SELECTION AND CONDITIONS OF SERVICE OF EXECUTIVE HEADS IN THE UNITED NATIONS SYSTEM ORGANIZATIONS : NOTE / BY THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
(Recommendation 11)
¾ The legislative bodies of the United Nations system organizations should
establish rigorous policies regarding the acceptance of gifts, honours,
decorations, etc., by their executive heads, where no such policies currently
exist. (...) Acceptance of gifts, honours and decorations.............. 123-132 26
2. Discontinuation of the mandate.................................... 133-136 28
ANNEXES
1. (...) Similarly, differences exist concerning the
conditions of service, such as salary scales and granted allowances; the application of staff
regulations and rules to executive heads; the requirement for executive heads to undergo a
medical examination prior to selection or appointment; provisions for conflicts of interest or
wrongdoing/misconduct by the executive head; the signing of a code of conduct abiding by a
code of ethics and the submission of financial disclosure statements; procedures for the
receipt of gifts, honours and decorations; and performance appraisals of the executive head.
16.

Language:English
Score: 947544.3
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...nsf/get?open&DS=A/65/71&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
Report to AO the following:
name & title of recipient
the circumstance that led to gift
the name and role of the donor
the nature of the honour,
decoration, favour or gift
date of receipt
3. Entrust to AO
yes
Is the gift of essentially nominal value?
(...) no
yes
Arrange for its deposit to
the Organization’s bank
account, log out of
Registry
Property Management Official
Decline & Return to donor
and log out of Registry
Politely decline
Politely decline
Administering Official
3.1
3.1
3.2
4.1
4.2 (a)
4.2 (b)
4.2 (c)
4.2 (d)
4.3
3.3 & 5.1
5.1
3.1
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.2
SM may be authorized to
retain it, log out of
Registry
no
Does the
honour,
decoration,
favour or gift
include
remuneration or
monies?
yes
Flow Chart for GIFTS (The annotations refer to relevant paragraphs of ST/AI/2010/1)
PMO= property management official (
AO= administering official (
ST/AI/2010/1 Reporting, retaining and disposing of honours, decorations,
favours, gifts or remuneration from governmental and non-governmental
sources
SM= All staff members
United Nations Ethics Office 917-367-9858 ethicsoffice@un.org www.un.org/en/ethics
Does it have a legitimate business
purpose?
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/en/ethics/a...t-on-Gifts-annotated-legal.pdf
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/en/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/es/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/ar/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/sw/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/hi/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/pt/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un
French Delegates’ Lounge
The French Delegates’ Lounge, originally a private meeting room for League of Nations Council members, was designed by the famous French decorator Jules Leleu, hence the designation of the room as...
Czech and Slovak Lounge
In the original League of Nations building, Room IV was the Permanent Delegates’ Lounge. The interior decoration – designed by M.K. Caivas – was donated by Czechoslovakia in 1937.
(...) Room III
This 200-seat conference room and Room VI are the only two in the Palais where the decoration was not entrusted to a specific designer/decorator.
Language:English
Score: 947287.8
-
https://www.un.org/fr/collection/29/7829
Data Source: un