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3 Aug, 2025 00:43

Nobody reads UN reports – UN report

The sheer number of meetings and paperwork is pushing the system to breaking point, Antonio Guterres has said
Nobody reads UN reports – UN report

Most of the 1,000+ reports produced each year by the United Nations are barely read, according to the organization’s own study into how to make its work more “impactful and coherent.” The revelation comes as the UN marks its 80th anniversary amid a deepening identity crisis.

In March, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres launched the UN80 Taskforce – a reform initiative aimed at reviewing how the Secretariat implements thousands of mandates and at reducing administrative overload.

According to a report released Thursday, the Secretariat published 1,100 reports last year – a 20% increase since 1990 – and supported 27,000 meetings involving 240 entities.

“The sheer number of meetings and reports is pushing the system – and all of us – to the breaking point,” Guterres said during a briefing on Friday.

Many of these reports are not widely read. The top 5% of reports are downloaded more than 5,500 times, while one in five reports receives fewer than 1,000 downloads. And downloading doesn’t necessarily mean reading.

It remains unclear how many people downloaded the latest report about reports, but a UN tweet about the efficiency reform effort, despite featuring an engaging video clip, had gathered fewer than 5,000 views at the time of writing.

Founded in the aftermath of World War II by the Soviet Union, United States, UK, France, and China, the organization was created to prevent wars and promote cooperation; it initially had 51 members.

Now with 193 member states, the UN faces what many experts have described as a credibility crisis. Guterres has pushed back, insisting that “our values have never been more relevant.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin stated during a meeting with Guterres at a BRICS summit last year that the UN should reform to keep pace with global changes and provide greater representation for developing nations.

India has also been among the most fervent advocates for reforming global governance institutions, with Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar comparing the UN to “an old company” that is not keeping up with the market but still occupying space.”

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