Vision for the UN

A Vision for the United Nations

The world has changed. The United Nations must change with it.

In 2026, 56 armed conflicts are active simultaneously — a historic record. The debt of developing countries has surpassed USD 100 trillion. CO₂ emissions continue to rise. And the Security Council, designed for 51 nations in 1945, governs a world of 193 States.

The architecture of 1945 no longer holds. The task is not to dismantle it, but to rebuild it.

2 bn
people live in areas affected by conflict
I.

No Peace Without Development

Peace cannot be decreed by a ceasefire alone. It is built in schools, hospitals and marketplaces. As long as the international community treats security and development as two separate files, crises will keep recurring.

  • Integrate socio-economic indicators into United Nations early-warning systems
  • Grant regional organisations a genuine operational role in crisis management
  • Combat terrorism through a comprehensive approach: security response, addressing root causes and reintegration
0
permanent African seats on the Security Council, in 80 years
II.

A New World, A New Governance

1.4 billion Africans. Zero permanent seats. The Security Council is the last vestige of a bygone world order. The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank still reflect the balance of power of 1945, not that of 2026.

  • Reform the Security Council to include permanent African seats
  • Rebuild the international financial architecture: IMF, World Bank, climate finance, sovereign debt
  • Open up multilateralism to civil society, the private sector and youth
37,000
staff at the Secretariat — more than the central administration of some States
III.

A United Nations That Works

The United Nations is weighed down by its own size. Overlapping mandates, redundant structures, procedures from another century. Every dollar absorbed by bureaucracy is a dollar that never reaches the field.

  • Streamline structures: eliminate duplication, simplify mandates
  • Modernise through digital means: transparency, digitisation of procedures, a results-driven culture
  • Ensure equity: geographic and gender representation at every level

Read the official vision statement (PDF, un.org)

PDF

Why Macky Sall?

12 years
Leading a nation
1 year
Chair of the African Union
2 elections
Won. Power peacefully transferred.
100+
International summits