Preface
This seminar was one of ten Associated Events held in
conjunction with the World Bank's Third Annual Conference on Environmentally
Sustainable Development, "Effective Financing of Environmentally Sustainable
Development," held in Washington, D.C. October 4 6, 1995. The seminar was
jointly sponsored by the Office of the Vice President for Environmentally
Sustainable Development of the World Bank and the Conference of Non-Governmental
Organizations in consultation with the United Nations Economic and Social
Council.
Institutions and people have had to adapt to change and to seek
alternative approaches to promoting sustainable development. This adaptation has
required a shift from development paradigms that focused exclusively on
economics and politics. Governments, international organizations,
nongovernmental organizations, professional analysts, and development
practitioners have begun to recognize that combating hunger, poverty,
inequality, and violence in a sustainable way requires approaches that view the
development process as integrating factors such as ecology, environment,
technology, cultural diversity, and human capacity.
One factor that has largely escaped consideration is the
development of the individual during rapid socioeconomic change. In dealing with
such factors as religious fundamentalism, ethnic hatred, the rise of prejudice,
and the anomie felt by so many of the youth in today's world, recognition of
individual development is essential for a deeper understanding of the processes
of development and for the more effective pursuit of environmentally sustainable
development.
This seminar addressed these issues by focusing on the link
between culture and the shaping of an individual's identity through the
perception of the self and the other. It explored new integrated approaches to
human-centered development, emphasizing child development, gender equality, and
education. The seminar brought together people from a broad range of
backgrounds, including psychoanalysts, anthropologists, educators, academics,
finance specialists, historians, representatives of United Nations agencies,
leaders of nongovernmental organizations, and staff of the World Bank.
The primary objectives of the seminar were to
· Explore and
generate a consensus on an integrated approach to development and capacity
building of the individual in this time of unprecedented socioeconomic change
· Shed light on the perceptions
of the self and the other as essential components in empowering people to take
charge of their destinies and become equal and efficient partners in development
· Identify links between the
issues of parenting, education, and self-empowerment and the process of
sustainable development.
Clearly, this meeting was only a first step in an exploration of
different, deeper, and broader ways of understanding sustainable development.
The views expressed here build from the individual to the broader collectivity
and back to the individual-views that look to the self and the other as the keys
to understanding human behavior and society with all its specificities. Although
we had not intended to formally publish the proceedings of this seminar, demand
from many colleagues prompted us to do so. We hope that this modest volume will
help engage others in this important intellectual journey.
Ismail Serageldin
Afaf
Mahfouz