Newspage: You described the 2024 UN Civil Society Conference (2024 UNCSC) as “momentous” in your post-conference reflection piece. How momentous was it considering the fact that it was organised on short notice yet received a huge turn-out and active participation of stakeholders from government and civil society?
Yusuf: The UN civil society conferences have been happening for several years, yet the 69th edition of the conference was, in my view, “momentous” in a couple of different respects.
Firstly, unlike the previous 68 conferences, it was the first to be tied to an intergovernmental process — it was explicitly in support of the Summit to the Future (SOTF). Secondly, it was the first conference to take place in the Global South, particularly in Africa–a region with potential for highest impact and influence in the future. Thirdly, it was planned within the shortest notice a planning committee has ever had to plan for such a conference.
Unlike previous conferences that had taken almost a year of planning, this one was planned within barely nine weeks. Carole [Osero-Ageng’o] and I were only appointed co-chairs in the middle of February, then the co-chairs for the planning subcommittees came on board in the third week of February. Moreover, this was the first UN civil society conference where we saw other stakeholder groups like Member States and UN entities showing up in full force. We also had a large representation of non Department of Global Communications (DGC) and Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) accredited NGOs (49.6%).
I believe this was crucial because, by and large, we are realizing that civil society talking to itself (and often privileging those based in New York) will not achieve the urgent impact we need for the future of multilateralism. And if we are to engage with the intergovernmental processes, if we are to engage with cross-sectoral processes, we really need to start convening beyond ourselves, which made the conversation at the 2024 UN Civil Society Conference a step in the right direction.
Newspage: One of the crucial components of the conference was the ImPact Coalitions (ICs), which you also described as reinventing how civil society engages with intergovernmental processes. How crucial were the ICs to the overall success of the conference?
Read the full interview in Africa Newspage.
International & Regional Organizations, International & Regional Organizations
Share:
Originally published in Africa Newspage
Newspage: You described the 2024 UN Civil Society Conference (2024 UNCSC) as “momentous” in your post-conference reflection piece. How momentous was it considering the fact that it was organised on short notice yet received a huge turn-out and active participation of stakeholders from government and civil society?
Yusuf: The UN civil society conferences have been happening for several years, yet the 69th edition of the conference was, in my view, “momentous” in a couple of different respects.
Firstly, unlike the previous 68 conferences, it was the first to be tied to an intergovernmental process — it was explicitly in support of the Summit to the Future (SOTF). Secondly, it was the first conference to take place in the Global South, particularly in Africa–a region with potential for highest impact and influence in the future. Thirdly, it was planned within the shortest notice a planning committee has ever had to plan for such a conference.
Unlike previous conferences that had taken almost a year of planning, this one was planned within barely nine weeks. Carole [Osero-Ageng’o] and I were only appointed co-chairs in the middle of February, then the co-chairs for the planning subcommittees came on board in the third week of February. Moreover, this was the first UN civil society conference where we saw other stakeholder groups like Member States and UN entities showing up in full force. We also had a large representation of non Department of Global Communications (DGC) and Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) accredited NGOs (49.6%).
I believe this was crucial because, by and large, we are realizing that civil society talking to itself (and often privileging those based in New York) will not achieve the urgent impact we need for the future of multilateralism. And if we are to engage with the intergovernmental processes, if we are to engage with cross-sectoral processes, we really need to start convening beyond ourselves, which made the conversation at the 2024 UN Civil Society Conference a step in the right direction.
Newspage: One of the crucial components of the conference was the ImPact Coalitions (ICs), which you also described as reinventing how civil society engages with intergovernmental processes. How crucial were the ICs to the overall success of the conference?
Read the full interview in Africa Newspage.
Recent & Related
Tripoli’s New Leverage: How the American Initiative Changed the Rules of Negotiation
America’s Chip Future Still Runs Through Taiwan
Postwar, Iran Is at a Crossroads
When Formal Alliances Stop Doing Political Work: The Canada-US Alliance in Crisis
Post-War Street Rallies in Iran: The Ascendance of Religious over National Identity
The Next Iran Nuclear Deal: Lessons from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and North Korea
The Negative Strategic Consequences of the US-Iran War for Iraq
What OCHA’s 87 Million Lives Campaign Reveals About the Future of UN Leadership
What The Iran War Reveals About Airpower
The Status of Transitional Justice in Syria
Iran-Qatar Electricity Grid Interconnection Plan Shows Pragmatism in the Shadow of War
North Africa Regional Outlook: June 17, 2026
การทำเหมืองแร่โดยไม่ได้รับการควบคุมตามแนวแม่น้ำในแผ่นดินใหญ่ของเอเชียตะวันออกเฉียงใต้
ການຂຸດຄົ້ນ-ປຸງແຕ່ງແຮ່ທີ່ບໍ່ຖືກຕ້ອງ ຢູ່ຕາມແມ່ນໍ້າສາຍຕ່າງໆ ຢູ່ແຜ່ນດິນໃຫຍ່ອາຊີຕາເວັນອອກສຽງໃຕ້ Unregulated Mining Along Rivers in Mainland Southeast Asia (Lao Language)
Current Geopolitics Shift Deep-Sea Mining Debates
Navigating Seabed Mining in the Cook Islands: A Conversation with John Parianos
การทำเหมืองแร่โดยไม่ได้รับการควบคุมตามแนวแม่น้ำในแผ่นดินใหญ่ของเอเชียตะวันออกเฉียงใต้
Mining in Mainland Southeast Asia – River Basins Dashboard
Unregulated Mining Along Rivers in Mainland Southeast Asia
Trump’s Critical Minerals Search in Africa Won’t Tip the Scales Against China
Breaking Silos to Beat Scams: Why Holistic Law Enforcement Matters
The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Violence Against Women and Girls
Find an Expert
Home to more than 100 scholars and global affiliates, the Stimson Center is proud to be a magnet for the world’s leading experts on the most pressing foreign policy and national security issues of our time. Explore our experts and their work.