Programme > Information note on the Conference
English
Russian 
Date and venue
The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) will organize the conference How
Generations and Gender Shape Demographic Change - Towards Policies Based on Better Knowledge from 14
to 16 May 2008 at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.
Format
The Conference is planned as a forum for policymakers and the research community on
challenges related to demographic change. It will be carried out as an intergovernmental meeting
of UNECE member States and will open to representatives of the international and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) as well as to the research community. The Conference has received financial
support from the
Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities of the
European Commission.
Expected outcome
The Conference is expected to address key challenges in policy areas related to family
and reproductive behaviour as well as intergenerational and gender relationships; to reflect advances
in knowledge in these areas; and to provide guidance on the use of such knowledge in policymaking.
The Conference will also facilitate an exchange of views on the modalities of the 15-year
appraisal of the Programme of Action of the
International Conference on Population and Development (Cairo, 1994) in the UNECE region, and may lead to the planning of further steps in this regard.
Sessions and topics
The Conference will be organized in seven plenary sessions on specific topics, each
with an approximate duration of one and a half hours. Opening and concluding sessions are also
foreseen.
The opening session will feature the presentation of the background information on the
organization and concept of the UNECE Generations and Gender Programme (GGP) as well as on the
perspectives for international cooperation in the area of population-related policies, followed
by an interactive discussion.
The subsequent plenary sessions will be organized around the following topics:
- Very low birth rates:
E.g. very low fertility in Southern, Central and Eastern Europe; reproductive health; and
increasing age at childbearing;
- Realities of parenthood and childbearing:
E.g. childcare provisions and strategies, the economic conditions of families with children,
and their implications on behaviours regarding the family and the labour market;
- Walking the tightrope of career and family:
E.g. parental leave, flexibilities of the labour market, values and attitudes;
- Moving towards gender equality:
E.g. household organization from the perspective of gender equality, use of parental leave
by men and women, and related attitudes;
- Solidarity between and within generations:
E.g. childcare provision by older persons, care provided to older persons, monetary
transfers between generations, and attitudes on care;
- In the age of old age:
E.g. economic and emotional well-being, living conditions, transition to retirement,
consequences of early life experience on life at older age, and gender relations between older persons;
- Breaking down barriers by integrating young people:
E.g. transition to adulthood, residential independence, economic independence and integration
into the labour market, increasing age at family formation, poverty and social exclusion of
young people, and integration of young immigrants or second-generation immigrants.
These sessions will each include:
-
A keynote presentation summarizing the state of the art and showing new policy-relevant
empirical findings;
-
Statements by policymakers highlighting the challenges facing their countries, and
addressing how research could better support resolving these challenges;
-
Up to two selected research contributions based on the new data from the GGP;
-
Statements from the floor and a discussion moderated by a discussant.
The concluding session will feature summary statements by the rapporteurs, and a
discussion on the modalities of further international cooperation in this area.
Participants
It is envisaged that UNECE Governments will be represented at the Conference by
officials involved with the formulation and/or implementation of population-related policies.
The national experts involved with GGP - members of the GGP
International Working Group -
have been invited to participate and provide contributions based on the Programme.
International and accredited NGOs are also expected to participate.
Registration
To facilitate arrangements, member States are kindly requested to communicate
to the UNECE secretariat the composition of their delegations by the end of February 2008.
The deadline for sending completed registration forms is 15 April 2008.
An electronic registration form will be made available on the
"Registration" tag of the conference website.
Languages and interpretation services
English, French and Russian will be the working languages of the Conference.
Statements made in any of these languages will be interpreted.
Documentation
The UNECE secretariat will prepare a background paper that will be distributed in
mid-April. Keynote speeches and presentations will be made available at the Conference. The report
will be completed shortly after the Conference. Provisions have been made to publish the edited
proceedings of this Conference by the end of this year. Documents and other background material
will be made available on the "Documents" tag of the conference website.
Background
Current demographic developments in Europe have important and far-reaching implications
across all spheres of society, affecting economic development, social cohesion, sustainability and
equity, and posing key challenges to public policies. The recent
UNECE Ministerial Conference on
Ageing (León, Spain, November 2007) discussed policy responses to population ageing and concluded
with a Ministerial Declaration
on further actions and priorities in this regard. Discussion on
ageing and other salient areas of population-related policies has been carried out in the context
of the Programme of Action of the International Conference for Population and Development
(ICPD, Cairo, 1994) and its follow-up. In the context of the 5- and 10-year appraisal of the
ICPD Programme of Action, the UNECE convened the
Regional Population Meeting (Budapest, 1998)
and the European Population Forum (Geneva, 2004).
The final documents of those meetings provide
a broader context for deliberations at the upcoming Conference, and for the discussion on modalities
of the 15-year appraisal of the ICPD Programme of Action in particular.
At the International Meeting on Generations & Gender
(Geneva, 2000), member States
invited the UNECE secretariat to organize another round of region-wide data collection and
research on population issues, building on the successful experience with such cooperation
programmes in the 1980s and the 1990s. That meeting initiated the GGP, which is becoming a
compelling source of policy-relevant research on population issues in the UNECE region.
The Programme comprises: (a) a survey covering a broad range of influences on demographic
behaviour, (b) a related contextual database of national and regional trends and policies on
these issues, and (c) analyses of these data. The vital role of research in developing
effective policies and programmes was again emphasized in the Declaration adopted at the
recent León Ministerial Conference on Ageing (2007) as well as in the conclusions of the
European Population Forum (Geneva, 2004). Integration of the GGP with policy discussion is
expected to contribute to the better use of research findings in policymaking.
Contact details
Population Activities Unit
UN Economic Commission for Europe
Palais des Nations
CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland
e-mail: ggp@unece.org
fax +41 22 917 0107.