local Leadership Programme |
Secretariat |
|
Mr. Paul Bongers |
Consultant to WACLAC
Formerly Director, Local Government
International Bureau, United Kingdom |
Mr. Rolf Wichmann |
Office of the Executive
Director and Special Programmes, UNCHS (Habitat) |
Ms. Vesna Dzuverovic |
Office of the Executive
Director and Special Programmes, UNCHS (Habitat) |
Note: Other international
associations of cities and local authorities are expected to appoint representatives
to join the Expert Group as the work progresses.
|