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APP

UNGA adopts resolution to strengthen work of UN system

Published on: April 2, 2026 2:16 AM

The United Nations General Assembly Tuesday adopted a resolution to strengthen how UN mandates — the decisions taken by member states that guide the organization’s work — are created, implemented and reviewed across the system as part of the world body’s reform efforts to make it more efficient and effective.

The 193-member Assembly passed the resolution by a recorded vote of 168 in favour, 4 against, with no abstentions. (Belarus, North Korea, Nicaragua and Russia voted against the resolution.)

Pakistan supported the resolution, but expressed reservations, noting some missing elements, including Islamabad’s position for focusing on mandate implementation as per the original intent of the Secretary-General’s UN80 initiative.

In this regard, the Deputy Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the UN, Ambassador Usman Jadoon, also highlighted Islamabad’s stand on upholding member states’ sovereign prerogatives across the mandate life-cycle.

At the same time, the Pakistani envoy welcomed the inclusion of the principle explicitly recognizing the diverse nature and contexts of mandates.

Ambassador Jadoon “deeply” regretted that this is the first time the UN80 Initiative has come to a vote, saying more efforts should have been made to reach a consensus.

Speaking in the General Assembly Hall, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres welcomed the adoption, calling it a “historic resolution” and “a major step”.

“The resolution adopted today reflects a shared understanding of the full mandate lifecycle – and a shared commitment to strengthen each step of it,” he told member states. “Today’s resolution helps translate the ambition of the UN80 Initiative into concrete, practical action.”

By creating mandates, member states instruct and guide the whole UN system on how to address global challenges: from supporting peace and security and delivering humanitarian aid, to advancing development and protecting human rights.

Over time, however, the large number of mandates has created practical challenges.

Since 1946, more than 40,000 resolutions, decisions and presidential statements have been adopted across key UN bodies – a landscape that is increasingly difficult to navigate.

This has contributed to duplication and overlap, proliferating reports and meetings, and limited visibility and review mechanisms across the system.

This can place a heavy burden on both member states and the United Nations system, while making it harder to ensure effective and efficient mandate implementation.

The resolution, it was pointed out, introduces, for the first time, a more structured approach across the full mandate lifecycle – from design to implementation and review.

In practice, this means:

— Clearer and more focused mandates, supported by better information for decision-making from the outset;

— Stronger and more coordinated implementation, with improved use of data, more user-oriented reporting and more effective use of resources;

— More systematic review of results, helping ensure mandates remain relevant and deliver impact, reinforcing a culture of continuous improvement, grounded in evidence, accountability and results, and,

— Increased transparency through improved digital tools, including through an expanded UN Mandate Registry, giving Member States more consolidated and comparable information on mandates, resources and results.

The resolution is intended to make it easier for Member States to navigate an increasingly complex mandate landscape, while helping the United Nations reduce duplication, fragmentation and inefficiency, the UN said.

By strengthening how mandates are designed, delivered and reviewed, it aims to improve how the UN system translates decisions into results.

The resolution builds on the work of the General Assembly’s Informal Ad Hoc Working Group on the Mandate Implementation Review, co-chaired by Jamaica and New Zealand.

The Working Group was established by the General Assembly to consider the proposals contained in the Secretary-General’s July 2025 report on the Mandate Implementation Review, prepared under Workstream 2 of the UN80 Initiative.

That report examined how mandates are created, implemented and reviewed across the United Nations system, and set out proposals to strengthen each stage of the mandate lifecycle.

Filed Under: Pakistan Tagged With: UNGA, United Nations General Assembly

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