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          The Rio Declaration on Environment and
         Development 
         
         Preamble 
         
         The United Nations Conference on Environment
         and Development 
         
         Having met at Rio de Janeiro from 3 to 14 June
         1992, Reaffirming the Declaration of the United Nations
         Conference on the Human Environment, adopted at
         Stockholm on 16 June 1972, and seeking to build upon
         it,  
         
         With the goal of establishing a new and
         equitable global partnership through the creation of
         new levels of cooperation among States, key sectors of
         societies and people, 
         
         Working towards international agreements
         which respect the interests of all and protect
         the integrity of the global environmental and
         developmental system,  
         
         Recognising the integral and interdependent
         nature of the Earth, our home 
         
         Proclaims that: 
         
         Principle 1 
         Human beings are at the centre of concerns for
         sustainable development. They are entitled to a healthy
         and productive life in harmony with nature. 
         
         Principle 2 
         States have, in accordance with the Charter of
         the United Nations and the principles of international
         law, the sovereign right to exploit their own resources
         pursuant to their own environmental and developmental
         policies, and the responsibility to ensure
         that activities within their jurisdiction or control do
         not cause damage to the environment of other States or
         of areas beyond the limits of national
         jurisdiction. 
         
         Principle 3 
         The right to development must be fulfilled so as
         to equitably meet developmental and environmental needs
         of present and future generations. 
         
         Principle 4 
         In order to achieve sustainable development,
         environmental protection shall constitute an integral
         part of the development process and cannot be
         considered in isolation from it. 
         
         Principle 5 
         All States and all people shall cooperate in the
         essential task of eradicating poverty as an
         indispensable requirement for sustainable development,
         in order to decrease the disparities in standards
         of living and better meet the needs of the majority of
         the people of the world. 
         
         Principle 6 
         The special situation and needs of developing
         countries, particularly the least developed and those
         most environmentally vulnerable, shall be given special
         priority. International actions in the field
         of environment and development should also address the
         interests and needs of all countries. 
         
         Principle 7 
         States shall cooperate in a spirit of global
         partnership to conserve, protect and restore the health
         and integrity of the Earths ecosystem. In view of the
         different contributions to global
         environmental degradation, States have common but
         differentiated responsibilities. The developed
         countries acknowledge the responsibility that they
         bear in the international pursuit of sustainable
         development in view of the pressures their societies
         place on the global environment and of the technologies
         and financial resources they command. 
         
         Principle 8 
         To achieve sustainable development and a higher
         quality of life for all people, States should reduce
         and eliminate unsustainable patterns of production and
         consumption and promote appropriate
         demographic policies. 
         
         Principle 9 
         States should cooperate to strengthen endogenous
         capacity-building for sustainable development by
         improving scientific understanding through exchanges of
         scientific and technological knowledge, and by
         enhancing the development, adaptation, diffusion and
         transfer of technologies, including new and innovative
         technologies. 
         
         Principle 10 
         Environmental issues are best handled with the
         participation of all concerned citizens, at the
         relevant level. At the national level, each individual
         shall have appropriate access to information concerning
         the environment that is held by public
         authorities, including information on hazardous
         materials and activities in their communities, and the
         opportunity to participate in
         decision-making processes. States shall facilitate and
         encourage public awareness and participation by making
         information widely available. Effective access to
         judicial and administrative proceedings, including
         redress and remedy, shall be provided. 
         
         Principle 11 
         States shall enact effective environmental
         legislation. Environmental standards, management
         objectives and priorities should reflect
         the environmental and developmental context to which
         they apply. Standards applied by some countries may be
         inappropriate and of unwarranted economic and social
         cost to other countries, in particular
         developing countries. 
         
         Principle 12 
         States should cooperate to promote a supportive
         and open international economic system that would lead
         to economic growth and sustainable development in all
         countries to better address the problems
         of environmental degradation. Trade policy measures for
         environmental purposes should not constitute a means of
         arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination or a
         disguised restriction on international
         trade. Unilateral actions to deal with environmental
         challenges outside the jurisdiction of the importing
         country should be avoided. Environmental measures
         addressing transboundary or global environmental
         problems should, as far as possible, be based on an
         international consensus. 
         
         Principle 13 
         States shall develop national law regarding
         liability and compensation for the victims of pollution
         and other environmental damage. States shall also
         cooperate in an expeditious and more determined manner
         to develop further international law regarding
         liability and compensation for adverse effects of
         environmental damage caused by activities within their
         jurisdiction or control to areas beyond
         their jurisdiction. 
         
         Principle 14 
         States should effectively cooperate to discourage
         or prevent the relocation and transfer to other States
         of any activities and substances that cause severe
         environmental degradation or are found to be harmful to
         human health. 
         
         Principle 15 
         In order to protect the environment, the
         precautionary approach shall be widely applied by
         States according to their capabilities. Where there are
         threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of
         full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason
         for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent
         environmental degradation. 
         
         Principle 16 
         National authorities should endeavour to promote
         the internalisation of environmental costs and the use
         of economic instruments, taking into account the
         approach that the polluter should, in principle,
         bear the cost of pollution, with due regard to the
         public interest and without distorting international
         trade and investment. 
         
         Principle 17 
         Environmental impact assessment, as a national
         instrument, shall be undertaken for proposed activities
         that are likely to have a significant adverse impact on
         the environment and are subject to a decision of a
         competent national authority. 
         
         Principle 18 
         States shall immediately notify other States of any natural
         disasters or other emergencies that are likely to
         produce sudden harmful effects on the environment of
         those States. Every effort shall be made by
         the international community to help States so
         afflicted. 
         
         Principle 19 
         States shall provide prior and timely
         notification and relevant information to potentially
         affected States on activities that may have a
         significant adverse transboundary environmental effect and
         shall consult with those States at an early stage and
         in good faith. 
         
         Principle 20 
         Women have a vital role in environmental
         management and development. Their full participation is
         therefore essential to achieve
         sustainable development. 
         
         Principle 21 
         The creativity, ideals and courage of the youth
         of the world should be mobilised to forge a global
         partnership in order to achieve sustainable development
         and ensure a better future for all. 
         
         Principle 22 
         Indigenous people and their communities, and
         other local communities, have a vital role in
         environmental management and development because of
         their knowledge and traditional practices. States should
         recognise and duly support their identity, culture and
         interests and enable their effective participation in
         the achievement of sustainable development. 
         
         Principle 23 
         The environment and natural resources of people
         under oppression, domination and occupation shall be
         protected. 
         
         Principle 24 
         Warfare is inherently destructive of sustainable
         development. States shall therefore respect
         international law providing protection for
         the environment in times of armed conflict and
         cooperate in its further development, as necessary. 
         
         Principle 25 
         Peace, development and environmental protection
         are interdependent and indivisible. 
         
         Principle 26 
         States shall resolve all their environmental
         disputes peacefully and by appropriate means in
         accordance with the Charter of the United Nations. 
         
         Principle 27 
         States and people shall cooperate in good faith
         and in a spirit of partnership in the fulfilment of the
         principles embodied in this Declaration and in the
         further development of international law in the field
         of sustainable development. 
         
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