List of members of the United Nations Economic and Social Council

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The United Nations Economic and Social Council has 54 member states which are elected by the United Nations General Assembly for overlapping three-year terms, with terms ending on 31 December of the third year. Seats on the Council are based on United Nations Regional Groups, with fourteen seats allocated to the African Group, eleven to the Asia-Pacific Group, six to the Eastern European Group, ten to the Latin American and Caribbean Group, and thirteen to the Western European and Others Group.[1]

Unlike the UN Security Council, outgoing members are eligible for immediate re-election. Like the Security Council, getting elected to a seat requires a two-thirds majority vote, so it is possible for two candidates to deadlock with approximately half the vote each, needing negotiations to resolve.

Membership (1946–1965)[edit]

Prior to an amendment to the UN Charter in 1965, the Economic and Social Council consisted of 18 seats.

De facto permanent[edit]

The UN General Assembly agreed in 1946 that the Security Council's permanent five should be given de facto permanent ECOSOC seats. The Republic of China kept its seat renewed until 1961, when it failed to get a two-thirds majority vote for re-election.[2]

The United States renewed its seat in 1947, 1950, and so on; the United Kingdom and Soviet Union renewed their seats in 1948, 1951, and so on; and France and the Republic of China renewed their seats in 1949, 1952, and so on; making it so six out of eighteen total seats are up for election each year (until the ECOSOC was expanded in 1965).

Year De facto permanent seats
1946–1965  France  Soviet Union  United Kingdom  United States

Non-permanent[edit]

Unlike the Security Council, there was no specific agreement on how many ECOSOC seats would go to each of the then-informal United Nations Regional Groups, and seat arrangements instead came from "unwritten rules" and "habits" that eventually stabilized into a documented pattern. For example:[2][3]

  • The first election for the 1946 term ended up electing three members from Eastern Europe. However, Yugoslavia and New Zealand had deadlocked on one of the seats until New Zealand withdrew. When Yugoslavia's term ended, New Zealand was elected in its place; that seat effectively became a Commonwealth seat going forward. Meanwhile, the 'original' Commonwealth seat that went to Canada in 1946 eventually became a Middle Eastern seat, so this change did not increase the number of Commonwealth seats long-term.
  • One of the Western European seats went to a Scandinavian country and another to a Benelux country, with one exception per seat after the pattern broke.
  • Due to being a pattern instead of an agreement or rule, deviations sometimes occurred without comment. For example, at the end of 1947, Czechoslovakia's outgoing seat was contested by both Poland and Iran, but no member of the General Assembly made any complaint about Eastern Europe being potentially deprived of a seat.[4] Successfully elected deviations from the pattern are highlighted with a star below.

The pattern broke at the end of 1960, after fifteen ungrouped[a] nations from Africa joined the United Nations in the span of one month, increasing the number of nations without a group from four to nineteen.[5][2] The new members gave Africa, Asia, and Latin America together a commanding 66 out of 99 seats on the General Assembly (with Cyprus and Turkey caucusing with Asia, while the Republic of China, Israel, and South Africa did not caucus with Asia or Africa).[5][3] In the election for the 1961 term, the Republic of China (Taiwan) failed to obtain a two-thirds majority for re-election, while Ethiopia received a two-thirds majority. Belgium, the Republic of China, and India all deadlocked on the Netherlands' outgoing seat, which was left vacant for over four months, well into the 1961 term.[6] After negotiations, all three members withdrew in place of Italy, with an agreement that next year, Spain's outgoing seat would go to a candidate from either Africa or Asia.[2] This changed pattern would continue until 1965 when ECOSOC was expanded.

Year Latin American seats Eastern European seats Common­wealth seat Middle East / "Near and Far East"[b][c] Western European seats[d] Chinese seat
1946  Chile  Peru  Cuba  Colombia Czecho­slovakia Ukrainian SSR  Yugoslavia*  Canada*  Lebanon  India  Norway  Belgium  Greece  Republic of China
1947  Venezuela  Byelorussian SSR  New Zealand  Netherlands[e]  Turkey
1948  Brazil  Poland  Australia*  Denmark
1949  India  Belgium  Republic of China (Taiwan)
1950  Mexico Czecho­slovakia  Canada  Iran  Pakistan*
1951  Uruguay  Philippines  Sweden
1952  Argentina  Cuba  Egypt
1953  Venezuela  Yugoslavia  Australia  India  Turkey
1954  Ecuador Czecho­slovakia  Pakistan  Norway
1955  Dominican Republic  Netherlands
1956  Brazil  Canada  Indonesia  Greece
1957  Mexico  Poland  Finland
1958  Chile  Costa Rica  Sudan
1959  Venezuela  Bulgaria  New Zealand  Afghanistan  Spain
1960  Brazil  Japan  Denmark
1961  El Salvador  Uruguay  Jordan  Italy  Ethiopia*
1962  Colombia  Yugoslavia  Australia  India  Senegal*
1963  Argentina Czecho­slovakia  Austria
1964  Chile  Ecuador  Iraq  Luxembourg  Algeria*
1965  Peru  Romania  Canada  Pakistan  Gabon*
  1. ^ i.e. not part of the Arab League and therefore not caucusing with the Middle East subgroup[5]
  2. ^ Various inconsistent names were used before the proper introduction of Africa and Asia as Regional Groups, including also "Near and Middle East". Sources that were published after the introduction of the Regional Groups retroactively name this group "Asia-Africa" or similar, but this name was not used at the creation of ECOSOC.[5][2][3]
  3. ^ In October 1947, India proposed the creation of a group named "Australasia and the Far East", which would match the third seat if including South Asia, but the proposal was not taken up.[2]
  4. ^ The third seat has also been called a "Near and Middle East" seat, with Spain as the exception instead of Pakistan.[5]
  5. ^ Belgium was elected to receive a 3-year term starting in 1946. However, as Greece's 1-year term was ending, Turkey and the Netherlands deadlocked as successor candidates. The deadlock was resolved when Belgium agreed to give the remaining 2 years of its term to the Netherlands.

As candidates do not explicitly run for a specific seat, the arrangement of columns is slightly arbitrary. For example, at the end of 1952, the terms of Czechoslovakia, Iran, and Pakistan were ending, with India and Turkey elected in their place. The last seat deadlocked for thirteen rounds between Czechoslovakia, Pakistan, and Yugoslavia, with Yugoslavia finally obtaining a two-thirds majority. Had Pakistan won re-election instead, Turkey may have ended up placed in the Eastern European column for the 1953 term (similar to it doing so on the Security Council).[2][7][8]

Membership by regional group[edit]

African Group[edit]

Similar to on the Security Council, the African Union is in charge of distributing the African Group's seats based on the African Union's subregions,[9][10] and the African Group is the only UN regional group to have such an internal seat system.[5] Unlike on the Security Council, the distribution of ECOSOC seats is not strict, and may change if (for example) a subregion does not receive enough applicants in a given year.[11] For example, at the end of 2004, the term of Libya ended and no member from Northern Africa applied. A member from Central Africa effectively replaced Libya. One year later, the term of the Republic of the Congo ended and the seat was given to Mauritania, undoing the 'imbalance' but changing the arrangement of seats (years that are a multiple of 3 now no longer elect any Northern African members).

Legend:   Western   Northern   Central   Southern   Eastern

1966–1978[edit]

Prior to 1979, there were four subregions. An official African Union document from 1972 states how many seats per region are to be doled out,[12] although a specific pattern did not stabilize.

Year Western Northern Central Eastern
1966
Sierra Leone
 Dahomey  Algeria  Morocco  Cameroon  Gabon  Tanzania
1967  Libya
1968
Upper Volta
 Chad
Congo
(Brazzaville)
1969  Sudan
1970  Ghana  Tunisia  Kenya
1971  Niger  Zaire  Madagascar
1972  Burundi
1973  Mali  Algeria  Uganda
Year Western Northern Central Eastern
1974  Ivory Coast  Liberia  Mali  Guinea  Senegal  Algeria  Egypt  Congo  Zaire[a]  Burundi  Uganda  Ethiopia  Kenya  Zambia
1975  Gabon
1976  Nigeria  Togo  Tunisia
1977  Mauritania Upper Volta  Sudan  Rwanda  Somalia
1978  Cameroon  Central African Empire  Lesotho  Tanzania
  1. ^ Zaire lost re-election in November 1973, but was then elected to one of the newly created ECOSOC seats and drew a 1-year term.[13] It then won re-election in this new seat in December 1974.[14]

1979–1996[edit]

With five regions, the distribution of seats eventually stabilized into the following pattern: 4 seats to Western Africa, 3 seats to Eastern Africa, 2 seats to Northern Africa, 2 seats to Southern Africa, and 3 seats to Central Africa.

Year Western Eastern Northern Southern Central
1979  Ghana  Senegal  Mauritania  Algeria  Tanzania  Somalia  Lesotho[a]  Sudan  Morocco  Zambia Upper Volta  Cameroon  Central African Empire  Rwanda
1980  Nigeria  Ethiopia  Libya  Malawi  Zaire
1981  Kenya  Sudan  Burundi
1982  Benin  Liberia  Mali  Tunisia  Swaziland
1983  Sierra Leone  Djibouti  Algeria  Botswana  Congo
1984  Somalia  Uganda  Rwanda  Zaire
1985  Guinea  Nigeria  Senegal  Morocco  Zimbabwe
1986  Egypt  Mozambique  Gabon
1987  Sudan
1988  Ghana  Liberia  Libya  Lesotho
1989  Niger  Kenya  Tunisia  Zambia  Cameroon
1990  Burkina Faso  Algeria
1991  Togo  Somalia  Morocco  Botswana
1992  Benin  Ethiopia  Madagascar  Swaziland  Angola
1993  Nigeria  Libya  Gabon
1994  Ghana  Senegal  Tanzania  Egypt  Zimbabwe
1995  Côte d'Ivoire  Sudan  Uganda  South Africa  Congo
1996  Togo  Tunisia  Central African Republic
  1. ^ Changed regions while still on ECOSOC.

1997–present[edit]

With Namibia, South Africa, and Angola all joining the Southern Africa region within a short period of time, the Southern Africa region gained a third seat, first at the expense of Northern Africa and then eventually Central Africa. (Angola's region change took place in 1995, so the first affected applications to the African Union took place in March 1996, in time for the October 1996 ECOSOC elections for the 1997 term.)[9] The first years to match the modern seat distribution (4 seats to Western Africa, 2 seats to Northern Africa, 2 seats to Central Africa, 3 seats to Southern Africa, 3 seats to Eastern Africa) were 1998–1999. No changes to the seat distribution have occurred since 2006.

Year Western Northern Central Southern Eastern
1997  Cape Verde  Gambia  Togo  Côte d'Ivoire  Congo  Zambia  Tunisia  Central African Republic  Gabon  South Africa  Mozambique  Djibouti  Sudan  Uganda
1998  Sierra Leone  Algeria  Lesotho  Comoros  Mauritius
1999  Guinea-Bissau  Morocco  Democratic Republic of the Congo  Rwanda
2000  Benin  Burkina Faso  Cameroon  Angola  Sudan
2001  Nigeria  Egypt  South Africa  Ethiopia  Uganda
2002  Ghana  Libya  Burundi  Zimbabwe
2003  Senegal  Congo  Mozambique  Kenya
2004  Tunisia  Namibia  Mauritius  Tanzania
2005  Guinea  Chad  Democratic Republic of the Congo  South Africa
2006  Guinea-Bissau  Mauritania  Angola  Madagascar
2007  Cape Verde  Algeria  Malawi  Somalia  Sudan
2008  Niger  Cameroon  Congo  Mozambique
2009  Côte d'Ivoire  Morocco  Namibia  Mauritius
2010  Ghana  Egypt  Zambia  Comoros  Rwanda
2011  Senegal  Gabon  Malawi
2012  Burkina Faso  Nigeria  Libya  Lesotho  Ethiopia
2013  Benin  Tunisia  South Africa  Mauritius  Sudan
2014  Togo  Congo  Democratic Republic of the Congo  Botswana
2015  Ghana  Mauritania  Zimbabwe  Uganda
2016  Nigeria  Algeria  Rwanda  Somalia
2017  Benin  Cameroon  Chad  Eswatini
2018  Togo  Morocco  Malawi  Sudan
2019  Mali  Egypt  Angola  Ethiopia  Kenya
2020  Congo  Gabon  Botswana
2021  Liberia  Nigeria  Libya  Zimbabwe  Madagascar
2022  Cote d'Ivoire  Tunisia  Eswatini  Mauritius  Tanzania
2023  Cabo Verde  Cameroon  Equatorial Guinea
2024  Senegal  Mauritania  Zambia  Kenya

Asia-Pacific Group[edit]

1966  Philippines  Iran  India  Pakistan  Iraq
1967  Kuwait
1968  Japan
1969  Indonesia  Pakistan
1970  Ceylon
1971  Lebanon  Malaysia
1972  China  Japan
1973  Mongolia
1974  South Yemen  Thailand  Iran  Jordan  Mongolia  Fiji  Indonesia  India  Pakistan  Japan  China
1975  North Yemen
1976  Afghanistan  Bangladesh  Malaysia
1977  Iraq  Philippines  Syria
1978  India  United Arab Emirates
1979  Cyprus  Pakistan  Indonesia
1980  Jordan    Nepal  Thailand
1981  Bangladesh  Fiji
1982  Qatar  Japan
1983  Lebanon  Malaysia  Saudi Arabia
1984  Indonesia  Papua New Guinea  Sri Lanka
1985  Bangladesh  India
1986  Iraq  Pakistan  Philippines  Syria
1987  Iran  Oman
1988  Saudi Arabia
1989  Indonesia  Jordan  Thailand
1990  Bahrain  Pakistan
1991  Malaysia  Syria
1992  Bangladesh  India  Kuwait  Philippines
1993  Bhutan  South Korea  Sri Lanka
1994  Indonesia  Pakistan
1995  Malaysia  Thailand
1996  Bangladesh  Jordan  Lebanon
1997  South Korea  Sri Lanka
1998  Oman  Pakistan  Viet Nam
1999  Indonesia  Saudi Arabia  Syria
2000  Bahrain  Fiji
2001  Iran    Nepal  South Korea
2002  Bhutan  India  Qatar
2003  Malaysia  Saudi Arabia
2004  Bangladesh  Indonesia  United Arab Emirates
2005  Pakistan  Thailand
2006  Sri Lanka
2007  Iraq  Kazakhstan  Philippines
2008  Malaysia  South Korea
2009  India
2010  Bangladesh  Mongolia
2011  Qatar
2012  Indonesia
2013  Kuwait  Kyrgyzstan    Nepal  Turkmenistan
2014  Bangladesh  Kazakhstan
2015  Pakistan
2016  Afghanistan  Iraq  Lebanon  Viet Nam
2017  Tajikistan  United Arab Emirates
2018  Philippines
2019  Iran  Pakistan  Saudi Arabia  Turkmenistan  Cambodia  Yemen
2020  Bangladesh  Thailand
2021  Indonesia  Solomon Islands
2022  Afghanistan  India  Kazakhstan  Oman
2023  Laos  Qatar
2024    Nepal  Pakistan

Eastern European Group[edit]

1966  Czechoslovakia  Romania  Soviet Union
1967
1968  Bulgaria
1969  Yugoslavia
1970
1971  Hungary
1972  Poland
1973
1974  Romania  East Germany  Yugoslavia  Poland  Czechoslovakia  Soviet Union
1975  Bulgaria
1976
1977  Poland  Ukrainian SSR
1978  Hungary  Romania
1979  East Germany
1980  Bulgaria  Yugoslavia
1981  Byelorussian SSR  Poland
1982  Romania
1983  East Germany
1984  Yugoslavia
1985
1986  Byelorussian SSR
1987  Bulgaria
1988  Yugoslavia
1989  Czechoslovakia  Ukrainian SSR
1990  East Germany[a]
1991  Romania
1992  Belarus  Poland
1993  Ukraine  Russia[b]
1994  Bulgaria
1995
1996  Czech Republic
1997  Latvia
1998
1999  Bulgaria
2000  Croatia
2001  Georgia  Romania
2002  Hungary  Ukraine
2003  Azerbaijan
2004  Armenia  Poland
2005  Albania  Lithuania
2006  Czech Republic
2007  Belarus  Romania
2008  Moldova  Poland
2009  Estonia
2010  Slovakia  Ukraine
2011  Hungary  Latvia
2012  Belarus  Bulgaria
2013  Albania  Croatia
2014  Georgia  Serbia
2015  Estonia
2016  Czech Republic  Moldova
2017  Azerbaijan  Bosnia and Herzegovina
2018  Belarus  Romania
2019  Armenia  Ukraine
2020  Latvia  Montenegro
2021  Bulgaria
2022  Croatia  Czechia
2023  Slovakia  Slovenia Vacant[c]
2024  Poland
  1. ^ East Germany ceased to exist ten months into its term. In a special election in November 1990, Romania was elected in its place and was seated immediately (before the other members which were seated January 1991).[15]
  2. ^ The Soviet Union was (re-)elected to a 3-year term starting in 1990; Russia first appeared on ballots for the 1993 term.
  3. ^ North Macedonia and Russia have deadlocked over this seat for twenty-three rounds of balloting, with neither candidate able to obtain a two-thirds majority. This is the only vacancy to have lasted more than a year. (Six rounds took place on 10 June 2022,[16][17] five rounds took place on 16 June 2022,[18] five rounds took place on 11 July 2022,[19] three rounds took place on 2 September 2022,[20] three rounds took place on 20 December 2022,[21] and one round took place on 8 June 2023.[22])

Latin American and Caribbean Group[edit]

1966  Panama  Venezuela  Peru  Chile  Ecuador
1967  Guatemala  Mexico
1968  Argentina
1969  Jamaica  Uruguay
1970  Brazil  Peru
1971  Haiti
1972  Bolivia  Chile
1973  Trinidad and Tobago
1974  Mexico  Colombia  Jamaica  Brazil  Trinidad and Tobago  Guatemala  Venezuela  Bolivia  Chile  Argentina
1975  Ecuador  Peru
1976  Bolivia  Cuba
1977
1978  Dominican Republic  Trinidad and Tobago
1979  Barbados  Ecuador
1980  Bahamas  Chile
1981  Nicaragua  Peru
1982  Colombia  Saint Lucia
1983  Ecuador  Suriname
1984  Costa Rica  Guyana
1985  Haiti
1986  Jamaica  Panama  Peru
1987  Belize  Bolivia  Uruguay
1988  Cuba  Trinidad and Tobago
1989  Bahamas  Brazil  Nicaragua
1990  Ecuador  Jamaica  Mexico
1991  Argentina  Chile  Peru
1992  Colombia  Suriname
1993  Bahamas  Cuba
1994  Costa Rica  Paraguay  Venezuela
1995  Jamaica
1996  Argentina  Guyana  Nicaragua
1997  Cuba  El Salvador  Mexico
1998  Saint Lucia
1999  Bolivia  Honduras  Venezuela
2000  Costa Rica  Suriname
2001  Argentina  Peru
2002  Chile  El Salvador  Guatemala
2003  Ecuador  Jamaica  Nicaragua
2004  Belize  Colombia  Panama
2005  Brazil  Costa Rica  Mexico
2006  Guyana  Haiti  Paraguay
2007  Barbados  Bolivia  El Salvador
2008  Saint Lucia  Uruguay
2009  Guatemala  Peru  Saint Kitts and Nevis  Venezuela
2010  Argentina  Bahamas  Chile
2011  Ecuador  Mexico  Nicaragua
2012  Brazil  Cuba  Dominican Republic  El Salvador
2013  Bolivia  Colombia  Haiti
2014  Antigua and Barbuda  Guatemala  Panama
2015  Argentina  Honduras  Trinidad and Tobago
2016  Chile  Guyana  Peru
2017  Colombia  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines  Venezuela
2018  Ecuador  El Salvador  Mexico  Uruguay
2019  Brazil  Jamaica  Paraguay
2020  Nicaragua  Panama
2021  Argentina  Bolivia  Guatemala
2022  Belize  Chile  Peru
2023  Brazil  Costa Rica
2024  Haiti  Paraguay  Suriname  Uruguay

Western European and Others Group[edit]

Since 2000, the Western European and Others Group has engaged in a large number of special elections, with members voluntarily giving part of their 3-year term to another member. In many cases, the newly elected member then runs for re-election only to again give part of their 3-year term to another member, creating an 'offset' effect where members' terms do not align with the usual cycle. Below, all re-elections are shown as separate table cells. To prevent distorting or stretching the table, special elections resulting in 1-year terms are abbreviated to the country's ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code.

1966  Sweden  United Kingdom  Canada  United States  France  Luxembourg  Greece
1967  France  Belgium  Turkey
1968  Ireland  United States
1969  Norway  United Kingdom
1970  France  Italy  Greece
1971  New Zealand  United States
1972  Finland  United Kingdom
1973  France  Netherlands  Spain
1974  Australia  Belgium  Italy  United States  France  Spain  Turkey  Netherlands  West Germany  Finland  Sweden  Canada  United Kingdom
1975  Denmark  Norway  Canada  United Kingdom
1976  France  Greece  Portugal  Austria  West Germany
1977  New Zealand  Netherlands  Italy  United States
1978  Finland  Sweden  Malta  United Kingdom
1979  France  Spain  Turkey  Ireland  West Germany
1980  Australia  Belgium  Italy  United States
1981  Denmark  Norway  Canada  United Kingdom
1982  France  Greece  Portugal  Austria  West Germany
1983  New Zealand  Luxembourg  Netherlands  United States
1984  Finland  Sweden  Canada  United Kingdom
1985  France  Spain  Turkey  Iceland  West Germany
1986  Australia  Belgium  Italy  United States
1987  Denmark  Norway  Canada  United Kingdom
1988  France  Greece  Portugal  Ireland  West Germany
1989  New Zealand  Netherlands  Italy  United States
1990  Finland  Sweden  Canada  United Kingdom
1991  France  Spain  Turkey  Austria  Germany
1992  Australia  Belgium  Italy  United States
1993  Denmark  Norway  Canada  United Kingdom
1994  France  Greece  Portugal  Ireland  Germany
1995  Australia  Luxembourg  Netherlands  United States
1996  Finland  Sweden  Canada  United Kingdom
1997  France  Spain  Turkey  Iceland  Germany
1998  New Zealand  Belgium  Italy  United States
1999  Denmark  Norway  Canada  United Kingdom
2000  France  GRC  Portugal  Austria  Germany
2001  Andorra  Netherlands  Italy  United States  Malta
2002  ESP  Finland  Sweden  Australia  United Kingdom
2003  France  Greece  PRT  Ireland  Germany
2004  Canada  Belgium  Italy  United States  Turkey
2005  ESP  Denmark  Iceland  Australia  United Kingdom
2006  France  ESP  TUR  Austria  Germany
2007  Canada  Luxembourg  Netherlands  United States  Portugal  Greece  NZL
2008  LIE  Sweden  ISL  New Zealand  United Kingdom
2009  France  PRT  GRC  Germany  Liechtenstein  Norway
2010  Canada  Belgium  Italy  United States  TUR  Malta  FIN  AUS
2011  ESP   CHE  Finland  NOR  Australia  United Kingdom
2012  NLD  France  Spain  Turkey  DEU  Ireland   CHE[a]
2013  Canada  NLD  San Marino  United States  Austria  SWE  DNK  NZL
2014  Italy  PRT  GRC  DEU  Sweden  DNK  NZL  United Kingdom
2015  AUS  France  Portugal  Greece  AUT  Germany  Finland   Switzerland
2016  Australia  Italy  Belgium  United States  Ireland
2017  ESP  TUR  SWE  Norway  Andorra  United Kingdom
2018  CAN  France  ESP  Turkey  Ireland  Germany  Denmark
2019  Canada  Luxembourg  Netherlands  United States  Malta
2020  ESP  Finland  Norway  Australia   Switzerland
2021  France  United Kingdom  Portugal  Austria  DEU
2022  Canada  Belgium  Italy  United States  Israel  DNK  FIN[b]  NZL  GRC
2023  LIE  Denmark  Sweden  New Zealand  GRC
2024  France  United Kingdom  Spain  Liechtenstein  Germany  Türkiye
  1. ^ Switzerland was not re-elected; Norway gave the last two years of its term to Switzerland separately from the regular election.[23] (Switzerland then gave the rest of its term to Sweden a year later.)
  2. ^ In June 2021, Finland gave the last year of its term to Denmark.[24] In December 2021, Norway gave the last year of its term to Finland.[25]

Non-members[edit]

The list is a summary of all countries that have never been a member of United Nations Economic and Social Council.[26]

UN Member state Regional Group
 Brunei Asia-Pacific
 Dominica GRULAC
 East Timor Asia-Pacific
 Eritrea African
 Grenada GRULAC
 Kiribati None
 Maldives Asia-Pacific
 Marshall Islands Asia-Pacific
 Micronesia Asia-Pacific
 Monaco WEOG
 Myanmar Asia-Pacific
 Nauru Asia-Pacific
 North Korea Asia-Pacific
 North Macedonia E. European
 Palau Asia-Pacific
 Samoa Asia-Pacific
 São Tomé and Príncipe African
 Seychelles Asia-Pacific
 Singapore Asia-Pacific
 South Sudan African
 Tonga Asia-Pacific
 Tuvalu Asia-Pacific
 Uzbekistan Asia-Pacific
 Vanuatu Asia-Pacific

Notes[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ UN Economic and Social Council Members list (official site)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Gregg, Robert W. “The Economic and Social Council: Politics of Membership.” The Western Political Quarterly, vol. 16, no. 1, 1963, pp. 109–32. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/445962. Accessed 5 Mar. 2024.
  3. ^ a b c Padelford, Norman J. “Politics and the Future of ECOSOC.” International Organization, vol. 15, no. 4, 1961, pp. 564–80. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2705552. Accessed 24 Mar. 2024.
  4. ^ http://undocs.org/en/A/PV.94
  5. ^ a b c d e f Agam, Hasmy; Sam Daws; Terence O'Brien; Ramesh Takur (26 March 1999). What is Equitable Geographic Representation in the Twenty-First Century (PDF) (Report). United Nations University. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  6. ^ http://undocs.org/en/A/PV.987
  7. ^ http://undocs.org/en/A/PV.389
  8. ^ http://undocs.org/en/A/PV.390
  9. ^ a b Endeley, Isaac (2009). Bloc Politics at the United Nations: The African Group. University Press of America. ISBN 978-0761845584.
  10. ^ Endeley, Isaac (1998). Le Groupe africain à l'ONU dans l'après-guerre froide (PDF) (PhD thesis) (in French). Université de Montréal. Retrieved 2024-03-30.
  11. ^ "Note of Presentation of the Document on Candidatures" (PDF).
  12. ^ "Report of the Administrative Secretary-General on African Candidatures to the United Nation and its Specialized Agencies and to other International Organizations" (PDF).
  13. ^ "A/PV.2177".
  14. ^ "A/PV.2306".
  15. ^ "A/45/PV.41".
  16. ^ "A/76/PV.81".
  17. ^ "A/76/PV.82".
  18. ^ "A/76/PV.83".
  19. ^ "A/76/PV.93".
  20. ^ "A/76/PV.98".
  21. ^ "A/77/PV.56".
  22. ^ "A/77/PV.77".
  23. ^ "A/66/PV.39".
  24. ^ "A/75/PV.73".
  25. ^ "A/76/PV.52".
  26. ^ "Economic and Social Council Membership". Economic and Social Council.

External links[edit]