International Conference on "Environment, Peace, and the 
Dialogue among Civilizations and Cultures"  -  Final Summary    

DIALOGUE AMONG CIVILIZATIONS BULLETIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
PUBLISHED BY THE INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT (IISD) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Written and edited by:

Rachel Carrell
Hugh Wilkins

Editor:

Lynn Wagner, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

Director of IISD Reporting Services:

Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
 

Volume 108, Number 1
Friday, 13 May 2005

Online at http://www.iisd.ca/sd/sdter/ 

SUMMARY REPORT OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENT, 
PEACE, AND THE DIALOGUE AMONG CIVILIZATIONS AND CULTURES: 

9-10 MAY 2005

The International Conference on "Environment, Peace, and the 
Dialogue among Civilizations and Cultures" (Tehran Conference) 
convened at the Pardisan Eco Park and the Azadi Grand Hotel in 
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran, from 9-10 May 2005. It was 
organized by the Iranian Department of Environment and the 
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and co-sponsored by 
the United Nations University (UNU) and the United Nations 
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). 

Over 70 participants from more than 30 countries participated, 
including several ministers and other high-level representatives. 
The purpose of the Conference was to examine the interaction 
between environment, peace and security in the context of 
multilateral cultural dialogue among civilizations and discuss 
the need for multilateralism and meaningful dialogue. The 
Conference sought to underpin the imperative of multilateralism 
and meaningful dialogue among civilizations as a means for joint 
action against dehumanizing poverty, violence, increasing 
reliance on military might and continued erosion of the 
democratic practice, both at national and international levels.

The Conference included an introductory session on progress on 
environment and peace issues and an overview of the nexus 
between environment, peace and the dialogue among civilizations, 
cultures and peoples. A special high-level interactive 
ministerial roundtable was held during the afternoon of Monday, 
9 May on the rationale for the Conference, and working sessions 
were held on Monday and Tuesday focusing on issues surrounding 
environment and conflict, environment and human security, and 
dialogue. An interactive discussion on conclusions from the 
Conference was held on Tuesday afternoon. The outcomes of the 
Conference, including the Tehran Communiqu�, will be forwarded 
to the 5-Year Review of the outcome of the Millennium Summit, 
scheduled for 14-16 September 2005 in New York.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE "DIALOGUE AMONG CIVILIZATIONS" AND 
MILLENNIUM REVIEW PROCESS 

On 21 September 1998 at the 53rd session of the UN General 
Assembly, Iranian President Seyed Mohammad Khatami called for 
institutionalizing dialogue and "replacing hostility and 
confrontation with discourse and understanding." In particular, 
Khatami invited the international community to broaden and 
encourage dialogue among civilizations on the environment, peace 
and security. The thrust of the initiative was an appeal to 
human understanding that genuine dialogue on a global scale, 
involving all stakeholders, offers the only practical way to 
ensure meaningful and effective international cooperation. 

On 4 November 1998, the General Assembly adopted Resolution 
53/22, proclaiming 2001 as the UN Year of Dialogue among 
Civilizations. It called on governments and the UN to plan and 
implement cultural, educational and social programmes to promote 
the concept of dialogue among civilizations, including through 
conferences and seminars and disseminating information. In the 
lead up to, and during, the UN Year of Dialogue among 
Civilizations, several international events and meetings were 
held, including the International Conference on Dialogue among 
Civilizations, held in Vilnius, Lithuania from 23-26 April 2001 
and the International Conference on Dialogue of Civilizations, 
held in Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan from 31 July-3 August 2001.

An international seminar on Environment, Religion and Culture 
was held in Tehran from 18-20 June 2001. The seminar adopted the 
Tehran Declaration on Environment, Religion and Culture, 
committing participants, among other things, to promote 
education on the environmental content of religion and to 
promote environmentally responsible behavior.

The International Conference on the Dialogue among Civilizations, 
Cultures and Peoples convened at UNESCO headquarters in Paris on 
5 April 2005. At this meeting, Khatami urged open dialogue among 
civilizations as a necessary condition to improve international 
relations and development and called for the establishment of a 
Global Forum for the Promotion of Dialogue among Civilizations 
and Cultures.

MEETINGS AND REPORTS RELATING TO THE MILLENNIUM REVIEW: The UN 
Millennium Summit convened from 6-8 September 2000 in New York. 
At the Summit, world leaders agreed on a far-reaching plan to 
support global development objectives for the new century, and 
reaffirmed their commitment to work toward a peaceful and secure 
world in which sustainable development and poverty eradication 
would have the highest priority. The Millennium Declaration, 
agreed to at the Summit, outlines responses to these challenges, 
and establishes measures for judging performance through a set 
of interrelated commitments, goals and targets on development, 
governance, peace, security and human rights. The Declaration 
addresses issues relating to: fundamental values and principles; 
peace, security and disarmament; development and poverty 
eradication; the protection of the environment; human rights, 
democracy and good governance; the needs of the most vulnerable; 
the special needs of Africa; and strengthening the UN. In the 
Declaration, governments also agreed to time-bound commitments 
to, among other things, reduce poverty, hunger, child mortality 
and the spread of HIV/AIDS, improve maternal health, and 
increase primary education. These commitments formed the basis 
of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). 

The World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) was held from 
26 August to 4 September 2002 in Johannesburg, South Africa. The 
WSSD adopted two main docu�ments: the Johannesburg Declara�tion 
on Sustainable Development and the Johannesburg Plan of 
Implementation (JPOI). The JPOI notes that peace, security, 
stability and respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, 
including the right to development, as well as respect for 
cultural diversity, are essential for achieving sustainable 
development. The JPOI contains time-bound targets for the 
implementation of sustainable development in the following areas: 
basic sanitation; chemicals; integrated water resources 
management; oceans and fish stocks; alternatives to 
ozone-depleting substances; reduction in the current rate of 
loss of biological diversity; small island developing states; 
food security in Africa; and energy access in Africa. 

On 1 December 2004, the UN Secretary-General's High-level Panel 
on Threats, Challenges and Change presented its report, entitled 
"A More Secure World: Our Shared Responsibility." The report 
contains 101 recommendations addressing a range of issues 
identified by the Panel as being the greatest threats to 
worldwide security in the twenty-first century: continued 
poverty and environmental degradation, terrorism, civil war, 
conflict between States, the proliferation of weapons of mass 
destruction, and organized crime. The report also makes 
recommendations regarding UN reform. 

Presented to the UN Secretary-General on 17 January 2005, the 
report of the UN Millennium Project entitled "Investing in 
Development: A Practical Plan to Achieving the Millennium 
Development Goals" underscores the importance of the MDGs, 
tracks their implementation, and considers various means of 
supporting their achievement, including through public 
investment, civil society participation, and private sector 
contribution. The report outlines ten main recommendations for 
scaling-up action to meet the MDGs and also identifies the 
special needs of Africa, highlights strategies for countries 
affected by conflict, and discusses the need to revamp 
development aid, calling for targeted investments to address 
various challenges.

On 21 March 2005, the UN Secretary-General released his report 
"In Larger Freedom," containing a package of recommendations for 
action in the areas of development, security, human rights and 
UN reform. Regarding development, the Secretary-General sets out 
proposals for developing countries to adopt national strategies 
to meet the MDGs and urges countries to increase official 
development assistance levels, redefine debt sustainability 
levels, make efforts to further liberalize international trade, 
and ensure environmental sustainability. Regarding security, he 
urges states to prevent terrorism, halt the proliferation of 
weapons and reduce nuclear arsenals, and to reduce the risk and 
prevalence of war, including through the creation of an 
intergovernmental Peacebuilding Commission. Regarding human 
rights, he urges strengthening the rule of law, improving the 
protection of human rights, and facilitating democracy building. 
On UN reform, the Secretary-General proposes rationalizing the 
UN General Assembly's work, making the Security Council more 
representative, having ECOSOC act as a high-level development 
cooperation forum and institutionalize its work in post-conflict 
management, create a Human Rights Council, strengthen the UN 
Secretariat, and improve the coherence of the UN system, 
including through a more integrated structure for environmental 
standard-setting, scientific discussion and monitoring treaty 
compliance.

REPORT OF THE CONFERENCE

The International Conference on "Environment, Peace, and the 
Dialogue among Civilizations and Cultures" opened on Monday, 
9 May 2005 at the Pardisan Eco Park in Tehran. The Chair of 
the Conference, Massoumeh Ebtekar, Iranian Vice-President and 
Head of the Department of the Environment, opened the meeting, 
emphasizing the need for dialogue, peace and understanding to 
achieve global peace and sustainable development. She stressed 
that the world is at a sensitive juncture, noting that political 
and environmental instability have led to many wars in the past 
few decades. She said dialogue opens new doors to international 
cooperation and decision-making, which is not dependent on 
diplomacy or military action. 

Klaus T�pfer, UNEP Executive Director, delivered a message from 
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan welcoming the Conference's work. 
In his message, Annan said people share a common humanity and a 
common dependence on the environment, and emphasized that people 
need a clean environment to build a world of peace, freedom and 
dignity. He stressed that efforts to promote security, 
development and human rights and to pursue sustainable 
development will be in vain if environmental degradation and 
natural resource depletion continues unabated. Referring to the 
March 2005 Millennium Ecosystem Assessment report, he stated 
that almost all ecosystems are in decline and that this presents 
enormous obstacles to achieving the MDGs. He emphasized that 
states must work together and that, although environmental 
degradation can produce flash points for conflict, it can also 
catalyze cooperation, reconciliation, mutual understanding and 
peace. He underlined the value of the Conference's contribution 
to the Millennium review process.

T�pfer also gave remarks on behalf of UNEP, stressing that 
dialogue and understanding are keys to tolerance. He stressed 
the need for common security through peace, environment, social 
justice and sustainable development and said sustainable 
development policy is akin to a peace policy for the future. He 
underlined the urgency of taking action to achieve the MDGs. 
T�pfer also emphasized that the world needs cultural diversity 
to stabilize the effects of globalization. He said the topics 
for discussion at the Conference are difficult ones, but that 
answers must be found. He urged that conferences on these topics 
continue and said the outcomes of the meeting must be forwarded 
to the UN high-level event in September at the commencement of 
the 60th session of the UN General Assembly.

Seyed Mohammad Khatami, President of Iran, stressed the 
potential for international environmental cooperation to 
increase peace, stability and friendship, and linked 
environmental degradation to the expansion of poverty, injustice 
and insecurity. Khatami noted that wars waged in Bosnia, Kosovo, 
Palestine, Afghanistan and Iraq have inflicted horrible damage 
to drinking water, health and the environment. He said that now, 
more than ever, humanity needs a mutual understanding based on 
intellectual reflection to create a culture of peace and 
cooperation and a healthy environment for future generations. He 
underlined that the dialogue of cultures and civilizations can 
lay the foundations for this and hoped the Conference would 
provide an opportunity to evaluate the environmental effects of 
conflict. Khatami emphasized the need for military and economic 
power to give way to dialogue on a level playing field. Khatami 
lamented the broken promises of poverty reduction and 
environmental protection and the "unilateral and willful actions 
of a number of powers," which he said have made nations 
distrustful of international governance. He stressed that 
building trust would require a process of dialogue and 
understanding and that cooperation to ensure a good future for 
humanity is needed, but that it cannot be attained within 
existing frameworks. Khatami said a new UN structure should aim 
at peace, security, sustainable development and the realization 
of freedom and democracy and the protection of human dignity. He 
urged that restructuring should be based on international 
consensus and a democratic process taking into account the 
rights and views of developing countries.

Following these opening remarks, participants proceeded to 
convene in a roundtable and working sessions to discuss issues 
surrounding environment and conflict, environment and human 
security, and dialogue. The following summary reviews the 
proceedings in chronological order.

INTRODUCTORY SESSION

After a brief organizational session chaired by Conference Chair 
Ebtekar, Ambassador Wafiq Kamil chaired the introductory session 
of the Conference, which focused on the problematique of the 
issue of environment, peace and dialogue among civilizations and 
cultures. Oliver Brown, International Institute for Sustainable 
Development (IISD), described progress on environment and peace 
issues since the 1972 Stockholm Conference on the Human 
Environment. He said three perspectives have been prominent in 
the analysis of the relationship between environment and 
security: conflicts arise over competition for scarce resources; 
environmental conflict is linked to a society's transition from 
a subsistence economy to a market economy; and violence in many 
developing countries occurs when different groups attempt to 
gain control of abundant resources. He noted the many complex 
connections between environmental change and human security and 
underlined that, by addressing environmental concerns, 
opportunities for dialogue and for strengthening mutual 
understanding are created.

Hans D'Orville, UNESCO, said dialogue lies at the core of the 
UN's mandate. He stated that in a complex, multifaceted global 
community, no single civilization can assume sole responsibility 
for humanity nor exclusively define how to be a human being. 
Given this diversity, he said a common understanding of 
universal values such as human rights and democratic practices 
has been a major achievement. He urged the international 
community to deepen understanding of shared values and concepts, 
to reduce divisiveness, and to help tackle prejudice, ignorance 
and intolerance. In particular, he emphasized the importance of 
interfaith dialogue. D'Orville also reported on regional and 
subregional efforts that have driven UNESCO's work, including a 
series of summits in the Balkans to promote peace through 
dialogue. He stressed the need for the participation of civil 
society and the importance of freedom of expression for genuine 
dialogue. 

During the subsequent discussion, participants raised questions 
on the role of faith groups in the UN system, the perception of 
"civilizations" as those that leave a permanent environmental 
impact, the role of athletes in peace and dialogue, the 
definition of conflict and security, the root causes of 
conflicts, the environmental and health effects of depleted 
uranium in Iraq, and funding for UNESCO.

SPECIAL HIGH-LEVEL INTERACTIVE MINISTERIAL ROUNDTABLE: "WHY THE 
TEHRAN CONFERENCE: THE WAY FORWARD"

Philippe Roch, State Secretary of Switzerland's Agency for the 
Environment, Forests and Landscape, chaired this session on 
Monday afternoon. He said the environment is the basis for all 
cultures, and said the principles of dialogue, respect and 
harmony should be fundamental aspects of globalization. 

Conference Chair Ebtekar noted Iran's long history of dialogue 
between cultures, and respect for diversity and the environment. 
She suggested that existing mechanisms to govern conflict should 
be revisited and strengthened to include environmental 
protection. She stressed the advantages of a "dialogue 
mentality" over an adversarial "diplomatic mentality" and said 
this should be integrated into a new environmental institutional 
order. 

T�pfer said bringing people of different faiths together was an 
end in itself, and had been achieved with this Conference. He 
said spiritual and cultural values should inform the choice of 
national indicators and questioned the universal utility of GDP 
as an overarching national goal, referring to China's "green 
GNP" and Bhutan's "gross national happiness" as alternatives. 

Participants then engaged in an extended high-level discussion 
on these issues. Several participants stressed the complexity of 
the links between the environment and peace, and said 
assessments and solutions should be holistic and address social, 
cultural, economic and political dimensions. Some participants 
said this should inform plans for restructuring international 
institutions. One participant noted the weakness of many central 
governments' domestic positions and their consequent inability 
to implement the commitments that they make internationally, 
suggesting that institutional reform should take this into 
account by including the voices of civil society and regional or 
local governments. 

Many speakers stressed the need to integrate spiritual beliefs 
and values into international dialogue and to emphasize shared 
values. Others urged a stronger ethical commitment to 
environmental protection during war. One participant said there 
is a need to form one "planetary civilization," while another 
suggested that the use of the term "civilization" implies a 
hierarchy of cultural development. 

Other participants noted the limited utility of legal 
instruments, asked what might be an ethical level of consumption, 
and stressed that the by-products of war, such as depleted 
uranium, mean today's conflicts affect future generations. Some 
participants lamented the loss of momentum since the 1992 Earth 
Summit and the domination of security issues on the global 
agenda.

WORKING SESSIONS

Over the course of the two-day meeting, participants met in 
seven parallel working sessions, focusing on: environment and 
conflict, the impact of the Second Persian Gulf War (1990-1991) 
on the marine environment, protection of the environment and 
international law, environment and human security, dialogue 
among civilizations, peace and conflict prevention, and the 
meaning and implications of dialogue. 

ENVIRONMENT AND CONFLICT: Anthony Hill, The Policy Advisory 
Group, chaired this session on Monday afternoon. Emma Nicholson, 
Member of the European Parliament, described the impacts of 
armed conflict on the Marsh people of southern Iraq, emphasizing 
that opportunities for dialogue were not taken to prevent the 
forced destruction of the Mesopotamian Marshlands ecosystem and 
the livelihoods of local peoples. She said such actions demand a 
response beyond the borders of the nations where they take place, 
noting that in the case of the Mesopotamian Marshlands, 
information upon which action could have been taken was 
available. Nicholson stressed that a forum for international 
dialogue, as proposed by President Khatami at a recent UNESCO 
meeting, could promote international stability.

Mohiaddin Mesbahi, Florida International University, emphasized 
that unless an issue gets into a state's establishment and 
becomes a threat to national security, nothing will usually be 
done to address it. Mesbahi stressed that civilizations must 
determine their own positions before dialogue between 
civilizations begins. To prioritize environmental issues, he 
said science needs to be depoliticized and normative positions 
on the environment need to be developed. He underlined that the 
environment must be seen as an active agent rather than an end 
for human activity. 

Nils Petter Gleditsch, International Peace Research Institute 
Oslo, discussed the linkages between resources, the environment 
and conflict. He described the neo-Malthusian view of resource 
scarcity, which states that population pressure and high 
resource consumption lead to resource depletion, scarcity, 
competition and armed conflicts. He then outlined methodological, 
economic, political, and demographic-related objections to this 
view, based on the idea that there is no inherent scarcity of 
resources and also the idea that conflict arises from resource 
abundance rather than resource scarcity. He concluded that 
policy measures must be developed democratically.

Participants raised questions regarding the impacts of upstream 
water uses in Turkey, the role of democracy in reducing 
international conflict, the role of the UN in avoiding war 
and/or maintaining peace, public engagement on environment 
issues, and human innovation to address environmental threats. 

IMPACT OF SECOND PERSIAN GULF WAR (1990-91) ON THE MARINE 
ENVIRONMENT: This session was chaired by Mohammad Saeid-Hosseini, 
Iranian Department of the Environment, on Monday afternoon. 
Parvin Farschi, Iranian Department of Environment, outlined the 
claim for environmental damages sought by Iran from Iraq through 
the UN Compensation Commission (UNCC) following the 1990-1991 
Persian Gulf conflict. She said that, because of ongoing 
instability in Iraq, the claim has still not been settled and 
therefore rehabilitation has not occurred. Farschi said that 
after the invasion of Kuwait by Iraq, millions of barrels of oil 
were spilled in the Gulf, although she also noted that even 
during times of peace, the sensitive coastal habitats of the 
Persian Gulf suffer from oil spills from tankers, ballast water 
dumping and harmful offshore activities. Farschi explained that 
the oil spills and soot fallout have destroyed coral reefs, 
waterfowl habitat and food sources. She highlighted the 
difficulties involved with measuring environmental damage 
associated with the conflict, including a lack of pre-war data, 
the time that has elapsed, and the lack of access to the 
majority of the potentially impacted coast areas. 

Afshin Daneh-kar, Iranian Department of the Environment, 
outlined the importance of mangroves within the Gulf's 
ecosystems and the dramatic losses in Iranian mangroves from 
1990-2001, as shown by studies using remote sensing and sediment 
sampling. He said a significant amount of these losses could be 
attributed to the Gulf conflict of 1990-1991, when oil, smoke 
and soot were released and war conditions prevented 
rehabilitation.

Hayder Mohammed Abdul-Hameed, University of Baghdad, outlined 
the environmental and health effects of weapons used during the 
2003 Iraq conflict. He stressed that dust carrying depleted 
uranium has had extensive impacts across the region, and linked 
depleted uranium to the Iraqi population's dramatic rise in 
infertility, miscarriages and unusual diseases such as leukemia, 
skin cancers and respiratory diseases. He said tanks used during 
the war removed the desert's top cluster layer of sand, causing 
sand storms even in Baghdad, and said warships in the Persian 
Gulf changed the temperature and ph-level of the water, forcing 
fish to migrate. He also highlighted issues regarding soil and 
waterway contamination.

Omid Sedighi, Iranian Department of the Environment, stated that 
coral reef coverage in the Persian Gulf decreased from 1990 to 
2001. He attributed the losses to oil pollution, including 
during wartime, rural and urban effluent, industrial waste, 
pesticides, tourism and over-fishing. 

During the session, participants discussed: giving the 
environment the status of a "protected person" and making injury 
a war crime; the reliability of statistics; the ability of the 
Iraqi Government to confront the West about damages to its 
environment; and political constraints on research into the 
effects of depleted uranium.

PROTECTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT AND INTERNATIONAL LAW: This 
session was chaired on Monday afternoon by Geoffrey Dabelko, 
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Focusing on 
the Caspian Sea, Barbara Janusz, German Institute for 
International and Security Affairs, discussed progress in 
dialogue on environmental issues as a means of cooperating and 
preventing regional conflicts. She said recent work in the 
Caspian region has strengthened local and regional cooperation 
and improved civil society inputs into government 
decision-making. She suggested that dialogue might improve the 
adoption of international legal standards in the region and 
strengthen the rule of law. Janusz stressed that current legal 
principles are no longer sufficient to deal with new 
environmental, political and economic problems and that more 
regional legal instruments are needed.

Pekka Haavisto, UNEP, discussed his organization's work on 
conflict, environmental destruction and post-conflict situations. 
He outlined direct and indirect wartime causes of environmental 
degradation and reviewed the UNEP Post-Conflict Unit's work 
preparing assessments in the Balkans, Afghanistan, Palestine, 
Iraq and Liberia. He described how each assessment is unique and 
stressed the frequent need to take a transboundary approach to 
the assessments. Haavisto underscored that environmental 
diplomacy can be used for confidence and peace building, and 
that environmental work can prevent future conflict. 

Said Mahmoudi, Stockholm University, discussed international law 
relating to environmental protection during armed conflict, 
questioning whether laws can prevent damage to the environment 
during war and whether there are enough international rules to 
regulate the conduct of war so that no damage to the environment 
will happen. He reviewed examples of damage to the environment 
during wars and noted competing views on war and the environment, 
one underlining that existing laws are enough but need 
implementation, and the other stating that a new convention on 
war and environment is needed. He noted that there may be 
opportunities for the growth of environmental law in this area.

Antonio Marquina, Complutense University, discussed 
environmental challenges to state security, including climate 
change, ozone depletion, natural disasters and scarcity of water 
and food. He said these can jeopardize state survival and 
stressed the need to find means to reduce state and human 
vulnerabilities through global commitments and by developing 
analytical tools that integrate knowledge about vulnerability.

During the discussion, participants raised questions regarding 
the status of environmental treaties after their parties go to 
war, the applicability of international law to non-international 
armed conflicts, the applicability of discussions on war-related 
issues in sustainable development processes, and UNEP's possible 
role in assessing liability for damages.

ENVIRONMENT AND HUMAN SECURITY: Juan Mayr Maldonado, former 
Colombian Minister of the Environment, chaired this session on 
Tuesday morning. Hans Van Ginkel, UNU, underlined that 
environment and human security problems are complex and that 
solutions to these problems must also be complex, noting that 
actions to address one problem often create new ones, and that 
proposed solutions must pay attention to specific circumstances. 
He noted that the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment focuses on 
specific problems in specific areas and avoids using "doom and 
gloom" approaches to the issues. He added that many so-called 
natural events, such as floods and landslides, are actually 
triggered by human behavior. Van Ginkel stressed that human 
security issues must focus on the individual, not the state, and 
that there is a need for a more balanced approach to environment 
and human security issues. He said dialogue is the key to 
understanding environment and human security issues and for 
mobilizing action. He said binding legal approaches will rarely 
compel states to agree to take actions.  

Kevin Clements, University of Queensland, addressed the need for 
more conflict-sensitive development policies and programmes, 
underlining the need to think and act holistically in 
development, security and human rights debates. He said security 
should be seen as a relationship between individuals and 
underlined the need to prioritize community needs and values. 
Clements said there is a need to ensure that development 
policies are conflict sensitive, to analyze development in terms 
of its capacity for peace building or strengthening the chances 
for peace, and to provide local peoples the powers to find 
solutions and "own" their development. He emphasized that 
development and security initiatives must be sustainable and 
generate peace rather than divisions.

Hossein Fadaei, UNEP, outlined his organization's Environment 
and Security (ENVSEC) initiative in Central Asia, which promotes 
peace and security through cooperation. He said the aims of 
ENVSEC are to: identify and address environmental stresses that 
carry security risks; identify where and how to foster 
environmental cooperation; integrate environmental 
considerations into foreign and security thinking; and focus on 
building capacity to address areas and issues prone to tensions. 
Providing examples from work in the field, Hossein said ENVSEC's 
activities focus on: vulnerability assessment and monitoring; 
policy development and implementation; and capacity building and 
institutional development.

Participants raised questions regarding the value of "doom and 
gloom" scenarios to inspire urgent action, the limits to legal 
approaches, the relationship between state and civil society 
regarding conflict-sensitive development policies, how to take 
these policies forward, the role of women, whether security 
concerns should be prioritized over development concerns, and 
the use of genetically modified crops in Africa.

SPECIAL PANEL ON DIALOGUE AMONG CIVILIZATIONS: Lalit Mansingh, 
former Indian Foreign Secretary and former Ambassador to the 
United States, chaired this session on Tuesday afternoon. He 
said participants should reflect on how the philosophies and 
lessons of ancient civilizations can help with contemporary 
problems and highlighted the basic unity of the world's 
religions.

Lawrence Troster, Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life, 
described his personal experience with the spirituality of the 
environment, and noted that sacred texts are filled with 
environmental references. He said people today are often in 
situations that traditions do not address, and that through 
dialogue science and religion can complement one another. Noting 
that environmental crises are universal and make no religious 
distinctions, he said the environmentalist worldview also 
transcends politics and religion and people need the wisdom of 
all religions to shed light on contemporary crises.

John Grim, Forum on Religion and Ecology, outlined the Forum's 
work in generating dialogue. He said religious concepts of 
"eco-justice," such as the sacredness of the commons, should 
be retrieved and evaluated, and he noted that traditions are 
often viewed as being continuous and timeless, but that they 
are in fact internally diverse and constantly reconstructed.  

Reza Shabani, Shahid Beheshti University, drew on Iran's long 
history at the crossroads of civilizations to underscore the 
relevance of Khatami's desire for dialogue among nations, 
showing that the initiative is deeply rooted in the Iranian 
culture and psyche.

Richard Jordan, International Information and Communications 
Technology Bridge for Caring Communities, echoed the role of 
spiritual inspiration from nature and the importance of moving 
from dialogue to action, particularly in implementing the 
environmental commitments in the Millennium Declaration.

During the subsequent discussion, participants raised questions 
on the role of dialogue within civilizations, the possibility of 
redefining rationality, educating world leaders about the 
environment, integrating the environment into religious sermons, 
and moving from textual evaluation and dialogue to action.

PEACE AND CONFLICT PREVENTION: Simon Dalby, Carleton University, 
chaired this session. Bagher Asadi, Special Representative of 
the Head of the Department of Environment for the Tehran 
International Conference, presented a paper prepared by Richard 
Falk, Professor Emeritus, Princeton University, on conflict 
prevention and dialogue as a strategic imperative, stressing the 
need for the emergence of a non-violent geopolitics. He stressed 
that the deepening and widening of dialogue between and within 
civilizations is a precondition for the emergence of an 
alternative paradigm and suggested the creation of a voluntary 
association of people, governments and international 
institutions, which work out common solutions to common problems.

Paul Claval, Universit� de Paris - Sorbonne, outlined how 
changes in the availability of energy supplies, advances in 
communications, and changes in cultures have affected the 
environment and people's perspectives on it. He underlined the 
need to acknowledge: that the traditional values on which the 
world order was built have changed; the key role of 
non-governmental organizations in negotiations; and that the 
definition of sustainable development needs to be continually 
updated with changing circumstances.

Dabelko described the need to exploit "environmental pathways to 
peace" by building on environment, conflict and security 
linkages. He said dialogue on environmental issues could be used 
for conflict prevention, tension reduction, achieving peace and 
post-conflict confidence building. He noted challenges, 
including moving the focus from conflict impact assessment to 
conflict prevention and peace-making and ensuring that parties, 
including donors, commit to long-term support.

Bahman Baktiari, University of Maine, said there is a need for 
greater dialogue among social scientists, scientists and 
policymakers. He stressed that many multilateral environmental 
agreements are not effective because they do not address 
scientific issues properly. He emphasized that agreements are 
shaped by scientific knowledge and social factors, scientific 
consensus is not enough to create an environmental regime, and 
scientific advice must be politically feasible. Jean Fried, 
University of Maine, then provided an EU project to increase the 
dialogue between scientists and policy makers. He described the 
project's four stages: a survey of needs; multidisciplinary 
regional training workshops; an analysis of the workshops' 
outcomes and development of a policy document and action plan 
for high-level decision makers; and ministerial conferences. He 
said the project showed that when experts have worked together, 
negotiators will use the scientific content in negotiations.

During the discussion, questions were asked regarding the role 
of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in peace-building 
through environment dialogue, whether the idea of common 
problems and common solutions is appropriate, how sustainable 
development is defined, and water conflicts in Palestine.

DIALOGUE - WHAT IT MEANS; WHAT IT ENTAILS: This session was 
chaired by Nay Htun, University for Peace. He noted that words 
have evolved with different meanings in different cultures, and 
proposed that communication be conceived broadly to incorporate 
art, music, dance and theatre.   

Hisae Nakanishi, University of Nagoya, discussed the 
difficulties associated with implementing "universal" values 
such as gender equality in different cultures, drawing on her 
experience in Afghanistan and Japan where traditional groups 
opposed a universalist interpretation of women's rights. She 
concluded that just as there are many democracies, there should 
be many forms of gender equality. Nakanishi warned against using 
shortcuts to achieve the MDGs quickly, saying local people need 
time to digest concepts of gender equality and apply them to 
their own cultures.

Mary Evelyn Tucker, Harvard Forum on Religion and Ecology, 
pointed out that the only truly shared human value is the 
continuation of life on Earth. She said we should move beyond 
individualism and domination of the environment to emphasize 
participation and kinship with all life systems. Tucker 
advocated that "species identity" should take precedence over 
religious, national and other identities and called for more 
consciousness of humankind's evolutionary responsibilities to 
safeguard shared resources for future generations. She said 
dialogue was of singular importance in building a planetary 
civilization with a global vision.

Hans Koechler, Leopold-Franzens University, questioned the value 
of dialogue in a world of extreme power imbalance, saying 
rational debate cannot succeed where one party is able to 
exploit its economic or military dominance. He called for the 
Western world to be more self-critical, and for a balanced 
international order as a fundamental prerequisite of genuine 
dialogue. He warned that attempts at dialogue will otherwise 
lack credibility and could generate further conflict.   

Ali Paya, National Research Institute of Science Policy of Iran, 
drew on concepts from science to illustrate the preeminent 
position of dialogue and its relationship to cooperation and 
rationality. 

Noel Brown, Friends of the United Nations, responded to the 
panel presentations. He summarized the discussion, stressing the 
need to develop strategies for dialogue in a hegemonic world. He 
said the generation that first saw images from space began to 
perceive the interests of the world as a whole, and that this 
still needs to be translated into social and political action.

Participants discussed: dialogue with the private sector, the 
false universalization of Western values, communicating the 
principles of the conference to world leaders, whether ethical 
arguments can influence business, reconciling communitarianism 
and capitalism, and concerns that dialogue might erode cultural 
heritage or facilitate the imposition of some cultures upon 
others.

INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION ON CONCLUSIONS 

This session took place on Tuesday afternoon and was chaired by 
Van Ginkel. He reviewed the discussions at the Conference and 
grouped the topics discussed into three major lines of thinking: 
environment and conflict, environment and human security, and 
dialogue. The Chair of each session then provided an overview of 
the discussions in their sessions.

Van Ginkel said a non-negotiated communiqu� from the Conference 
would be forwarded by the Islamic Republic of Iran to the 
September high-level event at the commencement of the 60th 
session of the UN General Assembly. Clements led the subsequent 
discussion on the issues to be included in the communiqu�, 
suggesting as a starting point: the complexity of environmental 
problems and solutions; links between the environment and 
security, development and human rights; the need to celebrate 
unity in diversity of civilizations; the need for justice, 
compassion and truth to accompany peace; moving from "national 
security" to "human security"; the world's complicity in Middle 
Eastern conflicts; state and societal failure; the inadequacy of 
the current legal framework; green indicators; the need for 
"reality-based optimism"; the special role of women and 
indigenous peoples; and political and cultural diversity as an 
evolutionary strategy.

Participants then made suggestions for the communiqu�, including: 
proposing that regions declare themselves free of weapons of 
mass destruction; directing the communiqu� to skeptical 
audiences rather than the converted; supporting proposals for a 
UN Peacebuilding Commission; strengthening international 
environmental law, especially regarding conflicts; and calling 
for civil society to be allowed to participate at the September 
high-level event at the commencement of the 60th session of the 
UN General Assembly.

The meeting was adjourned for one hour while the Secretariat 
prepared the communiqu� to be adopted during the closing plenary.

CLOSING PLENARY

The closing plenary convened late in the afternoon on Tuesday, 
10 May and was chaired by Conference Chair Ebtekar. She thanked 
all participants and introduced the outcome document, the Tehran 
Communiqu�, which was then distributed. Van Ginkel summarized 
the proceedings of the Conference and the three streams of 
working sessions (environment and conflict, environment and 
human security, dialogue). Conference Chair Ebtekar noted that 
reports from the Chair of each session will be fed into the 
final report of the Conference. She then opened the floor for 
amendments or comments on the text of the Tehran Communiqu� and, 
there being none, declared it adopted.

Reflecting on discussions at the Conference, Wolfgang Burhenne, 
International Council of Environmental Law, said that: 
policymakers must engage in more general dialogues; there must 
be greater respect given to culture, religion, and history in 
dialogue; a culture of dialogue must be developed; issues 
concerning shared resources must be addressed; the Security 
Council should designate safe havens in times of war for vital 
natural areas; and world leaders should use dialogue to 
strengthen solidarity, respect and tolerance. 

Alexandre Kiss, European Council for Environmental Law, said 
care for the environment is essential due to the growing 
complexity of problems. He underlined the need for a preventive 
and holistic approach, long-term perspectives on environmental 
issues, and a sense of responsibility starting with individuals. 
He also recommended the use of a human rights approach and said 
access to justice and public participation issues must be 
addressed. 

Kamal Kharrazi, Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs, said the 
Conference signifies that the interaction between environment, 
peace and security is increasingly appreciated everywhere. He 
stressed that people have come to realize that the environment 
is critical to people's lives and that it is in real jeopardy. 
He said the promotion of a global forum is another positive 
development and that dialogue must be inclusive. 

Adnan Amin, UNEP, on behalf of T�pfer, thanked the Iranian 
Government for its vision, leadership and hospitality, and 
emphasized that the process should be continued and strengthened 
in the future, possibly through a global forum at UNESCO. He 
also noted the potential of a future UN Peacebuilding Commission 
to address these issues.

Conference Chair Ebtekar then closed the meeting, expressing 
hope that this would be only "the end of the beginning" and 
inviting participants to conduct inner dialogue and to search 
for peace within themselves. She closed the meeting at 6:48 pm.

THE TEHRAN COMMUNIQU�

Participants adopted the Tehran Communiqu� during the closing 
plenary on the afternoon of Tuesday, 10 May. The Communiqu� 
provides a brief introduction to the structure and aims of the 
Conference, summarizes the main issues discussed, and provides 
nine recommendations and conclusions arising from the Conference.

The Communiqu� states that participants at the Conference 
underscored their "conviction of the common brotherhood of all 
peoples and a vision of a global civilization enriched by the 
peaceful interaction among individuals, cultures, religions and 
perspectives." It notes the currently fragmented nature of 
global discourse leading to increasing global tensions and 
insecurity and urges the creation of a new model of dialogue 
among civilizations and cultures based on mutual respect and 
recognition.

The Communiqu� emphasizes that the environment provides an 
important aspect of holistic dialogue that can contribute to 
understanding by, among other things, supporting a revitalized 
framework for effective multilateralism, confidence building and 
strategies for conflict avoidance, and effective decision-making. 
It states that an inclusive approach based on dialogue can be a 
catalyst for cooperation to ensure that problems of shared 
resources can produce effective shared solutions. It adds that 
there is a need for the reconstitution of ethical and spiritual 
messages that are common to all faiths concerning the protection 
of the environment and the central message of peace, tolerance 
and harmony.

The Communiqu� calls for vibrant, inclusive and democratic 
multilateralism based on respect, tolerance, accountable 
governance, human rights and inclusiveness. It emphasizes that 
UN reform should reinforce the objectives of promoting peace, 
security, freedom, democracy, respect for human dignity and 
respect for creation and must be democratic and accommodate all 
views and respect the rights of all peoples and nations. The 
Communiqu� also states that intersectoral coordination within 
the UN must be made more effective through dialogue.

The Communiqu� includes conclusions and recommendations stating, 
among other things: that there is a need for a new shared vision 
of a common destiny to create a culture of universal peace and 
solidarity and thus an environment free from poverty, war, fear, 
violence and insecurity; that there is a need to deepen and 
broaden the process of dialogue among civilizations and cultures; 
that UNEP should continue its initiative on environment, peace 
and dialogue and consider holding annual international meetings; 
that efforts should be made to develop better understanding of 
the issues of security and environment and link them to broader 
discussions on security; that greater efforts should be made to 
include broader constituencies, including mayors and civil 
society, in this process; that the proposed UN Peacebuilding 
Commission should contribute to the objectives of the Conference; 
that consideration should be given to the development of fora 
for preventive dialogue and confidence building, conflict 
resolution and post-conflict restitution; and that cultural, 
ethical and spiritual values must be fully integrated into 
strategies of dialogue for peace, security and development.

The Communiqu� is to be formally submitted by the Government of 
the Islamic Republic of Iran to the UN Secretary-General as a 
message to the UN high-level event in September at the 
commencement of the 60th session of the UN General Assembly.

UPCOMING MEETINGS

SECOND MEETING OF PARTIES TO THE AARHUS CONVENTION: This meeting 
of Parties to the UNECE Convention on Access to Information, 
Public Participation in Decision-Making and Access to Justice in 
Environmental Matters (Aarhus Convention) will convene from 
25-27 May 2005, in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The meeting will review 
progress to date, make future plans and discuss developments at 
global and regional levels regarding Principle 10 of the Rio 
Declaration on Environment and Development. For more information, 
contact: Ella Behlyarova, Environmental Affairs Officer, ECE; 
tel: +41-22-917-2376; fax: +41-22-917-0107; e-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Internet: 
http://www.unece.org/env/pp/mop2.htm

WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY: Mayors from 60 cities will attend the 
signing of the Urban Environmental Accords in San Francisco, 
California, US, on 5 June 2005 to mark World Environment Day. 
Official celebrations will include a walk entitled "Peace and 
the Environment at Muir Woods - the UN at 60" plus over 200 
community activities in the San Francisco Bay area. For more 
information, contact: World Environment Day Secretariat; tel: 
+1-415-355-9905; fax: +1-415-353-9933; e-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Internet: http://www.wed2005.org 

MEETING THE HEALTH MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS IN FRAGILE 
STATES: This conference will be held on 23-24 June 2005 at The 
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, in London, UK. 
The conference will address the challenges to meeting the 
Millennium Development Goals in "Fragile States," including 
states affected by conflict. For further details, contact 
Marlene Julien; tel: +44-0-207-065-0800; fax: +44-0-207-065-0801; 
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Internet: 
http://www.lshtm.ac.uk/hpu/conflict

2005 ECOSOC HIGH-LEVEL SEGMENT AND SUBSTANTIVE SESSION: The 
ECOSOC High-level Segment will convene from 29 June to 1 July 
2005 at UN headquarters in New York to address the theme 
"Achieving the internationally agreed development goals, 
including those contained in the Millennium Declaration as well 
as implementing the outcomes of the major United Nations 
conferences and summits: progress made, challenges and 
opportunities." The substantive session will also involve the 
following sessions: Coordination Segment (5-7 July); Operational 
Activities Segment (8-12 July); Humanitarian Affairs (13-18 
July); General Segment (18-25 July); and conclusion (26-27 July). 
For more information, contact: Sarbuland Khan, ECOSOC; tel: 
+1-212-963-4628; fax: +1-212-963-1712; e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 
Internet: 
http://www.un.org/docs/ecosoc/meetings/meetings2005.html

G8 2005 SUMMIT: The 2005 G8 Summit will convene from 6-8 July 
2005, at the Gleneagles Hotel in Perthshire, Scotland. Under the 
UK Presidency, the G8's deliberations will focus on Africa and 
climate change among other topics. For more information, contact: 
British Prime Minister's Office; fax: +44-20-7925-0918; e-mail: 
http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page821.asp; Internet: 
http://www.g8.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate
/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1078995902703

THIRD WORLD YOUTH CONGRESS: This Congress will meet from 30 July 
to 8 August 2005, in Stirling, Scotland. Convening under the 
theme of "Young People working together for a sustainable world 
community," delegates will seek to highlight how much youth do 
and are doing to support the achievement of the MDGs. For more 
information, contact: Ray Bugg, Media and Communications Manager; 
tel: +44-131-244-7425; fax: +44-795-726-1178; e-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Internet: 
http://www.scotland2005.org

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENGAGING COMMUNITIES: Organized by 
DESA and the State Government of Queensland, Australia, this 
conference will meet from 14-17 August 2005, in Brisbane, 
Australia, and will seek to promote understanding of the concept 
of engagement and participative practices and their role in good 
governance. For more information, contact: OzAccom Conference 
Services; tel: +61-7-3854-1611; fax: +61-7-3854-1507; e-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Internet: 
http://www.engagingcommunities2005.org

HELSINKI CONFERENCE 2005 - MOBILIZING POLITICAL WILL: Convening 
from 7-9 September 2005, in Helsinki, Finland, this conference 
represents the culmination of the Helsinki Process on 
Globalization and Democracy. For more information, contact: 
Pieni Roobertinkatu, Helsinki Conference Secretariat; tel: +358-
9-698-7024; fax: +358-9-612-7759; e-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Internet: 
http://www.helsinkiconference.fi

HIGH-LEVEL PLENARY MEETING OF THE 60TH SESSION OF THE UN GENERAL 
ASSEMBLY ON THE FOLLOW-UP TO THE OUTCOME OF THE MILLENNIUM 
SUMMIT: This High-level Plenary Meeting will take place from 
14-16 September 2005 at UN headquarters in New York. The 
meeting is expected to undertake a comprehensive progress 
review of the commitments in the UN Millennium Declaration. For 
more information, contact: Office of the President of the 
General Assembly; tel: +1-212-963-2486; fax: +1-212-963-3301; 
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Internet: 
http://www.un.org/ga/59/hl60_plenarymeeting.html



The Dialogue Among Civilizations Bulletin is a publication of 
the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, publishers of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin � 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. This issue was written and edited by Rachel 
Carrell and Hugh Wilkins. The Digital Editor is Leila Mead. The 
editor is Lynn Wagner, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. The Director of 
IISD Reporting Services is Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. Funding for coverage of this meeting has been 
provided by the Globe Environment and Development Foundation 
(GERDF). IISD can be contacted at 161 Portage Avenue East, 6th 
Floor, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 0Y4, Canada; tel: +1-204-958-7700; 
fax: +1-204-958-7710. The opinions expressed in the Bulletin 
are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the 
views of IISD. Excerpts from the Bulletin may be used in other 
publications with appropriate academic citation. Electronic 
versions of the Bulletin are sent to e-mail distribution lists 
(ASCII and PDF format) and can be found on the Linkages 
WWW-server at <http://www.iisd.ca/>. For information on the 
Bulletin, including requests to provide reporting services, 
contact the Director of IISD Reporting Services at 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, +1-646-536-7556 or 212 East 47th St. #21F, 
New York, NY 10017, USA.

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