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SU/SSC
>FAQ
1. What is
TCDC?
2. When and why was the
Undp' s Special Unit for TCDC created?
3. What is the role of UNDP in TCDC?
4. What is
a focal point?
5. What are the pivotal
countries?
6. What is the Buenos Aires Plan of Action?
7. What is WIDE?
8. What is the Group of 77?
9. What is the difference between TCDC and South-South
Cooperation?
10. What is the HLC - or the High Level
Committee on the Review of TCDC?
11. What is triangular cooperation?
12. What are the New Directions for TCDC?
13. What is the difference between ECDC and TCDC?
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1. What is TCDC? |
Technical
Cooperation among Developing Countries - known as TCDC
- is essentially a process whereby two or more developing
countries pursue their individual or collective development
through cooperative exchanges of knowledge, skills,
resources and technical know-how.
Ideally, TCDC activities should be initiated, organized and
managed by developing countries themselves with their
governments playing a lead role while involving public and
private institutions, non-governmental organizations and
individuals.
TCDC can include all sectors and all kinds of technical
cooperation activities of developing countries, whether
bilateral, multilateral, sub regional, regional or
interregional in character.
The challenge is to marshal innovative approaches, methods
and techniques that are particularly adapted to local needs
without supplanting existing modalities of technical
cooperation which have proven useful.
The ultimate goal of TCDC is the promotion of national and
collective self-reliance among developing countries, on the
one hand, and global interdependence, on the other.
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2. When and why was the
Undp' s Special Unit for TCDC created?
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In 1972, the General Assembly created a Working Group on
TCDC. The Special Unit was established within
UNDP in 1974, according to
resolution N°3251 (XXIX). When the General
Assembly in 1976 called for the Buenos Aires Conference, the
Special Unit was the focal point of the preparatory process,
and it was strengthened later to deal with follow-up
actions.
Since 1997,
the work of the Special Unit has been programmed within a
cooperation framework that takes into account prevailing
trends relevant to TCDC.
The second cooperation
framework (2001-2003) was formulated at a time of
accelerating integration of the global economy and is
focused on activities that will support developing countries
in dealing with related problems and opportunities. The
focus of current activities is on regional and interregional
initiatives aimed at engaging a large number of countries to
work together to formulate policies, share information,
agree on priorities and translate ideas into programmes.
The strategic aim is to
make developing countries effective partners with all other
actors in achieving the Millennium Development Goals and
targets set by the G-77 Havana Programme of Action, such as
halving the incidence of extreme poverty by 2015.
Click here to know how to contact SU/TCDC.
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3. What is the role of UNDP in TCDC?
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UNDP, the United Nations
Development Programme, hosts the Special Unit for TCDC.
UNDP is the United Nations global development network,
advocating for change and connecting countries to knowledge,
experience and resources to help people build a better life.
On the ground in 166 countries, working with them on their
own solutions to global and national development challenges,
UNDP handles issues connected with developing and
strengthening TCDC through the Special Unit for TCDC (SU/TCDC).
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4. What is
a focal point?
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The focal
point - whether it is a specific ministry,
an inter-ministerial committee, a development agency or even a special unit - is the national
institution responsible for the development
of TCDC in a developing country or in a
United Nations agency.
The concept
of focal point was created at the first
session of the High Level Committee, in
1980, as a way to enhance TCDC.
The activities of the focal points are mainly:
- Assisting in the
formulation of national TCDC policies, strategies and
programs;
- Organizing TCDC orientation seminars, training courses and
study tours;
- Serving as a liaison between national enterprises and
their foreign counterparts involved in TCDC;
- Assessing the costs, benefits and overall impact of TCDC
on a country's development needs;
- Providing guidance in the development of a national TCDC
information network.
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Maintaining an inventory of the country's needs and domestic resources that it's
willing to share with other countries.
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5. What are the pivotal
countries?
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Pivotal countries are developing countries that, by virtue
of their capacities and experience in promoting
South South cooperation, are positioned
to play a ‘lead’ role in the promotion and
application of TCDC, mainly by sharing their
capacities and experience with other developing
countries in their region or in other regions.
The
concept of pivotal countries was created
in 1995 within the new directions given
to TCDC by the High Level Committee following
recommendations of the United Nations General Assembly.
The
following are the 22 countries first identified as pivotal countries:
Brazil,
Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba,
Egypt, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Malta, Malaysia,
Mauritius, Mexico, Nigeria, Peru, the Republic
of Korea, Senegal, Thailand, Trindad and
Tobago, Tunisia and Turkey.
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6. What is the Buenos Aires Plan of Action?
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The document
is the result of a Conference held in Argentina's
capital in 1978, gathering 138 countries. It aims at Promoting
and Implementing Technical Cooperation among
Developing Countries (TCDC).
The concept
of TCDC already existed and had been thoroughly
studied and analyzed for over five years
on the international and interregional levels
to have its principle objectives spelled out in Buenos Aires.
Endorsed
by the General Assembly, the
Buenos Aires Plan of Action presents
38 recommendations for the enhancement of
TCDC focused on the purpose of increasing
the capacity of the developing countries,
developing their awareness and confidence
in each other capabilities.
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7. What is WIDE?
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The
Web of Information
for Development is an online web-enabled system
which gathers information on experts, experiences and
institutions of the South.
On one hand, it promotes the use of Southern expertise in
development initiatives by providing points of contact with
Southern experiences.
On the other hand, WIDE strengthens the ability to identify
Southern capacities to carry out technical cooperation.
WIDE supports the efforts of countries and organizations to:
- better identify, index and access their own expertise
- position their expertise for better access by others
- facilitate access to the expertise of others
- improve collaborative work
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8. What is the Group of
77?
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The Group
of 77 was established on 15 June 1964 by
seventy-seven developing countries signatories
of the "Joint Declaration of the Seventy-Seven
Countries" issued at the end of the first
session of the United Nations Conference
on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in Geneva.
As the largest Third World coalition in
the United Nations, the Group of 77 provides
the means for the developing world to articulate
and promote its collective economic interests
and enhance its joint negotiating capacity
on all major international economic issues
in the United Nations system, and promote
economic and technical cooperation among
developing countries.
Although the membership
of the G-77 has increased to 133 countries,
the original name was retained because of
its historic significance.
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9.
What is the difference between TCDC and South-South
Cooperation?
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South-South Cooperation is a broader concept because it
covers a very wide range of collaboration among developing
countries, being generally perceived to have three
dimensions: political, economic and technical.
Since the growing integration of TCDC and Economic
Cooperation among developing countries (ECDC) has been
encouraged by the HLC and the United Nations General
Assembly, the Special Unit for TCDC is working on all the
dimensions of South-South Cooperation.
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10.
What is the HLC or High-Level Committee on the Review of
TCDC?
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The overall intergovernmental
review of TCDC is entrusted to a high-level meeting of
representatives of all countries participating in UNDP. This
meeting was renamed the "High-Level Committee on the
Review of TCDC" (HLC) in 1980. It meets biennially.
The United Nations General Assembly has consistently
endorsed the relevance of the recommendations of the HLC,
underscoring the importance of implementing its decisions as
a basis for strengthening TCDC.
Within UNDP and in addition to other responsibilities, the
Special Unit serves as a secretariat of the HLC.
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11.
What is triangular cooperation?
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It's the initiative of
technical cooperation among two or more developing countries
that is supported financially by northern donors or by
international organizations.
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12.
What are the New Directions for TCDC?
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The report on New
Directions was adopted by the HLC in its ninth session
in 1995. Among many
decisions - such as better integrating TCDC and ECDC or such
as creating the concept of pivotal countries - the New
Directions establish the need to adopt a more strategic orientation for
TCDC, focused on high priority areas like trade and investment, debt, environment, poverty
alleviation, production and employment, macroeconomic policy coordination and aid
management for strategic focus.
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13. What
is the difference between ECDC and TCDC?
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ECDC is the acronym for
Economic Cooperation Among Developing Countries and it
refers mainly to South-South cooperation in trade,
investment and finance.
UNCTAD
(United Nations Conference on Trade and Development) is the lead organization in
supporting ECDC.
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