name | United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization |
---|---|
type | Specialized Agency |
acronyms | UNESCO |
headquarters | Paris, France |
head | Irina Bokova |
status | Active |
established | 16 November 1945 |
website | www.UNESCO.org |
commons | UNESCO |
footnotes | }} |
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO; ) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. Its stated purpose is to contribute to peace and security by promoting international collaboration through education, science, and culture in order to further universal respect for justice, the rule of law, and the human rights along with fundamental freedoms proclaimed in the UN Charter. It is the heir of the League of Nations' International Commission on Intellectual Cooperation.
UNESCO has 193 Member States and seven Associate Members. Most of the field offices are "cluster" offices covering three or more countries; there are also national and regional offices. UNESCO pursues its objectives through five major programs: education, natural sciences, social and human sciences, culture, and communication and information. Projects sponsored by UNESCO include literacy, technical, and teacher-training programmes; international science programmes; the promotion of independent media and freedom of the press; regional and cultural history projects; the promotion of cultural diversity; international cooperation agreements to secure the world cultural and natural heritage (World Heritage Sites) and to preserve human rights, and attempts to bridge the worldwide digital divide. It is also a member of the United Nations Development Group.
Other priorities of the Organization include attaining quality education for all and lifelong learning, addressing emerging social and ethical challenges, fostering cultural diversity, a culture ofpeace and building inclusive knowledge societies through information and communication.
The broad goals and concrete objectives of the international community – as set out in the internationally agreed development goals, including the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – underpin all UNESCO’s strategies and activities.
UNESCO and its mandate for international intellectual co-operation can be traced back to the League of Nations resolution on 21 September 1921, to elect a Commission to study the question. The International Committee on Intellectual Co-operation (CICI) was officially created on 4 January 1922, as a consultative organ composed of individuals elected based on their personal qualifications. The International Institute for Intellectual Cooperation (IICI) was then created in Paris on 9 August 1925, to act as the executing agency for the CICI. On 18 December 1925, the International Bureau of Education (IBE) began work as a non-governmental organization in the service of international educational development. However, the work of these predecessor organizations was largely interrupted by the onset of the Second World War.
After the signing of the Atlantic Charter and the Declaration of the United Nations, the Conference of Allied Ministers of Education (CAME) began meetings in London which continued between 16 November 1942 to 5 December 1945. On 30 October 1943, the necessity for an international organization was expressed in the Moscow Declaration, agreed upon by China, the United Kingdom, the United States of America and the USSR. This was followed by the Dumbarton Oaks Conference proposals of 9 October 1944. Upon the proposal of CAME and in accordance with the recommendations of the United Nations Conference on International Organization (UNCIO), held in San Francisco in April–June 1945, a United Nations Conference for the establishment of an educational and cultural organization (ECO/CONF) was convened in London 1–16 November 1945. 44 governments were represented. At the ECO/CONF, the Constitution of UNESCO was introduced and signed by 37 countries, and a Preparatory Commission was established. The Preparatory Commission operated between 16 November 1945, and 4 November 1946 – the date when UNESCO’s Constitution came into force with the deposit of the twentieth ratification by a member state.
The first General Conference took place from 19 November to 10 December 1946, and elected Dr. Julian Huxley to the post of Director-General. The Constitution was amended in November 1954 when the General Conference resolved that members of the Executive Board would be representatives of the governments of the States of which they are nationals and would not, as before, act in their personal capacity. This change in governance distinguished UNESCO from its predecessor, the CICI, in terms of how member states would work together in the Organization’s fields of competence. As member states worked together over time to realize UNESCO’s mandate, political and historical factors have shaped the Organization’s operations in particular during the Cold War, the decolonization process, and the dissolution of the USSR.
Among the major achievements of the Organization is its work against racism, for example through influential statements on race starting with a declaration of anthropologists (among them was Claude Lévi-Strauss) and other scientists in 1950 and concluding with the 1978 Declaration on Race and Racial Prejudice. In 1956, the Republic of South Africa withdrew from UNESCO claiming that some of the Organization’s publications amounted to “interference” in the country’s “racial problems.” South Africa rejoined the Organization in 1994 under the leadership of Nelson Mandela.
UNESCO’s early work in the field of education included the pilot project on fundamental education in the Marbial Valley, Haiti, started in 1947. This project was followed by expert missions to other countries, including, for example, a mission to Afghanistan in 1949. In 1948, UNESCO recommended that Member States should make free primary education compulsory and universal. In 1990 the World Conference on Education for All, in Jomtien, Thailand, launched a global movement to provide basic education for all children, youths and adults. Ten years later, the 2000 World Education Forum held in Dakar, Senegal, led member governments to commit to achieving basic education for all by 2015.
UNESCO’s early activities in the field of culture included, for example, the Nubia Campaign, launched in 1960. The purpose of the campaign was to move the Great Temple of Abu Simbel to keep it from being swamped by the Nile after construction of the Aswan Dam. During the 20-year campaign, 22 monuments and architectural complexes were relocated. This was the first and largest in a series of campaigns including Mohenjo-daro (Pakistan), Fes (Morocco), Kathmandu (Nepal), Borobudur (Indonesia) and the Acropolis (Greece). The Organization’s work on heritage led to the adoption, in 1972, of the Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage. The World Heritage Committee was established in 1976 and the first sites inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1978. Since then important legal instruments on cultural heritage and diversity have been adopted by UNESCO member states in 2003 (Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage) and 2005 (Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions).
At an intergovernmental meeting of UNESCO in Paris in December 1951 was held which led to the creation of the European Council for Nuclear Research (CERN) in 1954. The World Wide Web was born at CERN in 1989.
Arid Zone programming, 1948–1966, is another example of an early major UNESCO project in the field of natural sciences. In 1968, UNESCO organized the first intergovernmental conference aimed at reconciling the environment and development, a problem which continues to be addressed in the field of sustainable development. The main outcome of the 1968 conference was the creation of UNESCO’s Man and the Biosphere Programme.
In the field of communication, the free flow of information has been a priority for UNESCO from its beginnings. In the years immediately following World War II, efforts were concentrated on reconstruction and on the identification of needs for means of mass communication around the world. UNESCO started organizing training and education for journalists in the 1950s. In response to calls for a "New World Information and Communication Order" in the late 1970s, UNESCO established the International Commission for the Study of Communication Problems, which produced the 1980 MacBride report (named after the Chair of the Commission, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Seán MacBride). Following the MacBride report, UNESCO introduced the Information Society for All programme and Toward Knowledge Societies programme in the lead up to the World Summit on the Information Society in 2003 (Geneva) and 2005 (Tunis).
UNESCO implements its activities through the five programme areas of Education, Natural Sciences, Social and Human Sciences, Culture, and Communication and Information. Education: UNESCO is providing international leadership in creating learning societies with educational opportunities for all; it supports research in Comparative education; and provides expertise and fosters partnerships to strengthen national educational leadership and the capacity of countries to offer quality education for all. This includes the
The highest form of affiliation to UNESCO is "formal associate", and the 22 NGOs with ''formal associate'' (ASC) relations occupying offices at UNESCO are: # International Baccalaureate (IB) # Coordinating Committee for International Voluntary Service (CCIVS) # Education International (EI) # International Association of Universities (IAU) # International Council for Film, Television and Audiovisual Communication (IFTC) # International Council for Philosophy and Humanistic Studies (ICPHS) which publishes Diogenes # International Council for Science (ICSU) # International Council of Museums (ICOM) # International Council of Sport Science and Physical Education (ICSSPE) # International Council on Archives (ICA) # International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) # International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) # International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) # International Federation of Poetry Associations (IFPA) # International Music Council (IMC) # International Scientific Council for Island Development (INSULA) # International Social Science Council (ISSC) # International Theatre Institute (ITI) # International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) # International Union of Technical Associations and Organizations # Union of International Associations (UIA) # World Association of Newspapers (WAN) # World Federation of Engineering Organizations (WFEO) # World Federation of UNESCO Clubs, Centres and Associations (WFUCA)
As of October 2009, UNESCO counts 193 Member States, 7 Associate Members and 2 observers. Some members are not independent states and some members have additional National Organizing Committees from some of their dependent territories.
While UNESCO has never separately issued stamps valid for postage, from 1951 to 1966 it issued a series of 41 "gift stamps" to raise money for its activities. Designed by artists in various countries, they were sold at a desk by the UNPA counter located in the United Nations Headquarters building in New York City. No longer available at the UN, most of these Cinderella stamps can be purchased at low cost from speciality stamp dealers.
Through its field offices, UNESCO develops strategies, programs and activities in consultation with national authorities and other partners. UNESCO's field offices are categorized into four primary office types based upon their function and geographic coverage: cluster offices, national offices, regional bureaux and liaison offices.
A cluster office covers a group of countries and is the central component in the field, around which are organized national offices and regional bureaux. The 27 cluster offices, covering 148 Member States, represent the main supporting structure of UNESCO Secretariat’s network in the field.
In addition to cluster offices which are the main supporting structure of the Secretariat’s network in the field, there are 21 national offices, each serving a single Member State. These exceptions to the cluster system involve either the so-called E-9 countries (nine highly-populated countries) which are either in post-conflict situations or are in transition.
Regional bureaux and regional advisers specializing in the fields of education, science, the social sciences, culture and communication provide specialized support to cluster and national offices in a given region.
The decentralized network includes two liaison offices to the United Nations in New York and Geneva and a liaison office to the European Union in Brussels.
The organization has been accused of historical revisionism due to its recent decision to refer to age-old Talmudic scholar, Maimonides (who lived in Palestine for part of his life) as "Moussa ben Maimoun" and falsely claim that Maimonides was of Muslim heritage.
In October 2010, UNESCO’s Executive Board voted to recognize Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem in the West Bank as the 'Bilal Bin Rabah Mosque, and demanded that Israel remove the site from its own list of National Heritage Sites, even though the site has had Jewish significance for thousands of years, on the grounds that this unilateral action was a violation of international law. UNESCO also requested that Muslim officials be allowed to examine the Mughrabi Gate near the Western Wall in Jerusalem. Israel responded by partially suspending ties with UNESCO. Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon declared that it was another example of campaign of delegitimization that the Palestinian Authority was waging, and that it hurt UNESCO for seeming to be a rubber stamp. Zevulun Orlev, chairman of the Knesset Education and Culture Committee, referred to the resolutions as an attempt to undermine the mission of UNESCO as a scientific and cultural organization that promotes cooperation throughout the world.
On June 28, 2011, UNESCO's World Heritage Committee condemned Israel's decision to demolish and rebuild the Mughrabi Gate Bridge in Jerusalem for safety reasons. The decision came after Jordan asked UNESCO to censure Israel over the planned renovation and demand that Israel halt archaological excavations in the Old City, violating an agreement between Israel and Jordan which stipulated that the existing bridge must be razed for safety reasons, although Jordan claimed that it had only agreed following U.S. pressure. Israel's ambassador to UNESCO attempted to address the committee, but was denied the floor after Egypt objected. Israeli government sources said that Israel was "shocked" and "furious" over Jordan's breach of the agreement. Nimrod Barkan, Israel's ambassador to UNESCO, said that "the Jordanians lied to us and to the Americans in an unbelievable way... The most astonishing thing is they don't even mention the agreement between Israel and Jordan".
Category:UNESCO Category:1945 establishments Category:Acronyms Category:Digital divide Category:Heritage organizations Category:Information society Category:Information technology and development Category:International cultural organizations Category:International educational organizations Category:International scientific organizations Category:Organizations based in Paris Category:United Nations Development Group Category:United Nations specialized agencies
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Name | Samuel Pisar |
---|---|
Birth date | March 18, 1929 |
Birth place | Białystok, Poland |
Occupation | Lawyer |
Nationality | Poland |
Citizenship | United States }} |
After the liberation, Pisar spent a year and a half in the American occupation zone of Germany, engaging in black marketeering with fellow survivors. He was rescued by an aunt living in Paris. His uncle sent him to Melbourne, Australia where he resumed his studies. He attained a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Melbourne in 1953. After recovering from a bout of tuberculosis, he traveled to the United States and earned a doctorate in law from Harvard University. He also holds a doctorate from the Sorbonne.
Pisar has been married twice. He has two daughters from his first wife, and one from his second wife, Judith, with whom he lives in Paris.
He was the founder of Yad Vashem France, manager of the Foundation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah and trustee of the Brookings Institution Washington.
As a lawyer, Pisar's clients included many Fortune 500 companies and many known business leaders of the 20th century. He is considered one of the most influential trade lawyers of our time. His legal books have been translated into many languages.
Category:1929 births Category:Living people Category:American Jews Category:Harvard Law School alumni Category:People from Białystok Category:Honorary Officers of the Order of Australia
fr:Samuel Pisar no:Samuel Pisar pl:Samuel PisarThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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