11/04/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 11/04/2025 07:21
The adoption of the Declaration marks a shared pledge by governments to tackle poverty, create decent work, combat discrimination, expand access to social protection, and protect human rights.
It also emphasises that social development is not only a moral imperative, but also a precondition for peace, stability and sustainable growth.
The Summit has brought together more than 40 Heads of State and Government, 170 ministerial-level representatives, heads of international organizations, youth leaders, civil society and experts, convening over 14,000 stakeholders under one roof.
Delegates gathered in Doha's expansive Qatar National Convention Centre - where meeting rooms spilled into networking spaces filled with students, activists and community leaders - underscoring that social development is not the work of governments alone.
Named after the city of its adoption, the Doha Political Declaration renews leaders' commitment to the 1995 Copenhagen Declaration and the 2030 Agenda, centring social development on three mutually reinforcing pillars: poverty eradication, full and productive employment and decent work for all, and social inclusion.
It links social justice to peace, security and human rights, vows to leave no one behind, and urges urgent climate action under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and Paris Agreement, reaffirming the Rio principles, including common but differentiated responsibilities.
Financing is put front and centre: the Declaration reaffirms the Addis Ababa Action Agenda as integral to the 2030 Agenda, welcomes the Sevilla Commitment to renew the financing framework, and calls for stronger, more representative multilateral institutions.
Follow-up will be led by the Commission for Social Development, with a five-year review process to assess progress and close gaps.
Speaking after the adoption, President of the General Assembly Annalena Baerbock emphasised that Doha must "go the last mile" in ensuring that no one is left behind.
Reflecting on progress since Copenhagen, she noted that unemployment has fallen globally and extreme poverty has declined, yet disparities remain stark, particularly for women and young people.
She cautioned that economic growth alone has proven insufficient to overcome structural inequalities, stressing that climate change, demographic pressures and conflict are compounding social vulnerabilities.
Ms. Baerbock called for holistic, interconnected solutions that address poverty, hunger, education, health, climate resilience and gender equality together, underscoring that the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are "not 17 separate targets, but an integrated framework where advancement in one area accelerates progress in others."
"These are not siloed agendas, they all underscore that human security is the foundation of global security," she said.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned that progress on the SDGs is too slow, with several targets stalled or reversing.
"The Doha Political Declaration represents a booster shot for development," he said, calling it a "people's plan" focused on expanding universal social protection, ensuring equitable access to health and education, creating decent work, and closing the digital divide.
He also stressed the urgency of reforming the global financial architecture to ensure fair access to development and climate finance, particularly for developing countries facing debt distress.
In conclusion, the Secretary-General underlined that the Summit is about "hope through collective action" - and about mobilising the political and financial will to deliver on the promise first made in Copenhagen.
"Guided by the Doha Political Declaration, let's deliver the bold people's plan humanity needs and deserves," he said.
UN News is on the ground in Doha, providing continuing coverage throughout the week, including live updates, interviews and analysis from the Summit. Follow our coverage here.