Inter-Parliamentary Union

{{Short description|International organization of national parliaments}}

{{Infobox organization

| logo = Inter-Parliamentary Union logo.png

| status = International organization

| headquarters = Geneva, Switzerland

| membership = 180 Members
14 Associate Members

| leader_title = President

| leader_name = Tulia Ackson{{cite web |title=President |url=https://www.ipu.org/about-ipu/structure-and-governance/president |website=Inter-Parliamentary Union |access-date=30 November 2021}}

| leader_title2 = Secretary General

| leader_name2 = Martin Chungong{{cite web |title=Secretary General |url=https://www.ipu.org/about-ipu/structure-and-governance/secretary-general |website=Inter-Parliamentary Union |access-date=30 November 2021}}

| name = Inter-Parliamentary Union

| founder = Frédéric Passy,
William Randal Cremer

| founded = 1889

| website = {{URL|http://www.ipu.org/}}

}}

The Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU; {{langx|fr|Union Interparlementaire}}, UIP) is an international organization of national parliaments.{{Cite web |url=https://uia.org/s/or/en/1100040146 |url-access= |title=Inter-Parliamentary Union |author1=Staff writer |year=2024 |department=UIA Global Civil Society Database |website=uia.org |publisher=Union of International Associations |agency=Yearbook of International Organizations Online |location=Brussels, Belgium |format= |arxiv= |asin= |bibcode= |doi= |doi-broken-date= |isbn= |issn= |jfm= |jstor= |lccn= |mr= |oclc= |ol= |osti= |pmc= |pmid= |rfc= |ssrn= |zbl= |id= |access-date=24 December 2024 |url-status= |archive-url= |archive-date= |via= |quote= |trans-quote= |ref= |postscript=}} Its primary purpose is to promote democratic governance, accountability, and cooperation among its members; other initiatives include advancing gender parity among legislatures, empowering youth participation in politics, and sustainable development.

The organization was established in 1889 as the Inter-Parliamentary Conference. Its founders were statesmen Frédéric Passy of France and William Randal Cremer of the United Kingdom, who sought to create the first permanent forum for political multilateral negotiations. Initially, IPU membership was reserved for individual parliamentarians, but has since transformed to include the legislatures of sovereign states. As of 2020, the national parliaments of 180 countries are members of the IPU, while 13 regional parliamentary assemblies are associate members.{{Cite news|date=2016-05-13|title=Members|language=en|work=Inter-Parliamentary Union|url=https://www.ipu.org/about-us/members|access-date=2017-12-07}}{{Cite news|title=Матвиенко избрана председателем ассамблеи Межпарламентского союза|language=ru|work=ТАСС|url=http://tass.ru/politika/4646881|access-date=2017-10-17}}

The IPU facilitates the development of international law and institutions, strengthening the foundations and enhancing the vision for peace and the common good, including the Permanent Court of Arbitration, the League of Nations, and the United Nations. It also sponsors and takes part in international conferences and forums, and has permanent observer status at the United Nations General Assembly. Consequently, eight individuals associated with the organization are Nobel Peace Prize laureates.

History

The organisation's initial objective was the arbitration of conflicts. The IPU played an important part in setting up the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. Over time, its mission has evolved towards the promotion of democracy and inter-parliamentary dialogue. The IPU has worked for establishment of institutions at the inter-governmental level, including the United Nations, an organization with which it cooperates and with which it has permanent observer status.

The headquarters of the union have been moved several times since its inception.

Locations:

  • 1892–1911: Bern (Switzerland)
  • 1911–1914: Brussels (Belgium)
  • 1914–1920: Oslo (Norway)
  • 1921–present: Geneva (Switzerland)

Eight leading personalities of the IPU have received Nobel Peace Prizes:

Members and organization

=Members=

File:Inter-Parliamentary Union Members.png

At its founding on 30 June 1889, the Inter-Parliamentary Conference had eight members: Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Denmark, France, Italy, Liberia, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The United States also attended but did not formally adopt the treaty of arbitration.{{cite web|url=https://www.ipu.org/about-ipu/history-ipu|title=History of the IPU|website=Inter-Parliamentary Union}}{{cite web|url=https://www.ipu.org/130years/#1889-1914|title=Inter-Parliamentary Union {{!}} 130 years {{!}} 130 ans|website=Inter-Parliamentary Union}}

The Inter-Parliamentary Union currently has 180 members.

  • Regional parliamentary assemblies may be admitted by the Governing Council as Associate Members
  • Every Parliament constituted in conformity with the laws of a sovereign State whose population it represents and on whose territory it functions may request affiliation to the Inter-Parliamentary Union. The decision to admit or readmit a Parliament shall be taken by the Governing Council.

It is the duty of the Members of the IPU to submit the resolutions of the IPU within their respective Parliament, in the most appropriate form; to communicate them to the Government; to stimulate their implementation and to inform the IPU Secretariat, as often and fully as possible, particularly in its annual reports, as to the steps taken and the results obtained.

As it can be seen on the map, mostly all the countries in the world have a parliament member of IPU, with the notable exception of the United States, although the 12th (1904), the 23rd (1925) and the 42nd (1953) conferences were hosted in the US.

;Associate Members

The participating parliamentary assemblies other than national parliaments are the following:

class="wikitable"
style="background:#ececec; vertical-align:top;"

|Name

|Related organization

Andean Parliament

|CAN

Arab Parliament

|

Central American Parliament (PARLCEN)

|SICA

East African Legislative Assembly

|EAC

European Parliament

|EU

CIS Interparliamentary Assembly

|CIS

Interparliamentary Assembly on Orthodoxy

|

Inter-Parliamentary Committee of the West African Economic and Monetary Union

|UEMOA

Latin American Parliament

|PARLATINO

Pan-African Parliament

|AU

Parliament of the Central African Economic and Monetary Community

|CEMAC

Parliament of the Economic Community of West African States

|ECOWAS

Parliamentary Assembly of La Francophonie

|OIF

Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe

|CoE

Parliamentary Assembly of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation

|BSEC

= Organs =

Image:IPU Building2010.jpg

The organs of the Inter-Parliamentary Union are:

  • Assembly. Meeting biannually, the Assembly is composed of parliamentarians designated as delegates by the Members. The Assembly is assisted in its work by Standing Committees, whose number and terms of reference are determined by the Governing Council; Standing Committees shall normally prepare reports and draft resolutions for the Assembly. No one delegate may record more than ten votes.
  • Governing Council. The Governing Council normally holds two sessions a year. The Governing Council is composed of three representatives from each Member. The term of office of a member of the Governing Council lasts from one Assembly to the next and all the members of the Governing Council must be sitting members of Parliament. The Governing Council elects the President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union for a period of three years. It also elects the members of the executive committee and appoints the Secretary General of the Union.
  • Executive Committee. The executive committee is composed of the President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, 15 members belonging to different Parliaments (elected by the Governing Council; not less than 12 are elected from among the members of the Governing Council) and the President of the Coordinating Committee of the Meeting of Women Parliamentarians. The fifteen elected seats are assigned to the geopolitical groups. Only parliamentarians from States where women have both the right to vote and the right to stand for election are eligible to the executive committee. The executive committee is the administrative organ of the Inter-Parliamentary Union. The current President is Portuguese MP Mr. Duarte Pacheco, who was elected in November 2020.{{Cite web|title=Election of the President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union|url=http://archive.ipu.org/cnl-e/201/15-p1.pdf}}
  • Secretariat. The Secretariat constitutes the totality of the staff of the organisation under the direction of the Secretary General, currently Martin Chungong of Cameroon.{{Cite web|title=Secretary General|url=https://www.ipu.org/about-ipu/structure-and-governance/secretary-general|access-date=2020-08-25|website=Inter-Parliamentary Union|language=en}}

The Association of Secretaries General of Parliaments is a consultative body of the Inter-Parliamentary Union.

Assemblies

File:Berlin Plaque Medal 1908 Inter-Parliamentary Union.jpg plaque-medallion for the 15th Inter-Parliamentary Conference 1908 in Berlin]]

The Assembly is the IPU's main political body through which the IPU's Member Parliaments adopt parliamentary resolutions on global issues. It plays a pivotal role in addressing the issues which threaten peace, democracy and sustainable development, including through its four thematic standing committees. IPU Assemblies are held twice a year either in Geneva or hosted by Member Parliaments.

class="wikitable sortable"
#Host CityHost CountryYear
147th

|Luanda

|{{flag|Angola}}

|2023

146th

|Manama

|{{flag|Bahrain}}

|2023

145th

|Kigali

|{{flag|Rwanda}}

|2022

144th

|Nusa Dua

|{{flag|Indonesia}}

|2022

143rd

|Madrid

|{{flag|Spain}}

|2021

142nd

|Virtual

|Virtual

|2021

141stBelgrade{{flag|Serbia}}2019
140thDoha{{flag|Qatar}}2019
139thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2018
138thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2018
137thSaint Petersburg{{flag|Russia}}2017
136thDhaka{{flag|Bangladesh}}2017
135thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2016
134thLusaka{{flag|Zambia}}2016
133rdGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2015
132ndHanoi{{flag|Vietnam}}2015
131stGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}} {{cite web

| title = Cameroon: Ipu Urges Members to Stem Indefensible Terrorism and to Protect Human Rights

| work = allAfrica.com - PR Newswire

| access-date = 2014-10-21

| url = http://allafrica.com/stories/201410171491.html

}}

2014
130thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2014
129thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2013
128thQuito{{flag|Ecuador}}2013
127thQuebec City{{flag|Canada}}2012
126thKampala{{flag|Uganda}}2012
125thBern{{flag|Switzerland}}2011
124thPanama City{{flag|Panama}}2011
123rdGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2010
122ndBangkok{{flag|Thailand}}2010
121stGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2009
120thAddis Ababa{{flag|Ethiopia}}2009
119thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2008
118thCape Town{{flag|South Africa}}2008
117thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2007
116thNusa Dua, Bali{{flag|Indonesia}}2007
115thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2006
114thNairobi{{flag|Kenya}}2006
113thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2005
112thManila{{flag|Philippines}}2005
111thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2004
110thMexico City{{flag|Mexico}}2004
109thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}2003
108thSantiago{{flag|Chile}}2003
107thMarrakesh{{flag|Morocco}}2002
106thOuagadougou{{flag|Burkina Faso}}2001
105thHavana{{flag|Cuba}}2001
104thJakarta{{flag|Indonesia}}2000
103rdAmman{{flag|Jordan}}2000
102ndBerlin{{flag|Germany}}1999
101stBrussels{{flag|Belgium}}1999
100thMoscow{{flag|Russia}}1998
99thWindhoek{{flag|Namibia}}1998
98thCairo{{flag|Egypt}}1997
97thSeoul{{flag|South Korea}}1997
96thBeijing{{flag|China}}1996
95thIstanbul{{flag|Turkey}}1996
94thBucharest{{flag|Romania}}1995
93rdMadrid{{flag|Spain}}1995
92ndCopenhagen{{flag|Denmark}}1994
91stParis{{flag|France}}1994
90thCanberra{{flag|Australia}}1993
89thNew Delhi{{flag|India}}1993
88thStockholm{{flag|Sweden}}1992
87thYaoundé{{flag|Cameroon}}1992
86thSantiago{{flag|Chile}}1991
85thPyongyang{{flag|North Korea}}1991
84thPunta del Este{{flag|Uruguay}}1990
83rdNicosia{{flag|Cyprus}}1990
82ndLondon{{flag|United Kingdom}}1989
81stBudapest{{flag|Hungary}}1989
80thSofia{{flag|Bulgaria|1971}}1988
79thGuatemala City{{flag|Guatemala}}1988
78thBangkok{{flag|Thailand}}1987
77thManagua{{flag|Nicaragua}}1987
76thBuenos Aires{{flag|Argentina}}1986
75thMexico City{{flag|Mexico}}1986
74thOttawa{{flag|Canada}}1985
73rdLomé{{flag|Togo}}1985
72ndGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}1984
71stGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}1984
70thSeoul{{flag|South Korea}}1983
69thRome{{flag|Italy}}1982
68thHavana{{flag|Cuba}}1981
67thBerlin{{flag|East Germany}}1980
66thCaracas{{flag|Venezuela|1954}}1979
65thBonn{{flag|Germany}}1978
64thSofia{{flag|Bulgaria|1971}}1977
63rdMadrid{{flag|Spain|1945}}1976
62ndLondon{{flag|United Kingdom}}1975
61stTokyo{{flag|Japan|1870}}1974
60thRome{{flag|Italy}}1972
59thParis{{flag|France}}1971
58thThe Hague{{flag|Netherlands}}1970
57thNew Delhi{{flag|India}}1969
56thLima{{flag|Peru}}1968
55thTehran{{flag|Iran|1964}}1966
54thOttawa{{flag|Canada}}1965
53rdCopenhagen{{flag|Denmark}}1964
52ndBelgrade{{flag|Yugoslavia}}1963
51stBrasília{{flag|Brazil|1960}}1962
50thBrussels{{flag|Belgium}}1961
49thTokyo{{flag|Japan|1870}}1960
48thWarsaw{{flag|Poland}}1959
47thRio de Janeiro{{flag|Brazil}}1958
46thLondon{{flag|United Kingdom}}1957
45thBangkok{{flag|Thailand}}1956
44thHelsinki{{flag|Finland}}1955
43rdVienna{{flag|Austria}}1954
42ndWashington, D.C.{{flag|United States|1912}}1953
41stBern{{flag|Switzerland}}1952
40thIstanbul{{flag|Turkey}}1951
39thDublin{{flag|Ireland}}1950
38thStockholm{{flag|Sweden}}1949
37thRome{{flag|Italy}}1948
36thCairo{{flag|Egypt|1922}}1947
35thOslo{{flag|Norway}}1939
34thThe Hague{{flag|Netherlands}}1938
33rdParis{{flag|France}}1937
32ndBudapest{{flag|Hungary|1920}}1936
31stBrussels{{flag|Belgium}}1935
30thIstanbul{{flag|Turkey}}1934
29thMadrid{{flag|Spain|1931}}1933
28thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}1932
27thBucharest{{flag|Romania}}1931
26thLondon{{flag|United Kingdom}}1930
25thBerlin{{flag|Germany|Weimar}}1928
24thParis{{flag|France}}1927
rowspan=2|23rd

|Washington, D.C.

|{{flag|United States|1912}}

|rowspan=2|1925

Ottawa

|{{flag|Canada}}

22ndBern{{flag|Switzerland}}1924
21stCopenhagen{{flag|Denmark}}1923
20thVienna{{flag|Austria}}1922
19thStockholm{{flag|Sweden}}1921
18thThe Hague{{flag|Netherlands}}1913
17thGeneva{{flag|Switzerland}}1912
16thBrussels{{flag|Belgium}}1910
15thBerlin{{flag|Germany|empire}}1908
14thLondon{{flag|United Kingdom}}1906
13thBrussels{{flag|Belgium}}1905
12thSt. Louis{{flag|United States|1896}}1904
11thVienna{{flag|Austria-Hungary}}1903
10thParis{{flag|France}}1900
9thChristiania{{flag|Denmark}}1899
8thBrussels{{flag|Belgium}}1897
7thBudapest{{flag|Austria-Hungary}}1896
6thBrussels{{flag|Belgium}}1895
5thThe Hague{{flag|Netherlands}}1894
4thBern{{flag|Switzerland}}1892
3rdRome{{flag|Italy|1861}}1891
2ndLondon{{flag|United Kingdom}}1890
1stParis{{flag|France}}1889

Presidents

"
President

! Years

! Country

August Beernaert

|1909–1912

|{{flag|Belgium}}

Philip Stanhope

|1912–1922

|{{flag|United Kingdom}}

Theodor Adelsward

|1922–1928

|{{flag|Sweden}}

Fernand Bouisson

|1928–1934

|{{flag|France}}

Henri Carton de Wiart

|1934–1947

|{{flag|Belgium}}

William Wedgwood Benn

|1947–1957

|{{flag|United Kingdom}}

Giuseppe Codacci-Pisanelli

|1957–1962

|{{flag|Italy}}

Ranieri Mazzilli

|1962–1967

|{{flag|Brazil}}

Abderrahman Abdennebi

|1967–1968

|{{flag|Tunisia}}

André Chandernagor

|1968–1973

|{{flag|France}}

Gurdial Singh Dhillon

|1973–1976

|{{flag|India}}

Thomas Williams

|1976–1979

|{{flag|United Kingdom}}

Rafael Caldera

|1979–1982

|{{flag|Venezuela}}

Johannes Virolainen

|1982–1983

|{{flag|Finland}}

Emile Cuvelier

|1983

|{{flag|Belgium}}

Izz El Din El Sayed

| 1983–1985

|{{flag|Sudan}}

John Page

|1985

|{{flag|United Kingdom}}

Hans Stercken

|1985–1988

|{{flag|West Germany}}

Dauda Sow

|1988–1991

|{{flag|Senegal}}

Michael Marshall

|1991–1994

|{{flag|United Kingdom}}

Ahmed Fathi Sorour

|1994–1997

|{{flag|Egypt}}

Miguel Angel Martinez

|1997–1999

|{{flag|Spain}}

Najma Heptulla

|1999–2002

|{{flag|India}}

Sergio Paes Verdugo

|2002–2005

|{{flag|Chile}}

Pier Ferdinando Casini

|2005–2008

|{{flag|Italy}}

Theo-Ben Gurirab

|2008–2011

|{{flag|Namibia}}

Abdelwahad Radi

|2011–2014

|{{flag|Morocco}}

Saber Hossain Chowdhury

|2014–2017

|{{flag|Bangladesh}}

Gabriela Cuevas Barron

|2017–2020

|{{flag|Mexico}}

Duarte Pacheco

|2020–2023

|{{flag|Portugal}}

Tulia Ackson

|2023–

|{{flag|Tanzania}}

Amendments to the Statutes

Any proposal to amend the Statutes shall be submitted in writing to the Secretariat of the Union at least three months before the meeting of the Assembly. The Secretariat will immediately communicate all such proposals to the Members of the Union. The consideration of such proposed amendments shall be automatically placed on the agenda of the Assembly.

Any sub-amendments shall be submitted in writing to the Secretariat of the Union at least six weeks before the meeting of the Assembly. The Secretariat will immediately communicate all such sub-amendments to the Members of the Union.

After hearing the opinion of the Governing Council, expressed through a simple majority vote, the Assembly shall decide on such proposals by a two-thirds majority vote.

The IPU and the United Nations

The IPU marked the 50th anniversary of the United Nations, in 1995, by holding a special session in the General Assembly Hall before the start of the session,{{UN document |docid=A-50-561 |type=Document |body=General Assembly |session=50 |document_number=561 |highlight=rect_158,350_882,609 |page=2 |accessdate=2007-09-10}} where they planned for closer cooperation with the United Nations. The General Assembly Resolution passed during that session requested the Secretary-General to put this into action.{{UN document |docid=A-RES-50-15 |type=Resolution |body=General Assembly |session=50 |resolution_number=15 |accessdate=2007-09-10|date=22 November 1995}} An agreement was signed between the IPU and the Secretary-General on 24 July 1996 and subsequently ratified by a General Assembly Resolution, where the United Nations recognizes IPU as the world organization of parliaments.{{UN document |docid=A-51-402 |type=Document |body=General Assembly |session=51 |document_number=402 |accessdate=2007-09-10| date=25 September 1995}}{{UN document |docid=A-RES-51-7 |type=Resolution |body=General Assembly |session=51 |resolution_number=7 |accessdate=2007-09-10|date=7 November 1996}} Pursuant to this resolution, the Secretary-General submitted a report{{UN document |docid=A-52-456 |type=Document |body=General Assembly |session=52 |document_number=456 |accessdate=2007-09-10| date=13 October 1997}} which was noted with appreciation by the General Assembly, who requested further strengthening of cooperation and another report.{{UN document |docid=A-RES-52-7 |type=Resolution |body=General Assembly |session=52 |resolution_number=7 |accessdate=2007-09-10|date=6 November 1997}} This report detailed the measures that had been taken, including opening a liaison office in New York, and cooperation on issues such land-mines and the promotion of representative democracy.{{UN document |docid=A-53-458 |type=Document |body=General Assembly |session=53 |document_number=458 |accessdate=2007-09-10|date=5 October 1998}} Following an entire morning of debate{{UN document |docid=A-53-PV.46 |date=28 October 1998 |type=Verbatim Report |body=General Assembly |session=53 |meeting=46 |accessdate=2007-09-10}} the General Assembly passed a resolution which simply stated that it "looks forward to continued close cooperation".{{UN document |docid=A-RES-53-13 |type=Resolution |body=General Assembly |session=53 |resolution_number=13 |accessdate=2007-09-10}}

The following year (1999) the Secretary-General reported on an increased number of areas of cooperation,{{UN document |docid=A-54-379 |type=Document |body=General Assembly |session=54 |document_number=379 |accessdate=2007-09-10|date=21 September 1999}} the issue was debated for an entire afternoon{{UN document |docid=A-54-PV.41 |date=27 October 1999 |type=Verbatim Report |body=General Assembly |session=54 |meeting=41 |accessdate=2007-09-10}} (interrupted by a minute of silence held for tribute to Vazgen Sargsyan, the Prime Minister of Armenia who had just at that time been killed by gunmen),{{ UN document |docid=A-54-PV.41 |body=General Assembly |type=Verbotim Report |session=54 |meeting=41 |page=20 |anchor=pg020-bk02 |date=27 October 1999 |meetingtime=15:00 |speakername=The President |accessdate=2007-09-10 }} and passed a resolution requesting the IPU be allowed to address the Millennium General Assembly directly.{{UN document |docid=A-RES-54-12 |type=Resolution |body=General Assembly |session=54 |resolution_number=12 |accessdate=2007-09-10| date=18 November 1999}}

Following another report,{{UN document |docid=A-55-409 |type=Document |body=General Assembly |session=55 |document_number=409 |accessdate=2007-09-10|date=18 October 2000}} and another half-day debate,{{UN document

|docid=A-55-PV.55

|date=8 November 2000

|type=Verbatim Report

|body=General Assembly

|session=55

|meeting=55

|anchor=top

|accessdate=2007-09-10}} the General Assembly welcomed the IPU declaration entitled "The Parliamentary vision for international cooperation at the dawn of the third millennium" and called for the Secretary-General to explore new and further ways in which the relationship could be strengthened.{{UN document |docid=A-RES-55-19 |type=Resolution |body=General Assembly |session=55 |resolution_number=19 |accessdate=2007-09-10}}

On 19 November 2002 the IPU was granted observer status to the General Assembly.{{UN document |docid=A-RES-57-32 |type=Resolution |body=General Assembly |session=57 |resolution_number=32 |accessdate=2007-09-10}}

In the Resolution 59/19, Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, the UN General Assembly takes note of the recommendations in regard to engaging parliamentarians more systematically in the work of

the United Nations.[http://www.ipu.org/Un-e/a-res-59-19.pdf Resolution adopted by the General Assembly], 17 December 2004

The final declaration of the Second World Conference of Speakers of Parliament, hosted at United Nations headquarters, took place in September 2005, was entitled Bridging the democracy gap in international relations: A stronger role for parliament.[http://www.ipu.org/splz-e/sp-conf05/declaration.pdf Bridging the democracy gap in international relations: A stronger role for parliaments] UNO Second World Conference of Speakers of Parliaments, New York, 7 to 9 September 2005

In the Resolution adopted by the UN General Assembly, 61/6, Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, on 27 November 2006, it calls for the further development of the annual parliamentary hearing at the United Nations and other specialized parliamentary meetings in the context of major United Nations meetings as joint United Nations-Inter-Parliamentary Union events.[http://www.ipu.org/Un-e/a-61-L6-e.pdf Resolution 61/6: Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union], 27 November 2006, at IPU official website

Every year during the fall session of the General Assembly the IPU organises a Parliamentary Hearing.[http://www.ipu.org/un-e/un-hearings.htm Cooperation with the UN: hearings] at IPU official website A resolution on cooperation between the United Nations and the IPU allowed for circulation of official IPU documents in the General Assembly.

UN and the IPU cooperate closely in various fields, in particular peace and security, economic and social development, international law, human rights, and democracy and gender issues, but IPU has not obtained the status of UN General Assembly subsidiary organ.

= Fourth World Conference of Speakers of Parliament =

The fourth world conference on UN 70th anniversary marked by Ban Ki-Moon as "UN70" was organised in September 2015 where Speakers of all IPU (Inter-Parliamentary Union) member parliaments and of non-member parliaments were invited from across the world. The theme was on peace, democracy, and development.{{cite web|title = Press Releases|url = http://www.hellenicparliament.gr/en/Enimerosi/Grafeio-Typou/Deltia-Typou/?press=4cd2f49d-6939-4061-833d-a50a0125d9d9|website = www.hellenicparliament.gr|access-date = 2015-10-01}}

= United Nations reports, resolutions, and agreements=

  • Resolution of the United Nations: Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, 27 November 2006.
  • Report of the United Nations Secretary-General: Cooperation between the United Nations and regional and other organizations, 16 August 2006.[http://www.ipu.org/Un-e/a-61-256-e.pdf Etpu]
  • Resolution of the United Nations General Assembly: Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, 8 November 2004.
  • Report of the United Nations Secretary-General: Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union (see Part 5 of the Annex), 1 September 2004.[http://www.ipu.org/Un-e/a-59-303.pdf Microsoft Word – 0447505e.doc]
  • Resolution adopted by the General Assembly: Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, 21 November 2002.[http://www.ipu.org/Un-e/a-res-57-47.pdf Microsoft Word – UND_GEN_N0254074_DOCU_N]
  • Resolution adopted by the General Assembly: Observer status for the Inter-Parliamentary Union in the General Assembly, 19 November 2002.[http://www.ipu.org/Un-e/a-res-57-32.pdf Resolution 57/32. Observer status for the Inter-Parliamentary Union in the General Assembly] 19 November 2002
  • Report of the United Nations Secretary-General: Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, 3 September 2002.[http://www.ipu.org/Un-e/a-57-375.pdf Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union: Report of the Secretary-General—Summary] at IPU official website, 3 September 2002
  • Cooperation Agreement between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union of 1996.[https://www.un.org/documents/ga/docs/51/plenary/a51-402.htm Cooperation between the United Nations and the Inter-Parliamentary Union: Report of the Secretary-General] Full item, 25 September 1996, at UNO official website. Accessed 24 February 2014

See also

Notes

{{Reflist|group=note}}

References

{{Reflist|2}}