5.1 to invite shareholders to reconsider the Statutes, in order to allow the Bank to make its lending policies vis-à-vis governments dependent on respect for human rights and pluralist democracy;
5.2 to further increase the share of lending, and especially that of the World Bank's International Development Agency, which is directly aimed at poverty alleviation, environmental protection, voluntary family planning, human development, emancipation of women, indigenous ethnic groups and marginalised communities, and in general toward supporting the principles for sustainable development contained in "Agenda 21" and other conclusions of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development;
5.3 to concentrate its resources more intensively on low-income countries and economies in transition that lack ready access to international capital markets, provided that credit risks are adequately taken into account to safeguard the shareholders' funds;
5.4 to develop criteria for judging the environmental and social sustainability of loans and projects;
5.5 to pay adequate attention also to non-economic determinants of development, and to broaden the concept of "good governance", in particular as regards the institutional and legal framework for development and measures to combat corruption;
5.6 to improve the Bank's analytical capacity by encouraging the contributions of the social sciences, and to accentuate the multilateral character of the institution through the recruitment of a greater number of nationals from Europe and the developing countries;
5.7 to pursue decentralisation of the Bank's organisational structure, and to increase its local presence so as to enable it to deepen its understanding of socio-cultural factors and the political economy of recipient countries;
5.8 to enhance the participation of local populations both at the design and implementation stages of projects, to give greater consideration to the consequences for the poor of structural adjustment programmes, and to encourage greater efficiency and accountability on the part of state officials and public institutions in recipient countries.