Forum of Small States

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from The Forum of Small States)
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 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]

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
 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