Press
Release No.2002-51
UNESCO PROMOTES CULTURAL DIVERSITY AND EDUCATION
AT WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Paris, August 22 -
New trade and environmental agreements alone won't alleviate poverty
and unbridled consumption, which are wreaking ecological havoc
and deepening economic inequalities the world over. Any serious
efforts to balance human and ecological needs must include education
and cultural diversity, both of which will be at the heart of
UNESCO's contribution to the World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg (South Africa), from August 26 to September 4.
"At Johannesburg,
we must take a major leap forward by recognizing that culturally
diverse visions of human well-being are essential to truly understand
and protect the environment while meeting the needs of this generation
and those of the future," says Koïchiro Matsuura, Director-General
of UNESCO. "Indigenous and traditional communities around
the world have developed extraordinarily sophisticated understandings
of biodiversity, the fruit of a rich base of knowledge and a set
of values for respecting it. We can no longer afford to neglect
the knowledge that links cultural and biological diversity."
This focus on knowledge
highlights a key UNESCO priority, education. Scientists and decision-makers
alone cannot bring about the changes required to curb emissions
of greenhouse gases, for example, or the destruction of coral
reefs. "Education has a critical role to play in addressing
the thinking, values and practices in social, economic and political
affairs that have put the world on an unsustainable path,"
says the Director-General. However, traditional classroom approaches
are not enough. UNESCO is therefore focusing on original ways
of learning to encourage the necessary lifestyle changes and mobilize
the support required for a new ecological vision grounded in a
sense of global solidarity.
UNESCO will organize
a major event on "Educating for a Sustainable Future"
during the Summit with the South African Ministry of Education
on September 2 and 3 at Summer Place, close to the Summit venue.
The Director-General and Prof. Kader Asmal, the host country's
Minister of Education, will lead the discussions along with several
Heads of State and Government. A wide range of experts - from
non-governmental organizations, academia and business - will also
take part in the presentations on diverse subjects such as AIDS
prevention, literacy, the needs of rural African women, teacher-training
and university curricula.
At the summit, cultural
diversity will also be at the centre of another major event (September
3 at the Intercontinental Hotel), organized by UNESCO, the United
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the French government.
Several Heads of State and Government will take part, including
President Jacques Chirac of France, President Joaquim Chissano
of Mozambique and the Vice President of Iran, Massoumeh Ebtekarm. Nobel Prize laureates Rigoberta Menchu of Guatemala and
Wole Soyinka of Nigeria will also participate.
Discussions and debates
over biodiversity are generally marked by a narrow technical perspective,
which often overlooks the cultural, political and ecological contexts.
"It is not enough to simply classify and quantify the number
of plant and animal species," says the Mr Matsuura. "We
must grasp the links between how different cultures shape the
environment and vice versa."
The roundtable will
examine the links between cultural and biological diversity and
the common threats facing them. For example, seven out of nine
top countries for linguistic diversity are also among the top
17 countries for biological diversity, according to the UNESCO
publication, Sharing a World of Difference, produced with the
non-governmental organizations World Wide Fund for Nature and
Terralingua. The publication, to be released in September, also
found that 13 out of the 17 biological megadiversity countries
- Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, India, Australia, Mexico, Brazil,
Democratic Republic of Congo, the Philippines, the United States,
Malaysia, China, Peru and Colombia - also figure among the top
25 countries for endemic languages spoken exclusively within their
respective borders, generally spoken by indigenous peoples and
minorities with a wealth of information concerning the surrounding
ecosystem. However, these communities are increasingly impoverished
by the very same market forces that threaten biodiversity.
The controversy surrounding
indigenous knowledge and intellectual property rights will be
the subject of another major UNESCO event, scheduled for August
29 at the Ubuntu Village. A wide range of scientific and legal
experts from Ethiopia to Thailand will lead the discussions. The
event will be organized jointly with the International Council
for Science (ICSU), Tebtebba Foundation (an indigenous institute
for international research and policy based in the Philippines)
and in cooperation with the International Chamber of Commerce.
UNESCO will also launch
the largest and most comprehensive encyclopaedia ever published
on sustainable development (September 3, Ubuntu Village). The
web-based Encyclopaedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) is the
result of an unprecedented global effort and will be available
for free to the least developed countries. Never before has an
encyclopaedia gone beyond the ecological sciences to cover all
aspects of sustainable development. EOLSS is the only series to
examine the origins and threats facing all of the systems that
support life on earth comprehensively - from the climate to the
world's oceans, forests, water cycle and atmosphere. EOLSS also
covers a diverse range of social issues - from international human
rights law and poverty eradication to the psychology of religion.
A series of UNESCO
roundtables (see attached list for more details) will also cover
such critical issues as global water supplies, the health of the
oceans and the use of satellites to monitor the environment. A
major exhibition on the Organization's programmes, priorities
and activities will be on display at the Ubuntu Village in addition
to more specialized exhibits on the oceans, solar energy, and
the International Year of Freshwater, which UNESCO will lead in
2003.
The Summit will also
serve as a platform for the launch of new partnership initiatives,
by and between governments, non-governmental organizations and
businesses, to tackle specific problems - from the preservation
of biodiversity to the alleviation of poverty. UNESCO will present
about 15 partnership initiatives in diverse fields. For example,
the Organization will join forces with the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) in a new project designed to improve education
for rural communities around the world. Another partnership with
three of the largest university associations in the world will
work to make sustainable development a major issue in academic
curricula. The private sector will also be involved. The American
advertising giant J. Walter Thompson, for example, will work with
UNESCO to launch a major public awareness campaign on diverse
aspects of sustainable development.
****
Contact:
Amy Otchet, Bureau of Public Information
in Johannesburg, cell phone: (+27) (0)828 580
email: a.otchet@unesco.org
Isabelle Le Fournis,
Bureau of Public Information
cell phone: (+33) (0) 614 6953 72
email: i.le-fournis@unesco.org
UNESCO EVENTS AND
EXHIBITIONS AT THE
WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Exhibitions
18 August - 8 September
2002
UNESCO Exhibition
Ubuntu Village Exhibition Pavilion
18 August - 5 September
2002
Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems
Ubuntu Village Exhibition Pavilion
24 August - 5 September
2002
Renewable Energies
South African Pavilion
24 August - 6 September
Virtual Exhibition on Man and the Biosphere Programme (MAB) -
World Network of Biosphere Reserves
Sandton Cube, Internet
28 August - 3 September
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC)
Water Dome (Oceans Pavilion)
28 August - 5 September
2002
UN World Water Assessment Programme & UN International Year
of Freshwater (2003)
Water Dome (Oceans Pavilion)
Events
29 August 2002,
9:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Linking Traditional and Scientific Knowledge for Sustainable Development
Ubuntu Village, Wanderers Club, Water Berry Room
29 August 2002,
2:00 - 3:00 p.m.
Book launch : Oceans 2020: Science, Trends, and Challenges of
Sustainability
Water Dome, Pavilion IV
30 August 2002,
2:30 - 6:00 p.m.
The Role of Global Observing Systems for Sustainable Development
Ubuntu Village, Wanderers Club, Water Berry Room
2 September 2002
(afternoon) and 3 September 2002 (all day), Summer Place
Educating for a Sustainable Future: Action, Commitments and Partnerships
- Launch of partnership
"International Marketing and Communications Initiative for
Sustainable Development" (2 September, 5:15 p.m.)
- Launch of the South
African Version of the UNESCO Multimedia Teacher Education Programme
"Teaching & Learning for a Sustainable Future" (2
September, 6:30 p.m.)
- Launch of Education
For All (EFA) Flagship Programme for Rural People (3 September,
9:00 a.m.)
- Launch of Global
Higher Education for Sustainability Partnership (3 September,
2:00 p.m.)
- Launch of the UNESCO/Education
International (EI) Dissemination Toolkit for the UNESCO Programme
"Teaching & Learning for a Sustainable Future" (3
September, 3:30-3:45 p.m.)
2 September 2002,
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Launch of "Oceans & Coasts" partnerships
Water Dome
3 September 2002,
11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Launch of the Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS)
Ubuntu Village - Dwarf Natal Plum Room
3 September 2002,
1:00 - 3:00 p.m.
Cultural Diversity, Biological Diversity & Sustainable Development
Sandton Convention Centre - Intercontinental Hotel, Mareola South
Room
3 September 2002,
2:00 - 4:30 p.m.
World Water Assessment Programme : "Measuring Global Progress"
Water Dome, Room III & IV
Field Visit
5-6 September 2002
Biosphere Reserves: Combining Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable
Development at the Regional Level
Waterburg Biosphere Reserve, Limpopo Province