Press
Release No.2002-88
WORLD FORUM OF
UNESCO CHAIRS:
TRANSFERING KNOWLEDGE TO DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Paris, November 12 - The aim of
the UNITWIN/UNESCO Chairs programme launched in 1992 is to boost
cooperation and solidarity between universities around the world
in order to encourage a major transfer of knowledge to developing
countries.
To mark its 10th anniversary and
take a look at what has been achieved so far, UNTWIN is holding
a World Forum of UNESCO Chairs from November 13 to 15 at UNESCO
Headquarters in Paris. Some 1,000 people will take part, including
heads of universities from all over the world, those running UNESCO
Chairs, coordinators of UNITWIN networks, members of UNESCO national
commissions and partners from civil society, the private sector
and the media. At the Forum, students will recount their own experiences
of inter-university networks and UNESCO Chairs.
The UNITWIN/UNESCO Chairs programme
was conceived as a way to boost training and research in higher
education by building networks of universities and other institutions
to encourage inter-university cooperation between researchers
and professors and thus the transfer of knowledge to developing
countries and those in transition.
Since it was set up, the programme
has aroused great interest among member-states. The number of
Chairs and inter-university networks rose from 17 in 1992 to more
than 500 today in 113 countries. They were all established with
formal agreements linking the institution to UNESCO.
Thousands of teachers and students
all over the world are involved, but also major partners, such
as NGOs and private firms, which provide substantial funding.
UNITWIN projects received some $30 million in support over the
past five years.
The programme works by initially
encouraging universities, higher education and research institutions,
both private and public, to twin with each other and sign scientific
cooperation agreements. The universities are then asked to extend
these agreements to other universities in order to set up networks.
This helps some institutions, especially in developing countries,
to break out of their isolation and improve their access to and
use of the most up-to-date information and communications technology.
It also helps forge academic partnerships that direct students
towards subjects relevant to the needs of their countries.
The main aim of one of these university
networks -- the Global Education Network Initiative (GENIe) --
is to provide education that incorporates humanistic and scientific
disciplines and teaches people to live in accordance with sustainable
development. It brings together decision-makers, scientists, postgraduates
and high school students. GENIe has put together distance education
courses on the importance of sustainable development. Students
all over the world are thus linked through the Internet, putting
together scenarios for the future based on their own local conditions.
They then exchange their opinions and experiences.
The UNESCO Chairs, like the UNITWIN
inter-university networks, cover all of UNESCO's areas of interest
- education, human rights, sustainable development, cultural development
and communication. One UNESCO Chair in Canada studies the philosophical
basis of justice and democratic society, one in France is developing
information and communication techniques, there is a Chair in
Tunisia for a comparative study of religions, another looks at
environmental water resources in Asia and the Mediterranean while
one in Romania is centred on theatre and the culture of civilisations.
Whatever their field, the UNESCO
Chairs and UNITWIN networks are participating directly in the
renewal and internationalisation of higher education through an
exchange of methods, courses and training in line with the goal
of the World Conference on Higher Education held in Paris in October
1998 - to build a new structure of cooperation between universities
around the world.
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Contact:
Cristina L'Homme
Bureau of Public Information, Editorial Section
Tel.: +33 (0)1 4568-1711
e-mail: c.l-homme@unesco.org