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General
Conference adopts Convention on the protection and promotion of the
diversity of cultural expressions
20-10-2005 7:00 pm The General Conference of UNESCO, meeting in Paris
from October 3 to October 21, today approved (148 votes for, two
against, four abstentions) the Convention on the protection and
promotion of the diversity of cultural expressions, an international
normative instrument that will enter into force three months after its
ratification by 30 States. The result of a long process of maturation
and two years of intense negotiations, punctuated by numerous meetings
of independent and then governmental experts, this text which takes the
form of an international normative instrument, reinforces the idea
already included in the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural
Diversity, unanimously adopted in 2001, that cultural diversity must be
considered as a “common heritage of humanity”, and its “defence as an
ethical imperative, inseparable from respect for human dignity.” In
2003, Member States requested the Organization to pursue its normative
action to defend human creativity, a vital component of the Declaration,
as explained in Articles eight and eleven.*
The Convention** seeks to reaffirm the links between culture,
development and dialogue and to create an innovative platform for
international cultural cooperation; to this end, it reaffirms the
sovereign right of States to elaborate cultural policies with a view “to
protect and promote the diversity of cultural expressions” and “to
create the conditions for cultures to clourish and to freely interact in
a mutually beneficial manner” (Article 1).
At the same time, a series of Guiding Principles (Article 2) guarantees
that all measures aimed at protecting and promoting the diversity of
cultural expressions does not hinder respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms “such as freedom of expression, information and
communication, as well as the ability of individuals to choose (them)…”.
As well, the “Principle of openness and balance” ensures that when
States adopt measures in favour of the diversity of cultural expressions
“they should seek to promote, in an appropriate manner, openness to
other cultures of the world”.
The rights and obligations of Parties (Articles 5 to 11) include a
series of policies and measures aimed at protecting and promoting the
diversity of cultural expressions, approaching creativity and all it
implies in the context of globalization, where diverse expressions are
circulated and made accessible to all via cultural goods and services.
Thus, Parties, recognizing the fundamental role of civil society, will
seek to create an environment that encourages individuals and social
groups “to create, produce, disseminate, distribute and have access to
their own cultural expressions, paying due attention to the special
circumstances and needs of women as well as various social groups,
including persons belonging to minorities and indigenous peoples”, and
“to recognize the important contribution of artists, others involved in
the creative process, cultural communities, and organizations that
support their work, and their central role in nurturing the diversity of
cultural expressions.”
It should be stressed that international promotion and cooperation,
especially in the case of developing countries, is at the heart of the
Convention (Articles 12 to 19). To this effect, the creation of an
International Fund for Cultural Diversity, has been provided for
(Article 18). Resources for this Fund will come from voluntary
contributions from Parties, funds allocated by UNESCO’s General
Conference, diverse contributions, gifts or bequests, interest due on
resources of the Fund, funds raised through collections and receipts
from events organized for the benefit of the Fund, or any other
resources authorized by the Fund’s regulations.
The concern to ensure coherence between the Convention and other
existing international instruments guided States to include a clause
(Article 20) aimed at ensuring a relationship of “mutual supportiveness,
complementarity and non-subordination” between these instruments. At the
same time, “nothing in the present Convention shall be interpreted as
modifying rights and obligations of the Parties under any other treaties
to which they are parties.”
The Convention establishes a series of follow-up mechanisms aimed at
ensuring efficient implementation of the new instrument. Among these, a
non binding mechanism for the settlement of disputes allows, within a
strictly cultural perspective, possible divergences of views on the
interpretation or application of certain rules or principles relatives
to the Convention (Article 25) to be dealt with. This mechanism
encourages, first and foremost, negotiation, then recourse to good
offices or mediation. If no settlement is achieved, a Party may have
recourse to conciliation. The Convention does not include any mechanism
for sanctions.
Finally, it should be recalled that UNESCO’s Constitution provides a
mandate to both respect the “fruitful diversity of (…) cultures” and to
“promote the free flow of ideas by word and image”, principles that are
reaffirmed in the Preamble to the Convention. The Organization, which
celebrates its 60th anniversary next month, has spared no effort to
fulfill this double mission. With this Convention, it completes its
normative action aimed at defending cultural diversity in all of its
manifestations, and most especially the two pillars of culture:
heritage*** and contemporary creativity. |