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Forum of Small States

The Forum of Small States (FOSS) is a voluntary, informal and non-ideological grouping of countries at the United Nations, founded in 1992 by Singapore. Since then, Singapore has served as Chair of FOSS. The Forum of Small States is open to countries with a population of fewer than 10 million, although the population of some members has exceeded that level since they joined the group.[1]

Forum of Small States
AbbreviationFOSS
Formation1 October 1992; 31 years ago (1992-10-01)
Founded atNew York, New York, USA
TypeInformal grouping of nations at the UN
PurposeTo provide a forum for small states to promote their economic interests
HeadquartersUnited Nations Headquarters
FieldsInternational politics
Membership
108 member states
Chair
 Singapore
AffiliationsUnited Nations

The term "small state" is similar to the term microstate or ministate, a sovereign state having a very small population or land area, usually both. However, the meanings of "state" and "very small" are not well-defined in international law.[2]

The international system is for the most part made up by small powers or small states. While a small power in the international system may never equal or surpass the effect of larger powers, they can nevertheless influence the workings of the international system together with others.

According to a 2017 review study, "What scholars can agree on is that small states generally prefer multilateralism as both a path to influence and a means to restrain larger states. Studies of influential small states indicate that they are able to develop issue-specific power to make up for what they lack in aggregate structural power. Small states can, therefore, develop power disproportionate relative to their size on the few issues of utmost importance to them. In addition to prioritization, small states have successfully employed the strategies of coalition-building and image-building. Even though small state administrations lack the resources of their larger counterparts, their informality, flexibility, and the autonomy of their diplomats can prove advantageous in negotiations and within institutional settings."[3]

Small states make up the majority of United Nations member states and they have served as key drafters, negotiators, and thought leaders on a variety of issues at the UN. However, small states face significant structural and capacity barriers to their effective participation in diplomacy and policymaking at the UN.[4][5]

FOSS now comprises 108 countries across all geographical regions and at various levels of development and members meet several times a year to discuss issues of concern to small states. [1]

Founding edit

The Permanent Representative of Singapore to the UN, Chew Tai Soo, assumed his role in 1991 and said he was struck by three shortcomings which small member states of the UN faced:

First, small states particularly those which do not belong to a recognised grouping were often excluded from the inner sanctums of negotiations... Second, and related to the first, small countries often lacked in-depth information on what went on in the UN; unless they had a team of very active diplomats. Third, and most critically small states had by tradition been proportionally under-represented in the principal organs of the UN and boards of the UN specialised agencies. This came about because it was difficult for small states to be elected to these organs and agencies. I had observed at the 1991 Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) elections that the big regional countries were easily elected at the first round of voting. The smaller countries were then left to fight over the remaining seats.[6]

Following discussions, the core group that was convened by Singapore to form FOSS were:

FOSS Core Group
  Bahrain
  Barbados
  Botswana
  Djibouti
  Cape Verde
  Gabon
  Honduras
  Jamaica
  Malta
  Mongolia
  Papua New Guinea
  Mongolia
  Singapore
  Suriname
  Tunisia
  Uruguay
  Vanuatu

[6][7]

Challenges for small states edit

Small states face structural and capacity barriers to their participation in diplomacy and policymaking at the UN because their foreign ministries and missions are smaller than their larger counterparts, the relative costs of engagement are higher for small states and they often face capacity problems in filtering and processing the vast quantities of information they do receive.[4][5]

The countries designated as small states include some of the most and least developed nations, resource-rich and resource-scarce countries, and both island and landlocked states. The diversity of small states is significant, in terms of their circumstances, interests, policy priorities, and resources. These significant differences limit the extent to which small states can cooperate on policy issues or come together as a single negotiating bloc.[4]

In 2012, at the 20th anniversary of the formation of FOSS, then UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon noted some of the reasons the group was formed:

Small developing States face special challenges. Landlocked developing countries find themselves marginalized from the world economy, cut-off from global flows of knowledge, technology, capital and innovations, and unable to benefit substantially from external trade. The small island developing States continue to be on the frontlines in dealing with the adverse effects of climate change and sea level rise. From telecommunications and electricity to education and health, many of the problems faced by the small island developing States, located deep in the middle of oceans, are similar to the transportation challenges faced by the landlocked countries of the Himalayas.[8]

In 2019 in his remarks to the Small States Forum, UN Secretary-General António Guterres noted that small states are especially vulnerable to climate change and should not be expected to pay for climate disasters alone:

Over the past 20 years, more than 90 percent of disasters - droughts, floods, hurricanes and fires - were climate-related. Economic losses alone are estimated at more than $2.2 trillion and the human toll falls largely on low-income countries. These disasters constitute a major impediment to sustainable development.

For small states, recovery and reconstruction bills, including the cost of restoring people’s livelihoods, can total more than 100 per cent of Gross Domestic Product. Successive storms can trap small island states in particular in an accelerating cycle of disaster and debt...

Many small states, including middle-income countries, are highly vulnerable to external shocks of all kinds. As a result, the debt levels of small states are on average higher than other developing countries. Many are currently under debt distress or face a high risk of debt distress. [9]

But small states also have certain advantages, as noted by Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong:

We can respond more nimbly and adapt more easily to changing circumstances. Our sense of insecurity and even paranoia are also constructive as they motivate us to deal more decisively with challenges and threats. With our options more constrained, our collective minds are more readily focussed, and we are less hampered by regional interests and differences, or multiple levels of government, that bigger countries have to grapple with.[10]

Activities edit

In 2022, “FOSS for Good” was launched, a technical assistance package to provide a peer-learning platform for FOSS members to share experiences, best practices, and solutions to tackle common challenges.[11]

In January 2024, PassBlue, a New York City-based nonprofit that observes and independently reports on activities at and involving the UN, launched a series on multi-lateralism and small states. Articles focused on the challenges to small states in general, as well as profiles of specific challenges for Armenia and Gambia.[12]

Singapore hosted a study visit by 12 Permanent Representatives to the UN in New York from 19 to 23 February 2024 under the 12th FOSS Fellowship Programme. These Permanent Representatives were from Botswana, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Fiji, Grenada, Kyrgyzstan, Lesotho, Micronesia, Nauru, Senegal, Suriname and Tuvalu.[13]

Current members edit

Members
  Albania   Liberia
  Andorra   Libya
  Antigua & Barbuda   Liechtenstein
  Armenia   Lithuania
  Austria   Luxembourg
  Azerbaijan   Maldives
  Bahamas   Malta
  Bahrain   Marshall Islands
  Barbados   Mauritania
  Belarus   Mauritius
  Belize   Micronesia
  Benin   Moldova
  Bhutan   Monaco
  Bolivia   Mongolia
  Bosnia & Herzegovina   Montenegro
  Botswana   Namibia
  Brunei Darussalam   Nauru
  Bulgaria   New Zealand
  Burundi   Nicaragua
  Cabo Verde   North Macedonia
  Cambodia   Norway
  Central African Republic   Oman
  Comoros   Palau
  Costa Rica   Panama
  Croatia   Papua New Guinea
  Cyprus   Paraguay
  Czech Republic   Qatar
  Denmark   Rwanda
  Djibouti   Saint Kitts and Nevis
  Dominican Republic   Saint Lucia
  El Salvador   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  Estonia   Samoa
  Eswatini   San Marino
  Fiji   Senegal
  Finland   Serbia
  Gabon   Seychelles
  Gambia   Sierra Leone
  Georgia   Singapore
  Grenada   Slovakia
  Guinea-Bissau   Slovenia
  Guyana   Solomon Islands
  Haiti   Suriname
  Honduras   Sweden
  Hungary    Switzerland
  Iceland   Tajikistan
  Ireland   Timor-Leste
  Jamaica   Togo
  Jordan   Tonga
  Kuwait   Trinidad & Tobago
  Kyrgyzstan   Tunisia
  Lao PDR   United Arab Emirates
  Latvia   Uruguay
  Lebanon   Vanuatu
  Lesotho   Zambia

[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Small States". Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Government of Singapore. 2017-02-26., accessed June 17, 2016
  2. ^ Warrington, E. (1994). "Lilliputs Revisited". Asian Journal of Public Administration, 16(1).
  3. ^ Thorhallsson, Baldur; Steinsson, Sverrir (24 May 2017). "Small State Foreign Policy". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.484. ISBN 9780190228637.
  4. ^ a b c Ó Súilleabháin, Andrea (May 2014). "Small States at the United Nations: Diverse Perspectives, Shared Opportunities" (PDF). International Peace Institute. Retrieved Mar 25, 2024.
  5. ^ a b H.E. Mr. Abdulla Shahid (28 April 2022). "Informal High-level roundtable on "Small States, Multilateralism and International Law"". United Nations. Retrieved 25 Mar 2024.
  6. ^ a b Soo, Chew Tai (2015). "Small States". World Scientific Publishing Co., accessed 28 June 2024
  7. ^ Koh, Tommy; Li Lin Chang; Joanna Koh, eds. (September 2015). 50 Years of Singapore and the United Nations. World Scientific Publishing Co. doi:10.1142/9729., accessed 28 June 2024
  8. ^ "Secretary-General Tells Forum of Small States Their Size Does Not Mean Absence of Big Ideas as They Are Well-Placed to Be Bridge-Builders, Mediators". United Nations. 1 October 2012., accessed 28 Mar 2024
  9. ^ "António Guterres" (19 October 2019). "Secretary-General's remarks to the Small States Forum". "United Nations"., accessed= 28 Mar 2024
  10. ^ "Lee Hsien Loong" (25 September 2019). "Welcome remarks by PM Lee Hsien Loong at the Forum of Small States (FOSS) Reception". "Government of Singapore"., accessed= 28 Mar 2024
  11. ^ a b "Members of the Forum of Small States (FOSS)" (PDF). "Ministry of Public Administration, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago". May 2022., accessed= 28 Mar 2024
  12. ^ "Small States". "PassBlue". 11 January 2024., accessed= 28 Mar 2024
  13. ^ "Visit to Singapore Under the 12th Forum of Small States Fellowship Programme by Permanent Representatives to the United Nations, 19 to 23 February 2024". "Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Singapore". 18 February 2024., accessed= 28 Mar 2024

forum, small, states, foss, voluntary, informal, ideological, grouping, countries, united, nations, founded, 1992, singapore, since, then, singapore, served, chair, foss, open, countries, with, population, fewer, than, million, although, population, some, memb. The Forum of Small States FOSS is a voluntary informal and non ideological grouping of countries at the United Nations founded in 1992 by Singapore Since then Singapore has served as Chair of FOSS The Forum of Small States is open to countries with a population of fewer than 10 million although the population of some members has exceeded that level since they joined the group 1 Forum of Small StatesAbbreviationFOSSFormation1 October 1992 31 years ago 1992 10 01 Founded atNew York New York USATypeInformal grouping of nations at the UNPurposeTo provide a forum for small states to promote their economic interestsHeadquartersUnited Nations HeadquartersFieldsInternational politicsMembership108 member statesChair SingaporeAffiliationsUnited NationsThe term small state is similar to the term microstate or ministate a sovereign state having a very small population or land area usually both However the meanings of state and very small are not well defined in international law 2 The international system is for the most part made up by small powers or small states While a small power in the international system may never equal or surpass the effect of larger powers they can nevertheless influence the workings of the international system together with others According to a 2017 review study What scholars can agree on is that small states generally prefer multilateralism as both a path to influence and a means to restrain larger states Studies of influential small states indicate that they are able to develop issue specific power to make up for what they lack in aggregate structural power Small states can therefore develop power disproportionate relative to their size on the few issues of utmost importance to them In addition to prioritization small states have successfully employed the strategies of coalition building and image building Even though small state administrations lack the resources of their larger counterparts their informality flexibility and the autonomy of their diplomats can prove advantageous in negotiations and within institutional settings 3 Small states make up the majority of United Nations member states and they have served as key drafters negotiators and thought leaders on a variety of issues at the UN However small states face significant structural and capacity barriers to their effective participation in diplomacy and policymaking at the UN 4 5 FOSS now comprises 108 countries across all geographical regions and at various levels of development and members meet several times a year to discuss issues of concern to small states 1 Contents 1 Founding 2 Challenges for small states 3 Activities 4 Current members 5 See also 6 ReferencesFounding editThe Permanent Representative of Singapore to the UN Chew Tai Soo assumed his role in 1991 and said he was struck by three shortcomings which small member states of the UN faced First small states particularly those which do not belong to a recognised grouping were often excluded from the inner sanctums of negotiations Second and related to the first small countries often lacked in depth information on what went on in the UN unless they had a team of very active diplomats Third and most critically small states had by tradition been proportionally under represented in the principal organs of the UN and boards of the UN specialised agencies This came about because it was difficult for small states to be elected to these organs and agencies I had observed at the 1991 Economic and Social Council ECOSOC elections that the big regional countries were easily elected at the first round of voting The smaller countries were then left to fight over the remaining seats 6 Following discussions the core group that was convened by Singapore to form FOSS were FOSS Core Group nbsp Bahrain nbsp Barbados nbsp Botswana nbsp Djibouti nbsp Cape Verde nbsp Gabon nbsp Honduras nbsp Jamaica nbsp Malta nbsp Mongolia nbsp Papua New Guinea nbsp Mongolia nbsp Singapore nbsp Suriname nbsp Tunisia nbsp Uruguay nbsp Vanuatu 6 7 Challenges for small states editSmall states face structural and capacity barriers to their participation in diplomacy and policymaking at the UN because their foreign ministries and missions are smaller than their larger counterparts the relative costs of engagement are higher for small states and they often face capacity problems in filtering and processing the vast quantities of information they do receive 4 5 The countries designated as small states include some of the most and least developed nations resource rich and resource scarce countries and both island and landlocked states The diversity of small states is significant in terms of their circumstances interests policy priorities and resources These significant differences limit the extent to which small states can cooperate on policy issues or come together as a single negotiating bloc 4 In 2012 at the 20th anniversary of the formation of FOSS then UN Secretary General Ban Ki moon noted some of the reasons the group was formed Small developing States face special challenges Landlocked developing countries find themselves marginalized from the world economy cut off from global flows of knowledge technology capital and innovations and unable to benefit substantially from external trade The small island developing States continue to be on the frontlines in dealing with the adverse effects of climate change and sea level rise From telecommunications and electricity to education and health many of the problems faced by the small island developing States located deep in the middle of oceans are similar to the transportation challenges faced by the landlocked countries of the Himalayas 8 In 2019 in his remarks to the Small States Forum UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres noted that small states are especially vulnerable to climate change and should not be expected to pay for climate disasters alone Over the past 20 years more than 90 percent of disasters droughts floods hurricanes and fires were climate related Economic losses alone are estimated at more than 2 2 trillion and the human toll falls largely on low income countries These disasters constitute a major impediment to sustainable development For small states recovery and reconstruction bills including the cost of restoring people s livelihoods can total more than 100 per cent of Gross Domestic Product Successive storms can trap small island states in particular in an accelerating cycle of disaster and debt Many small states including middle income countries are highly vulnerable to external shocks of all kinds As a result the debt levels of small states are on average higher than other developing countries Many are currently under debt distress or face a high risk of debt distress 9 But small states also have certain advantages as noted by Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong We can respond more nimbly and adapt more easily to changing circumstances Our sense of insecurity and even paranoia are also constructive as they motivate us to deal more decisively with challenges and threats With our options more constrained our collective minds are more readily focussed and we are less hampered by regional interests and differences or multiple levels of government that bigger countries have to grapple with 10 Activities editIn 2022 FOSS for Good was launched a technical assistance package to provide a peer learning platform for FOSS members to share experiences best practices and solutions to tackle common challenges 11 In January 2024 PassBlue a New York City based nonprofit that observes and independently reports on activities at and involving the UN launched a series on multi lateralism and small states Articles focused on the challenges to small states in general as well as profiles of specific challenges for Armenia and Gambia 12 Singapore hosted a study visit by 12 Permanent Representatives to the UN in New York from 19 to 23 February 2024 under the 12th FOSS Fellowship Programme These Permanent Representatives were from Botswana Burundi Cabo Verde Fiji Grenada Kyrgyzstan Lesotho Micronesia Nauru Senegal Suriname and Tuvalu 13 Current members editMembers nbsp Albania nbsp Liberia nbsp Andorra nbsp Libya nbsp Antigua amp Barbuda nbsp Liechtenstein nbsp Armenia nbsp Lithuania nbsp Austria nbsp Luxembourg nbsp Azerbaijan nbsp Maldives nbsp Bahamas nbsp Malta nbsp Bahrain nbsp Marshall Islands nbsp Barbados nbsp Mauritania nbsp Belarus nbsp Mauritius nbsp Belize nbsp Micronesia nbsp Benin nbsp Moldova nbsp Bhutan nbsp Monaco nbsp Bolivia nbsp Mongolia nbsp Bosnia amp Herzegovina nbsp Montenegro nbsp Botswana nbsp Namibia nbsp Brunei Darussalam nbsp Nauru nbsp Bulgaria nbsp New Zealand nbsp Burundi nbsp Nicaragua nbsp Cabo Verde nbsp North Macedonia nbsp Cambodia nbsp Norway nbsp Central African Republic nbsp Oman nbsp Comoros nbsp Palau nbsp Costa Rica nbsp Panama nbsp Croatia nbsp Papua New Guinea nbsp Cyprus nbsp Paraguay nbsp Czech Republic nbsp Qatar nbsp Denmark nbsp Rwanda nbsp Djibouti nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp Saint Lucia nbsp El Salvador nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines nbsp Estonia nbsp Samoa nbsp Eswatini nbsp San Marino nbsp Fiji nbsp Senegal nbsp Finland nbsp Serbia nbsp Gabon nbsp Seychelles nbsp Gambia nbsp Sierra Leone nbsp Georgia nbsp Singapore nbsp Grenada nbsp Slovakia nbsp Guinea Bissau nbsp Slovenia nbsp Guyana nbsp Solomon Islands nbsp Haiti nbsp Suriname nbsp Honduras nbsp Sweden nbsp Hungary nbsp Switzerland nbsp Iceland nbsp Tajikistan nbsp Ireland nbsp Timor Leste nbsp Jamaica nbsp Togo nbsp Jordan nbsp Tonga nbsp Kuwait nbsp Trinidad amp Tobago nbsp Kyrgyzstan nbsp Tunisia nbsp Lao PDR nbsp United Arab Emirates nbsp Latvia nbsp Uruguay nbsp Lebanon nbsp Vanuatu nbsp Lesotho nbsp Zambia 11 See also editASEAN Group of 77 Least developed countries Pacific Islands Forum Small Island Developing States Southeast Asia Treaty OrganisationReferences edit a b Small States Ministry of Foreign Affairs Government of Singapore 2017 02 26 accessed June 17 2016 Warrington E 1994 Lilliputs Revisited Asian Journal of Public Administration 16 1 Thorhallsson Baldur Steinsson Sverrir 24 May 2017 Small State Foreign Policy Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190228637 013 484 ISBN 9780190228637 a b c o Suilleabhain Andrea May 2014 Small States at the United Nations Diverse Perspectives Shared Opportunities PDF International Peace Institute Retrieved Mar 25 2024 a b H E Mr Abdulla Shahid 28 April 2022 Informal High level roundtable on Small States Multilateralism and International Law United Nations Retrieved 25 Mar 2024 a b Soo Chew Tai 2015 Small States World Scientific Publishing Co accessed 28 June 2024 Koh Tommy Li Lin Chang Joanna Koh eds September 2015 50 Years of Singapore and the United Nations World Scientific Publishing Co doi 10 1142 9729 accessed 28 June 2024 Secretary General Tells Forum of Small States Their Size Does Not Mean Absence of Big Ideas as They Are Well Placed to Be Bridge Builders Mediators United Nations 1 October 2012 accessed 28 Mar 2024 Antonio Guterres 19 October 2019 Secretary General s remarks to the Small States Forum United Nations accessed 28 Mar 2024 Lee Hsien Loong 25 September 2019 Welcome remarks by PM Lee Hsien Loong at the Forum of Small States FOSS Reception Government of Singapore accessed 28 Mar 2024 a b Members of the Forum of Small States FOSS PDF Ministry of Public Administration Republic of Trinidad and Tobago May 2022 accessed 28 Mar 2024 Small States PassBlue 11 January 2024 accessed 28 Mar 2024 Visit to Singapore Under the 12th Forum of Small States Fellowship Programme by Permanent Representatives to the United Nations 19 to 23 February 2024 Ministry of Foreign Affairs Singapore 18 February 2024 accessed 28 Mar 2024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Forum of Small States amp oldid 1218161404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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