The UN 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo set a bold new vision of the relationships between population, development, and individual rights and well-being. It recognized that population was not about numbers, but about people, and that individual dignity and human rights, including sexual and reproductive health and rights, are the basis for individual well-being and sustainable development.
Three decades later, as the international community has embarked on the review of the progress made towards the goals agreed in Cairo, the European region has profoundly changed. The report on ICPD implementation in the broader European region evaluates achievements and setbacks and highlights how recent crises have impacted longer-term trends in population and development. The report identifies areas where acceleration of efforts is required to realize individual and societal potential and highlights policy responses to both longstanding and emerging issues. It provides action-oriented recommendations towards advancing progress towards the ICPD goals in the context of evolving demographic, social, and economic realities in the broader European region.