The Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions is an international treaty adopted in October 2005 in Paris during the 33rd session of the General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). In response to the fears that globalization would lead to an increasingly uniform global culture, it allows states to protect cultural diversity and cultural expressions by promoting and defending their own cultural industries. It also establishes international co-operation to help protect the cultural industries of developing countries, including the creation of the International Fund for Cultural Diversity. It reaffirms many of the principles of the 2001 UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity but, unlike that declaration, it is legally binding and requires legal ratification by member states. The convention is the first international treaty to give cultural goods a special status, having cultural as well as economic value.
Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions | |
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![]() Countries that have ratified the convention | |
Signed | 20 October 2005 |
Location | Paris, France |
Effective | March 2007 |
Condition | Ratification by 30 states |
Parties | 153 |
Depositary | United Nations/UNESCO |
Language | Authoritative in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian, and Spanish |
The convention addresses many audiences and operates at three main levels. First, it is an international treaty governing co-operation between states. Second, it guides national and international governments in the legislation and other actions they can take to preserve cultural diversity within their states or regions. Third, it calls for action by public and civil bodies at local and national levels to support diverse cultural expressions. The convention has no enforcing body; it leaves enforcement to the member states but sets out procedures in case of disputes between them.
One hundred and forty-eight countries voted to approve the treaty, with five abstaining and the United States and Israel opposing. The agreement came into effect in March 2007 and has been ratified by 151 states, as well as by the European Union.
Background and negotiations
The convention was a response to treaties and other international measures promoting trade liberalization in cultural goods, especially the actions of the World Trade Organisation (WTO). These were seen as undermining the sovereign right of states to use cultural policies to support their own cultural industries. The convention aimed to provide a legally binding international agreement that reaffirms that right. It enshrined the view that goods and services created as cultural expressions have both an economic and cultural nature and so cannot be seen purely as economic goods. The convention also defines cultural industry and interculturality and calls for international co-operation, especially to support the cultural industries of developing countries.
The impact of trade liberalization on cultural policy
The concept of diversity of cultural expressions is the result of a paradigm shift in the way that culture is considered in international relations, particularly in the context of agreements aimed at liberalizing trade. It succeeds the concepts of cultural exception or cultural exemption that appeared during the 1980s. The awareness on the part of certain states of the impacts of the liberalization of economic exchanges on their cultural policies is the trigger for the emergence of the concept of cultural diversity and the need to protect the diversity of cultural expressions, particularly because of the strength of the Hollywood film market.
The convention was born out of a desire to reconcile cultural diversity with increasingly liberal trade agreements. The international community was progressively lowering barriers to free trade, easing the movement of goods, services and capital between states. In several free trade agreements, states were able to establish exceptions to their commitments, either to protect specific sectors or to protect their policies such as environmental, social or culture.
The 1947 the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade already recognized the cultural specificity of the film sector by allowing states to maintain certain types of screen quotas to ensure the broadcasting of national films. When the trade system was being reformed in the 1980s and 1990s, Canada and France asked that special treatment be given to audiovisual services in the new General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) then under negotiation. The United States firmly opposed this, which led to the "failure of the cultural exception", an expression that reflects the impossibility of excluding the cultural sector from the reformed multilateral trade system.
The vulnerability of state cultural policies is also apparent in some trade disputes, most notably in Canada - Certain Measures Concerning Periodicals. In that case, the panel rejected one of Canada's arguments that, because the content of Canadian and U.S. periodicals differ, the products are not similar and, therefore, may be treated differently by Canada. In the end, certain measures to protect the Canadian periodical industry were not adopted.
One topic of negotiation is whether products with cultural value be treated like any other commodity. Some states answer in the affirmative, arguing that it is necessary to adopt a legal instrument that is independent of the WTO's multilateral trade system in order to recognize the dual nature, economic and cultural, of cultural goods and services. The recognition of this dual nature is reflected in certain bilateral or regional trade agreements that include cultural exemption clauses. The first agreement to contain a cultural exemption clause was the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement of 1988.
The application of trade rules to cultural products raises a particular problem. By making commitments in economic agreements, states agree to eliminate all forms of discrimination between domestic and imported cultural products. In doing so, they are gradually relinquishing their cultural sovereignty, that is, their ability to develop cultural policies and provide support for their own cultural industries, which reflect their identity. In this sense, the very foundations of free trade make it difficult to recognize the specific nature of cultural products, which are bearers of identity, value and meaning, hence the need to incorporate cultural exception and cultural exemption clauses (cultural clauses) into economic agreements.
Although these clauses are multiplying, concern remains in cultural circles about the progressive liberalization of the cultural sector and the repeated characterization of cultural products as mere "merchandise". In fact, cultural clauses receive a mixed reception during trade negotiations. Some states consider them to be protectionist and therefore antithetical to the ideology of free trade, which favours open markets. The United States generally refuses to incorporate such clauses into the free trade agreements it negotiates.
The concept of cultural diversity allows for a more positive perspective and a more positive approach to free trade. It allows for a balance to be struck between the economic benefits of opening up economies and taking into account the specificity of cultural products.
The role of UNESCO
The Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions is one of seven UNESCO conventions that deal with the four core areas of creative diversity; cultural and natural heritage, movable cultural property, intangible cultural heritage and contemporary creativity. The others are the Universal Copyright Convention (1952, followed by a revision in 1971), the Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict (1954/1999), the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property (1970), the Convention Concerning the Protection of World Cultural and Natural Heritage (1972), the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage (2001), and the Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (2003).
Faced with the fact that the commitments made within the WTO did not allow for the recognition of the dual nature of cultural goods and services, some states decided at the end of the 1990s to move the debate to UNESCO. On the one hand, UNESCO's constitution, and particularly Articles 1 and 2, make it the appropriate international forum for this debate. On the other hand, the United States was not a member of this organization at the time (it rejoined UNESCO in 2003 when the negotiation of the convention was launched), which created a favourable context for the development of a multilateral instrument aimed at protecting cultural diversity.
In 1998, the Action Plan on Cultural Policies for Development drawn up at the Stockholm Conference recommended that cultural goods and services should be treated differently from other merchandise. This action plan sets the stage for developments in cultural diversity from the early 2000s onwards.
UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity
The UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity was adopted unanimously by 188 member states on 2 November 2001, in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. It affirms "that respect for the diversity of cultures, tolerance, dialogue and cooperation, in a climate of mutual trust and understanding, are among the best guarantees of international peace and security". It represents an opportunity to "categorically reject the thesis of inescapable conflicts of cultures and civilizations".
In Article 8 of the declaration, UNESCO members affirm that "cultural goods and services [...], because they convey identity, values and meaning, should not be treated as commodities or consumer goods like any other." In Article 9, the role of cultural policies is defined as a tool to "create conditions conducive to the production and dissemination of diversified cultural goods and services".
This declaration is not legally binding. The desirability of negotiating a binding international legal instrument is set out in Annex II of the declaration. Several articles of the declaration are included in the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions.
Negotiations
Work towards the convention began in the fall of 2003, with a decision of the UNESCO General Conference. Fifteen independent experts participated in a series of three meetings to create a preliminary draft. This draft was distributed to member states in July 2004. It formed the basis for the intergovernmental negotiations from the fall of 2004 onwards to prepare the draft convention to be presented to the General Conference in 2005.
The first intergovernmental meeting, held from 20 to 24 September 2004, set up the negotiating structure and expressed the respective views on the type of convention to come. Differences of opinion persisted regarding the purpose of the convention, its relationship with other international agreements and the level of commitment required. At the second intergovernmental meeting, the Plenary Assembly considered almost all of the provisions of the preliminary draft. Definitions of key terms were discussed, as was the dispute settlement mechanism.
One of the significant difficulties encountered in the negotiations was the question of whether the convention would prevail over, or be subordinate to, other existing or future international agreements negotiated by the parties. Initially, the positions of the states were polarized on whether there would be an explicit clause setting out the relations between the convention and other international commitments. Some states, including the United States, Japan, New Zealand, Tunisia and India, questioned the need for such a clause. A majority of states, on the other hand, wanted the convention placed on an equal footing with other instruments. They argued that the dual nature of cultural goods and services mean that they should be treated by both the WTO and UNESCO texts. The need to incorporate such a clause was finally agreed upon. It would confirm complementarity and non-hierarchy between the convention and other international legal instruments. This would become Article 20 of the convention.
At the third intergovernmental meeting, a working group was charged with finding a compromise between the positions expressed to date on the relationship of the convention to other treaties. A stormy vote on the text of Article 20 led the United States to request registration of its formal opposition to the adopted text. Between the end of the negotiations and the 33rd General Conference of UNESCO, the United States led a campaign to reopen the negotiations. Canada responded by proposing that the preliminary draft be considered a draft convention to be voted on for adoption at the 33rd session of the General Conference, which it was. In advance of the General Conference, Condoleezza Rice, the United States Secretary of State, wrote to attendees, asking them not to sign the convention, which she said "invites abuse by forces opposed to freedom of expression and free trade".
Purpose
The main objective for the convention is to protect and promote the diversity of cultural expressions. The convention highlights the fact that cultural creativity has been placed upon all of humanity and that aside from economical gains, creative diversity reaps plenty of cultural and social advantages. States must also promote "openness to other cultures of the world". Protective measures are also included in the convention and international co-operation is encouraged in times of need.
Additional objectives are as follows:
- To reaffirm the sovereign rights of states to adopt cultural policies while ensuring the free movement of ideas and works.
- To recognise the distinct nature of cultural goods and services as vehicles of values, identity and meaning.
- To define a new framework for international cultural co-operation, the keystone of the convention.
- To create the conditions for cultures to flourish and freely interact in a mutually beneficial manner.
- To endeavour to support co-operation for sustainable development and poverty reduction, via assistance from the International Fund for Cultural Diversity.
- To ensure that civil society plays a major role in the implementation of the convention.
- To "strengthen international cooperation and solidarity with a view to favouring the cultural expressions of all countries, in particular those whose cultural goods and services suffer from lack of access to the means of creation, production and dissemination at the national and international level."
The convention also affirms that "Cultural diversity can be protected and promoted only if human rights and fundamental freedoms, such as freedom of expression, information and communication, as well as the ability of individuals to choose cultural expressions, are guaranteed" in a manner against a cultural relativism that may undermine universality of human rights.
The intended beneficiaries to the convention include all individuals and societies. The convention lists several groups such as women, indigenous peoples, minorities, and artists and practitioners of developing nations as specifically intended to benefit.
Content
Preamble
The preamble affirms the importance and benefits of cultural diversity and of the "framework of democracy, tolerance, social justice and mutual respect" needed for it to flourish. It refers to many issues on the periphery of the scope of the convention, yet intimately linked to the diversity of cultural expressions, including intellectual property rights, the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms, linguistic diversity, and traditional knowledge.
Section I: Objectives and guiding principles
Article 1 of the convention sets out the convention's nine purposes discussed above. Article 2 lists eight principles that guide the interpretation of commitments made by the parties:
- Principle of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms
- Principle of sovereignty
- Principle of equal dignity and respect for all cultures
- Principle of international solidarity and cooperation
- Principle of the complementarity of economic and cultural aspects of development
- Principle of sustainable development
- Principle of equitable access
- Principle of openness and balance
Section II: Scope of application
Article 3 sets out the scope of application: "This Convention shall apply to the policies and measures adopted by the Parties relating to the protection and promotion of the diversity of cultural expressions."
Section III: Definitions
The convention defines the following terms to explain their specific legal meaning: "cultural diversity", "cultural content", "cultural expressions", "cultural activities, goods and services", "cultural industries", "cultural policies and measures", "protection" and "interculturality". The convention creates several new concepts and uses similar expressions to some already known. As interpreted in the convention, cultural activities, goods, or services must result from creativity and have cultural content: symbolic meaning, artistic dimension or values related to cultural identity. "Cultural diversity" is interpreted both in terms of cultural heritage that is preserved, and in terms of diverse ways of creating, sharing, and enjoying art. This definition creates the link with the Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity.
Section IV: Rights and obligations of the parties
The section on rights and obligations is central to the convention. It focuses on rights, especially the rights of states to take action to protect their cultural diversity. Most of these rights are expressed as options ("Parties may...") rather than requirements ("Parties shall..."). In article 5, the convention reaffirms the sovereign right of states to use legislation to promote and protect the diversity of cultural expressions. Article 6 goes into more detail, listing examples of what states may do. It suggests regulation; the use of quotas on cultural content; subsidies and other support for cultural institutions or for individual artists; and giving domestic cultural industries ways to produce, promote, and publicise their output.
The obligation to promote cultural expressions is set out in article 7. Parties to the convention have an obligation to promote cultural expressions within their territory, giving individuals and society access to a diverse set of cultural influences from their own country and from around the world.
Article 8 sets out the powers of a state to identify a situation where a cultural expression is in need of "urgent safeguarding" and to take "all appropriate measures". It requires the parties to notify the Intergovernmental Committee (created by article 23) of any such measure. The committee may then make appropriate recommendations.
Articles 9 to 11 commit the states to sharing information transparently, to promoting cultural diversity through education and public awareness programs, and to working with civil society to achieve the convention's goals.
Article 12 sets out the five objectives of states in relation to international cooperation. Article 13 sets out the obligation of the parties to integrate culture into their sustainable development policies at all levels. This echoes article 11 of the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity, which describes cultural diversity as "a guarantee of sustainable human development". Article 14 provides a list of suggested forms of international cultural cooperation. These relate to the strengthening of cultural industries, capacity building, transfer of technology and know-how, and financial support.
Article 15 is the most explicit provision for partnerships between public authorities and civil society, especially to respond to the needs of developing countries.
Article 16 contains one of the most binding commitments of the convention. It states that "[d]eveloped countries shall facilitate cultural exchanges with developing countries by granting, through appropriate institutional and legal frameworks, preferential treatment to their artists and other cultural professionals and practitioners, as well as to their cultural goods and services." The obligation to "facilitate cultural exchanges" rests with developed countries and must benefit developing countries. This is the first time that a binding agreement in the cultural field has explicitly referred to "preferential treatment".[citation needed] Preferential treatment measures can be cultural in nature (e.g., hosting artists from developing countries in artists' residencies in developed countries), commercial in nature (e.g., easing the demands of artists in developed countries), or commercial in nature (e.g., facilitating the movement of cultural goods and services) or mixed, i.e., both cultural and commercial (e.g., entering into a film co-production agreement that includes measures that facilitate access to the developed country market for the co-produced work).
Article 17 commits parties to cooperate in situations of serious threat to cultural expressions of the kind mentioned in article 8.
The International Fund for Cultural Diversity (IFCD) was created as a result of the demands of developing countries and is established under article 18 of the convention. It is funded by voluntary contributions from member states. This creates some uncertainty as to the sustainability of the funding and ensures that the establishment of the fund is based on the principle of "hierarchical solidarity" rather than "reciprocity". Developing countries that are parties to the convention can apply to the IFCD for funding for specific activities that develop their cultural policies and cultural industries. As of April 2023, UNESCO reports that 140 projects in 69 developing countries have been carried out with funding from the IFCD.
In article 19, the parties commit to sharing data, expertise, and best practice for the protection and promotion of culture, creating a data bank maintained by UNESCO.
Section V: Relationship with other instruments
Article 20 explains that the convention is to be interpreted as complementary to other existing treaties, not overruling or modifying them. In article 21, the parties "undertake to promote the objectives and principles of this Convention in other international forums." The term "other international forums" refers in particular to the World Trade Organization (WTO), the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), but also to more informal bilateral or regional fora or negotiating groups.[citation needed]
Section VI: Organs of the convention
Article 22 establishes the Conference of the Parties, the governing body of the convention. This is composed of all the countries that have ratified the convention and meets every two years. Article 23 creates an Intergovernmental Committee for the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions. This is composed of 24 parties elected by the Conference of the Parties from all regions of the world. Members are given a four-year term and meet annually. These two bodies together act as a "political forum on the future of cultural policy and international cooperation". Article 24 requires the UNESCO Secretariat to assist both of them.
Ratification and implementation
Ratification and non-ratification
To date, 151 signatory states, as well as the European Union, have registered their ratification of the convention, or a legally equivalent process. Canada was the first party to ratify the treaty on 28 November 2005. Many more ratifications took place until 2007, after which the rate slowed down. The most recent ratifications are from Cape Verde (26 May 2021) and Pakistan (4 March 2022).
A November 2007 meeting of delegates from 59 member states of the Commonwealth produced the Kampala Civil Society Statement, which made recommendations to the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting. One recommendation was that Commonwealth states should ratify the convention and work with civil society to implement it.
Some Arab states, states in the Asia-Pacific region, Russia and Japan have not ratified or implemented the convention. The United States refused to ratify despite actively participating in the negotiations and drafting. The main argument of their opposition is that cultural products are commodities in the same way as other goods and services. They argue that the benefits of free trade extend to cultural goods and services. The United States left UNESCO at the end of 2018 but officially rejoined in July 2023.
Implementation monitoring
The monitoring framework is structured by four overarching objectives from the convention, as well as by the desired outcomes, core indicators and means of verification. The four objectives are: (1) supporting sustainable cultural governance systems, (2) achieving a balanced exchange of cultural goods and services and increasing the mobility of artists and cultural professionals, (3) including culture in sustainable development frameworks and (4) promoting human rights and fundamental freedoms.
The monitoring framework is based on Article 9 of the convention. It is specified by the Operational Guidelines for information sharing and transparency. In order to respect this commitment, the parties designate a point of contact and must produce periodic reports every four years, starting from the date of deposit of its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession. These reports are examined by the Conference of the Parties in order to plan international cooperation by identifying innovative measures and targeting the needs of countries that could benefit. As of 2021, it was reported that just half the ratifying states have complied with their reporting duties; there are no penalties for failing to comply.
The UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) has worked to support the convention by creating a Framework for Cultural Statistics and establishing an Expert Group on Measuring the Diversity of Cultural Expressions.
Effect on subsequent international agreements
UNESCO reports that "at least eight bilateral and regional free trade agreements concluded between 2015 and 2017 have introduced cultural clauses or list [sic] of commitments that promote the objectives and principles of the 2005 Convention."
Implementation in the online environment
The convention was negotiated at a time when music and films were mainly sold on CD and DVD formats. The subsequent years saw the rise of online streaming media, meaning that cultural works could be exported from one country to another without a physical medium. This increased the risk that cultural diversity would be threatened as more people had immediate access to the cultural productions of particular countries. The convention was intended to be technologically neutral so that future advancements would not leave it outdated. The definitions in section III allow states to develop cultural policies for digital cultural products. However, this rapid technological change raised the question of how to interpret the convention's rights and obligations relating to online cultural works. The community responded in 2017 by creating and adopting the Operational Guidelines on the Implementation of the Convention in the Digital Environment.
The role of civil society
The convention repeatedly mentions civil society — including non-governmental organizations (NGOs), cultural professionals and cultural groups — as necessary for implementation of its desired changes. Civil society organizations are involved at several levels in the implementation and promotion of the convention. Although they cannot attend the Conferences of the Parties, they can attend, by invitation, the meetings of the Intergovernmental Committee; participate in funding; contribute their expertise; or receive grants from the International Fund for Cultural Diversity.
A 2015 study found that many activities arising from the convention involved civil society, or partnerships between civil society and government, although fewer than half of the national reports mentioned involving civil society. It also found that the NGOs most involved in these activities were usually already well-established and used to working with government, which tend to be organizations in the Global North. The authors conclude that there are successful cases of involving civil society in the convention's implementation but that the participating organisations were not yet truly diverse. In 2009, the Intergovernmental Committee identified three general reasons why, in some countries, civil society participation was less than expected: 1) an organisationally weak cultural sector; 2) an excessively top-down approach by government and public bodies; and 3) poor communication between public bodies, civil society, and the cultural sector.
Civil society includes UNESCO Chairs: professors whose research objectives are linked to those of the 2005 convention. The UNESCO Chair on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, launched in November 2016, participates in the implementation of the convention and in the development of knowledge.
Global reports

UNESCO has published a series of reports that monitor the outcomes of the 2005 Convention and the progress being made within signatory states.
- UNESCO (2015). Re|shaping cultural policies: a decade promoting the diversity of cultural expressions for development. UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-100136-9. (foreword by Irina Bokova)
- UNESCO (2017). Re|shaping cultural policies: advancing creativity for development. UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-100256-4. (foreword by Audrey Azoulay)
- Cuny, Lawrence (2020). Freedom & Creativity: Defending art, defending diversity. UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-100379-0. (foreword by Ernesto Ottone)
- Conor, Bridget (2021). Gender & creativity: progress on the precipice. UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-100444-5. (foreword by Ernesto Ottone)
- UNESCO (2022). Re|shaping policies for creativity: addressing culture as a global public good. UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-100503-9. (foreword by Audrey Azoulay)
Scholarly reception
The convention has received both praise and criticism from academic sources. According to Lilian Richieri Hanania of the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, the convention was significantly watered-down by the negotiation process and so "it has been strongly questioned" whether it can provide a counterbalance to trade agreements. Despite this, she argued in 2014, the core elements of the convention are still relevant and should inform the co-ordination of policy and regulation. The Australian economist David Throsby argued in 2016 that the convention, as a legally binding treaty with many signatories, has achieved much more than the Sustainable Development Goals to advance cultural and economic development in a sustainable context. Reading the national reports on the implementation of the convention, he found that many countries have benefited by making the required policy changes.
Evaluating the convention ten years after its creation, Christiaan De Beukelaer and Miikka Pyykkönen described it as "a useful and important instrument in the debate on cultural diversity" but warn that it is "not broad and sufficient enough to confront cultural diversity as a whole, including challenges concerning human rights and sustainability." Sociologist John Clammer praised the convention for highlighting the role of culture but said it "lacks a hard-edged analysis or concrete policy proposals of how to address the very issues that it itself raises". Cultural policy scholar Johnathan Vickery warned that the democratic, pluralist values motivating the convention could lead to practices undermining those same values: that the document "can be used to legitimise and bolster current patriarchal, traditional, customary, superstitious or religious 'culture'". He described it as setting out a desirable democratic system of cultural governance without specifying how this could be achieved: "it is hard to see how many of the non-democratic members of the UN Assembly could ever implement many of its Articles".
In 2018, the Polish sociologist Dobrosława Wiktor-Mach described the political support for the convention, leading to its rapid ratification by many states, as impressive. She said that the convention "has had a direct impact on current debates on culture and sustainability" but that the interpretation of cultural diversity that has been implemented is narrow – focused on the market for creative goods – compared to the broad language of the declaration. She observed that the International Fund for Cultural Diversity, being reliant on donations, "has difficulties making real change." According to Nancy Duxbury and co-authors, although the convention mentions sustainability, it does not truly integrate sustainability requirements into its account of development. They drew a contrast with the 1996 Our Creative Diversity report by the World Commission on Culture and Development which considered culture not as a sector of the economy but in terms of the values and practices that define desirable futures.
Reviewing the second global report in 2018, Barbara Lovrinić of the Institute for Development and International Relations observed that the reports show that countries have made progress and have come up with new ways to address the strategic issues of promoting cultural diversity, but that the stated long-term goal of reshaping cultural policy was not yet being achieved. She criticised UNESCO for not promoting more public awareness of the 2005 Convention and the Sustainable Development Goals.
Notes
- For example, Coalitions for the Diversity of Cultural Expressions are active around the world: Canada, Australia, Belgium, Benin, Chad, Chile, France, Gabon, Germany, Mali, Nigeria, Paraguay, Portugal, Slovakia, Switzerland, Togo and Turkey. There is also the International Network of Jurists for the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, the World Organization of the Francophonie.
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- Bernier, Ivan (August 2009). "The Relationship Between the UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions and Other International Instruments: the Emergence of a New Balance in the Interface Between Commerce and Culture" (PDF). Québec: Chronique, Ministère de la Culture et des Communications. pp. 1, 2.
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- Bernier, Ivan (February 2006). "La troisième session de la réunion intergouvernementale d'experts sur l'Avant-projet de Convention sur la protection et la promotion de la diversité des expressions culturelles et l'examen du Projet de Convention par la Conférence générale de l'Unesco" (PDF) (in French). Québec: Chronique, Ministère de la Culture et des Communications. pp. 5, 6.
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- 30 frequently asked questions concerning the Convention and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions
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- 2005 Convention, art. 8(1).
- 2005 Convention, art. 8(3), 23 (6) d)
- 2005 Convention, art. 14
- UNESCO, Operational Guidelines - Modalities for Partnerships, Article 15 of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, Conference of Parties, 2nd session, Paris, June 2009, online: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000370521.page=63 .
- UNESCO, Operational Guidelines - Preferential Treatment for Developing Countries, Article 15 of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, Conference of Parties, 2nd sess, Paris, June 2009, online: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000370521.page=66 .
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- "What is the IFCD?". UNESCO. Retrieved 25 April 2023.
- Bernier, Ivan (April 2007). "An Important Aspect of the Implementation of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions: The International Fund for Cultural Diversity" (PDF). Québec: Chronique, Ministère de la Culture et des Communications.
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- "Governing bodies". UNESCO Diversity of Cultural Expressions. 15 February 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
- "Governance". UNESCO. 15 February 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
- 2005 Convention, Art. 24, Rules of Procedure of the Intergovernmental Committee, Art. 39.
- "Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions". UNESCO. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
- UNESCO, Intergovernmental Committee for the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, Report on the Results Achieved between 2010 and 2013 Following the Implementation of the Strategy to Encourage Ratification of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, Off. CE/13/7.IGC/10 (2013), p. 2, online: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000224652 .
- Aylett, Holly (July 2010). "An international instrument for international cultural policy: The challenge of UNESCO's Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions 2005". International Journal of Cultural Studies. 13 (4): 369. doi:10.1177/1367877910369975. ISSN 1367-8779.
- Ivana Otasevic, The emergence of an unwritten norm for the protection of cultural diversity in international law, PhD thesis, Quebec City, Université Laval, defended 2018, p. 111.
- Vlassis 2012, pp. 493, 496.
- Hahn 2007, p. 232.
- Lazaroff, Tovah (31 December 2018). "Israel, U.S. slated to leave UNESCO today to protest anti-Israel bias". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- Voon, Claire (12 July 2023). "The United States officially rejoins Unesco". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
- Falk, Pamela (11 July 2023). "U.S. rejoins UNESCO: "It's a historic moment!"". CBS News. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
- "Monitoring Framework". UNESCO. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
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- UNESCO, Operational Guidelines - Information Sharing and Transparency, Conference of Parties, 3rd sess. 2011, revised at the 7th sess. online: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000370521.page=37 .
- 2005 Convention, art. 28.
- 2005 Convention, Art. 9
- Operational Guidelines on Information Sharing and Transparency, online: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000260710.page=36 .
- 2005 Convention, Art. 22(4)(b).
- Betzler, Diana (17 May 2021). "Implementing UNESCO's Convention on Cultural Diversity at the regional level: Experiences from evaluating cultural competence centers". International Journal of Cultural Property. 27 (4): 524. doi:10.1017/S0940739121000059. ISSN 0940-7391.
- Singh 2015, p. 38.
- Guèvremont, Véronique (2017). "The Convention in other international forums: a crucial commitment". Re|shaping cultural policies: advancing creativity for development. UNESCO. p. 143. ISBN 978-92-3-100256-4.
- Guèvremont 2015, pp. 147–148.
- Guèvremont, Véronique. "Preliminary reflection on the implementation of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in the digital age" (PDF). Quebec: Université Laval. pp. 2, 18–19.
- Varin, Clémence (2021). "The contribution of international forums apart from UNESCO in achieving the objectives of the Convention on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in the digital environment". In Beauregard, Devin; Paquette, Jonathan (eds.). Canadian cultural policy in transition (First ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 9781003134022.
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- "Civil society - change agent and cultural watchdog". UNESCO. August 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
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- Al-Khamees, Omar A.; Yecies, Brian; Moore, Christopher (2 November 2022). "Cultural policy aspirations and the turn in Saudi Arabia's video game industry". International Journal of Cultural Policy: 1–14. doi:10.1080/10286632.2022.2135705. S2CID 253286030.
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- Clammer 2015, p. 113.
- Vickery, Johnathan (19 January 2016). "Book Review: Globalization, Culture and Development: The UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity edited by Christiaan De Beukelaer, Miikka Pyykkönen and J. P. Singh". LSE Review of Books. Retrieved 4 August 2023.
- Wiktor-Mach, Dobrosława (24 October 2018). "What role for culture in the age of sustainable development? UNESCO's advocacy in the 2030 Agenda negotiations". International Journal of Cultural Policy. 26 (3): 312–327. doi:10.1080/10286632.2018.1534841. ISSN 1028-6632. S2CID 149625996.
- Duxbury, Nancy; Kangas, Anita; De Beukelaer, Christiaan (28 February 2017). "Cultural policies for sustainable development: four strategic paths". International Journal of Cultural Policy. 23 (2): 214–230. doi:10.1080/10286632.2017.1280789. ISSN 1028-6632. S2CID 151387157.
- Lovrinić, Barbara (2018). "UNESCO Global Report Reshaping Cultural Policies. Advancing Creativity for Development". Croatian International Relations Review. XXIV (82): 134–137. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
Sources
- Bernier, Ivan (May 2008). "The UNESCO Convention on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions: A Cultural Instrument at the Crossroads of Law and Policy" (PDF). Québec: Chronique, Ministère de la Culture et des Communications.
- Beukelaer, Christiaan; Pyykkönen, Miikka; Singh, J. P., eds. (2015). Globalization, culture and development : the UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-39763-8.
- Anheier, Helmut K.; Hoelsche, Michael. "The 2005 UNESCO Convention and Civil Society: An Initial Assessment". In Beukelaer, Pyykkönen & Singh (2015).
- De Beukelaer, Christiaan; Pyykkönen, Miikka. "Introduction: UNESCO's "Diversity Convention" – Ten Years on". In Beukelaer, Pyykkönen & Singh (2015).
- Guèvremont, Véronique. "The 2005 Convention in the Digital Age". In Beukelaer, Pyykkönen & Singh (2015).
- Singh, J. P. "Cultural Globalization and the Convention". In Beukelaer, Pyykkönen & Singh (2015).
- Clammer, John. "Cultural Diversity, Global Change, and Social Justice: Contextualizing the 2005 Convention in a World in Flux". In Beukelaer, Pyykkönen & Singh (2015).
- Hahn, Michael (2007). "The Convention on Cultural Diversity and International Economic Law". Asian Journal of WTO & International Health Law and Policy. 2 (2). SSRN 1019387.
- Neil, Garry (2006). "Policy Review: Assessing the effectiveness of UNESCO's new Convention on cultural diversity". Global Media and Communication. 2 (2): 257–262. doi:10.1177/1742766506066278. ISSN 1742-7665. S2CID 146884655.
- Turp, Daniel (2013). "La Contribution Du Droit International Au Maintien de La Diversité Culturelle". Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law (in French). Vol. 363. Brill Reference Online.
- Hanania, Lilian Richieri; Norodom, Anne-Thida, eds. (2016). Diversité des expressions culturelles à l'ère du numérique (in French). Buenos Aires: Teseopress. doi:10.55778/ts096909001. ISBN 979-10-96909-00-1. S2CID 252803309.
- Théorêt, Yves, ed. (2008). David contre Goliath: la Convention sur la protection et la promotion de la diversité des expressions culturelles de l'UNESCO (in French). Montréal: Hurtubise HMH. OCLC 1319339094.
- Théorêt, Yves (2008a). "Petite histoire de la reconnaissance de la diversité des expressions culturelles". In Théorêt (2008).
- George, Éric. "La politique de "contenu canadien" à l'ère de la "diversité culturelle" dans le contexte de la mondialisation". In Théorêt (2008).
- Vlassis, Antonios (5 January 2012). "La mise en oeuvre de la Convention sur la diversité des expressions culturelles: Portée et enjeux de l'interface entre le commerce et la culture". Études internationales (in French). 42 (4): 493–510. doi:10.7202/1007552ar.
Further reading
- Barreiro Carril, Beatriz; Jakubowski, Andrzej; Lixinski, Lucas, eds. (2023). 15 Years of the UNESCO Diversity of Cultural Expressions Convention: Actors, Processes and Impact. Hart Publishing. doi:10.5040/9781509961474. ISBN 978-1-50996-147-4. S2CID 257242641.
- Garner, B; O'Connor, J (23 December 2019). "Rip it up and start again? The contemporary relevance of the 2005 UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity". The Journal of Law, Social Justice and Global Development (24): 8–23. doi:10.31273/LGD.2019.2401. S2CID 213154050.
- Schorlemer, Sabine; Stoll, Peter-Tobias, eds. (2012). The UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions : explanatory notes. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-25995-1.
External links
- Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions: full text, list of parties, and documents from the Conference of Parties and the Intergovernmental Committee
- Texts in all official languages, plus Operational Guidelines
- Procedural history and related documents on the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in the Historic Archives of the United Nations Audiovisual Library of International Law
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The Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions is an international treaty adopted in October 2005 in Paris during the 33rd session of the General Conference of the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO In response to the fears that globalization would lead to an increasingly uniform global culture it allows states to protect cultural diversity and cultural expressions by promoting and defending their own cultural industries It also establishes international co operation to help protect the cultural industries of developing countries including the creation of the International Fund for Cultural Diversity It reaffirms many of the principles of the 2001 UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity but unlike that declaration it is legally binding and requires legal ratification by member states The convention is the first international treaty to give cultural goods a special status having cultural as well as economic value 2005 ConventionConvention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural ExpressionsCountries that have ratified the conventionSigned20 October 2005 19 years ago 20 October 2005 LocationParis FranceEffectiveMarch 2007ConditionRatification by 30 statesParties153DepositaryUnited Nations UNESCOLanguageAuthoritative in Arabic Chinese English French Russian and Spanish The convention addresses many audiences and operates at three main levels First it is an international treaty governing co operation between states Second it guides national and international governments in the legislation and other actions they can take to preserve cultural diversity within their states or regions Third it calls for action by public and civil bodies at local and national levels to support diverse cultural expressions The convention has no enforcing body it leaves enforcement to the member states but sets out procedures in case of disputes between them One hundred and forty eight countries voted to approve the treaty with five abstaining and the United States and Israel opposing The agreement came into effect in March 2007 and has been ratified by 151 states as well as by the European Union Background and negotiationsThe convention was a response to treaties and other international measures promoting trade liberalization in cultural goods especially the actions of the World Trade Organisation WTO These were seen as undermining the sovereign right of states to use cultural policies to support their own cultural industries The convention aimed to provide a legally binding international agreement that reaffirms that right It enshrined the view that goods and services created as cultural expressions have both an economic and cultural nature and so cannot be seen purely as economic goods The convention also defines cultural industry and interculturality and calls for international co operation especially to support the cultural industries of developing countries The impact of trade liberalization on cultural policy The concept of diversity of cultural expressions is the result of a paradigm shift in the way that culture is considered in international relations particularly in the context of agreements aimed at liberalizing trade It succeeds the concepts of cultural exception or cultural exemption that appeared during the 1980s The awareness on the part of certain states of the impacts of the liberalization of economic exchanges on their cultural policies is the trigger for the emergence of the concept of cultural diversity and the need to protect the diversity of cultural expressions particularly because of the strength of the Hollywood film market The convention was born out of a desire to reconcile cultural diversity with increasingly liberal trade agreements The international community was progressively lowering barriers to free trade easing the movement of goods services and capital between states In several free trade agreements states were able to establish exceptions to their commitments either to protect specific sectors or to protect their policies such as environmental social or culture The 1947 the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade already recognized the cultural specificity of the film sector by allowing states to maintain certain types of screen quotas to ensure the broadcasting of national films When the trade system was being reformed in the 1980s and 1990s Canada and France asked that special treatment be given to audiovisual services in the new General Agreement on Trade in Services GATS then under negotiation The United States firmly opposed this which led to the failure of the cultural exception an expression that reflects the impossibility of excluding the cultural sector from the reformed multilateral trade system The vulnerability of state cultural policies is also apparent in some trade disputes most notably in Canada Certain Measures Concerning Periodicals In that case the panel rejected one of Canada s arguments that because the content of Canadian and U S periodicals differ the products are not similar and therefore may be treated differently by Canada In the end certain measures to protect the Canadian periodical industry were not adopted One topic of negotiation is whether products with cultural value be treated like any other commodity Some states answer in the affirmative arguing that it is necessary to adopt a legal instrument that is independent of the WTO s multilateral trade system in order to recognize the dual nature economic and cultural of cultural goods and services The recognition of this dual nature is reflected in certain bilateral or regional trade agreements that include cultural exemption clauses The first agreement to contain a cultural exemption clause was the Canada US Free Trade Agreement of 1988 The application of trade rules to cultural products raises a particular problem By making commitments in economic agreements states agree to eliminate all forms of discrimination between domestic and imported cultural products In doing so they are gradually relinquishing their cultural sovereignty that is their ability to develop cultural policies and provide support for their own cultural industries which reflect their identity In this sense the very foundations of free trade make it difficult to recognize the specific nature of cultural products which are bearers of identity value and meaning hence the need to incorporate cultural exception and cultural exemption clauses cultural clauses into economic agreements Although these clauses are multiplying concern remains in cultural circles about the progressive liberalization of the cultural sector and the repeated characterization of cultural products as mere merchandise In fact cultural clauses receive a mixed reception during trade negotiations Some states consider them to be protectionist and therefore antithetical to the ideology of free trade which favours open markets The United States generally refuses to incorporate such clauses into the free trade agreements it negotiates The concept of cultural diversity allows for a more positive perspective and a more positive approach to free trade It allows for a balance to be struck between the economic benefits of opening up economies and taking into account the specificity of cultural products The role of UNESCO The Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions is one of seven UNESCO conventions that deal with the four core areas of creative diversity cultural and natural heritage movable cultural property intangible cultural heritage and contemporary creativity The others are the Universal Copyright Convention 1952 followed by a revision in 1971 the Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict 1954 1999 the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property 1970 the Convention Concerning the Protection of World Cultural and Natural Heritage 1972 the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage 2001 and the Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage 2003 Faced with the fact that the commitments made within the WTO did not allow for the recognition of the dual nature of cultural goods and services some states decided at the end of the 1990s to move the debate to UNESCO On the one hand UNESCO s constitution and particularly Articles 1 and 2 make it the appropriate international forum for this debate On the other hand the United States was not a member of this organization at the time it rejoined UNESCO in 2003 when the negotiation of the convention was launched which created a favourable context for the development of a multilateral instrument aimed at protecting cultural diversity In 1998 the Action Plan on Cultural Policies for Development drawn up at the Stockholm Conference recommended that cultural goods and services should be treated differently from other merchandise This action plan sets the stage for developments in cultural diversity from the early 2000s onwards UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity The UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity was adopted unanimously by 188 member states on 2 November 2001 in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks It affirms that respect for the diversity of cultures tolerance dialogue and cooperation in a climate of mutual trust and understanding are among the best guarantees of international peace and security It represents an opportunity to categorically reject the thesis of inescapable conflicts of cultures and civilizations In Article 8 of the declaration UNESCO members affirm that cultural goods and services because they convey identity values and meaning should not be treated as commodities or consumer goods like any other In Article 9 the role of cultural policies is defined as a tool to create conditions conducive to the production and dissemination of diversified cultural goods and services This declaration is not legally binding The desirability of negotiating a binding international legal instrument is set out in Annex II of the declaration Several articles of the declaration are included in the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions Negotiations Work towards the convention began in the fall of 2003 with a decision of the UNESCO General Conference Fifteen independent experts participated in a series of three meetings to create a preliminary draft This draft was distributed to member states in July 2004 It formed the basis for the intergovernmental negotiations from the fall of 2004 onwards to prepare the draft convention to be presented to the General Conference in 2005 The first intergovernmental meeting held from 20 to 24 September 2004 set up the negotiating structure and expressed the respective views on the type of convention to come Differences of opinion persisted regarding the purpose of the convention its relationship with other international agreements and the level of commitment required At the second intergovernmental meeting the Plenary Assembly considered almost all of the provisions of the preliminary draft Definitions of key terms were discussed as was the dispute settlement mechanism One of the significant difficulties encountered in the negotiations was the question of whether the convention would prevail over or be subordinate to other existing or future international agreements negotiated by the parties Initially the positions of the states were polarized on whether there would be an explicit clause setting out the relations between the convention and other international commitments Some states including the United States Japan New Zealand Tunisia and India questioned the need for such a clause A majority of states on the other hand wanted the convention placed on an equal footing with other instruments They argued that the dual nature of cultural goods and services mean that they should be treated by both the WTO and UNESCO texts The need to incorporate such a clause was finally agreed upon It would confirm complementarity and non hierarchy between the convention and other international legal instruments This would become Article 20 of the convention At the third intergovernmental meeting a working group was charged with finding a compromise between the positions expressed to date on the relationship of the convention to other treaties A stormy vote on the text of Article 20 led the United States to request registration of its formal opposition to the adopted text Between the end of the negotiations and the 33rd General Conference of UNESCO the United States led a campaign to reopen the negotiations Canada responded by proposing that the preliminary draft be considered a draft convention to be voted on for adoption at the 33rd session of the General Conference which it was In advance of the General Conference Condoleezza Rice the United States Secretary of State wrote to attendees asking them not to sign the convention which she said invites abuse by forces opposed to freedom of expression and free trade PurposeThe main objective for the convention is to protect and promote the diversity of cultural expressions The convention highlights the fact that cultural creativity has been placed upon all of humanity and that aside from economical gains creative diversity reaps plenty of cultural and social advantages States must also promote openness to other cultures of the world Protective measures are also included in the convention and international co operation is encouraged in times of need Additional objectives are as follows To reaffirm the sovereign rights of states to adopt cultural policies while ensuring the free movement of ideas and works To recognise the distinct nature of cultural goods and services as vehicles of values identity and meaning To define a new framework for international cultural co operation the keystone of the convention To create the conditions for cultures to flourish and freely interact in a mutually beneficial manner To endeavour to support co operation for sustainable development and poverty reduction via assistance from the International Fund for Cultural Diversity To ensure that civil society plays a major role in the implementation of the convention To strengthen international cooperation and solidarity with a view to favouring the cultural expressions of all countries in particular those whose cultural goods and services suffer from lack of access to the means of creation production and dissemination at the national and international level The convention also affirms that Cultural diversity can be protected and promoted only if human rights and fundamental freedoms such as freedom of expression information and communication as well as the ability of individuals to choose cultural expressions are guaranteed in a manner against a cultural relativism that may undermine universality of human rights The intended beneficiaries to the convention include all individuals and societies The convention lists several groups such as women indigenous peoples minorities and artists and practitioners of developing nations as specifically intended to benefit ContentPreamble The preamble affirms the importance and benefits of cultural diversity and of the framework of democracy tolerance social justice and mutual respect needed for it to flourish It refers to many issues on the periphery of the scope of the convention yet intimately linked to the diversity of cultural expressions including intellectual property rights the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms linguistic diversity and traditional knowledge Section I Objectives and guiding principles Article 1 of the convention sets out the convention s nine purposes discussed above Article 2 lists eight principles that guide the interpretation of commitments made by the parties Principle of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms Principle of sovereignty Principle of equal dignity and respect for all cultures Principle of international solidarity and cooperation Principle of the complementarity of economic and cultural aspects of development Principle of sustainable development Principle of equitable access Principle of openness and balance Section II Scope of application Article 3 sets out the scope of application This Convention shall apply to the policies and measures adopted by the Parties relating to the protection and promotion of the diversity of cultural expressions Section III Definitions The convention defines the following terms to explain their specific legal meaning cultural diversity cultural content cultural expressions cultural activities goods and services cultural industries cultural policies and measures protection and interculturality The convention creates several new concepts and uses similar expressions to some already known As interpreted in the convention cultural activities goods or services must result from creativity and have cultural content symbolic meaning artistic dimension or values related to cultural identity Cultural diversity is interpreted both in terms of cultural heritage that is preserved and in terms of diverse ways of creating sharing and enjoying art This definition creates the link with the Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity Section IV Rights and obligations of the parties The section on rights and obligations is central to the convention It focuses on rights especially the rights of states to take action to protect their cultural diversity Most of these rights are expressed as options Parties may rather than requirements Parties shall In article 5 the convention reaffirms the sovereign right of states to use legislation to promote and protect the diversity of cultural expressions Article 6 goes into more detail listing examples of what states may do It suggests regulation the use of quotas on cultural content subsidies and other support for cultural institutions or for individual artists and giving domestic cultural industries ways to produce promote and publicise their output The obligation to promote cultural expressions is set out in article 7 Parties to the convention have an obligation to promote cultural expressions within their territory giving individuals and society access to a diverse set of cultural influences from their own country and from around the world Article 8 sets out the powers of a state to identify a situation where a cultural expression is in need of urgent safeguarding and to take all appropriate measures It requires the parties to notify the Intergovernmental Committee created by article 23 of any such measure The committee may then make appropriate recommendations Articles 9 to 11 commit the states to sharing information transparently to promoting cultural diversity through education and public awareness programs and to working with civil society to achieve the convention s goals Article 12 sets out the five objectives of states in relation to international cooperation Article 13 sets out the obligation of the parties to integrate culture into their sustainable development policies at all levels This echoes article 11 of the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity which describes cultural diversity as a guarantee of sustainable human development Article 14 provides a list of suggested forms of international cultural cooperation These relate to the strengthening of cultural industries capacity building transfer of technology and know how and financial support Article 15 is the most explicit provision for partnerships between public authorities and civil society especially to respond to the needs of developing countries Article 16 contains one of the most binding commitments of the convention It states that d eveloped countries shall facilitate cultural exchanges with developing countries by granting through appropriate institutional and legal frameworks preferential treatment to their artists and other cultural professionals and practitioners as well as to their cultural goods and services The obligation to facilitate cultural exchanges rests with developed countries and must benefit developing countries This is the first time that a binding agreement in the cultural field has explicitly referred to preferential treatment citation needed Preferential treatment measures can be cultural in nature e g hosting artists from developing countries in artists residencies in developed countries commercial in nature e g easing the demands of artists in developed countries or commercial in nature e g facilitating the movement of cultural goods and services or mixed i e both cultural and commercial e g entering into a film co production agreement that includes measures that facilitate access to the developed country market for the co produced work Article 17 commits parties to cooperate in situations of serious threat to cultural expressions of the kind mentioned in article 8 The International Fund for Cultural Diversity IFCD was created as a result of the demands of developing countries and is established under article 18 of the convention It is funded by voluntary contributions from member states This creates some uncertainty as to the sustainability of the funding and ensures that the establishment of the fund is based on the principle of hierarchical solidarity rather than reciprocity Developing countries that are parties to the convention can apply to the IFCD for funding for specific activities that develop their cultural policies and cultural industries As of April 2023 UNESCO reports that 140 projects in 69 developing countries have been carried out with funding from the IFCD In article 19 the parties commit to sharing data expertise and best practice for the protection and promotion of culture creating a data bank maintained by UNESCO Section V Relationship with other instruments Article 20 explains that the convention is to be interpreted as complementary to other existing treaties not overruling or modifying them In article 21 the parties undertake to promote the objectives and principles of this Convention in other international forums The term other international forums refers in particular to the World Trade Organization WTO the World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD but also to more informal bilateral or regional fora or negotiating groups citation needed Section VI Organs of the convention Article 22 establishes the Conference of the Parties the governing body of the convention This is composed of all the countries that have ratified the convention and meets every two years Article 23 creates an Intergovernmental Committee for the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions This is composed of 24 parties elected by the Conference of the Parties from all regions of the world Members are given a four year term and meet annually These two bodies together act as a political forum on the future of cultural policy and international cooperation Article 24 requires the UNESCO Secretariat to assist both of them Ratification and implementationRatification and non ratification To date 151 signatory states as well as the European Union have registered their ratification of the convention or a legally equivalent process Canada was the first party to ratify the treaty on 28 November 2005 Many more ratifications took place until 2007 after which the rate slowed down The most recent ratifications are from Cape Verde 26 May 2021 and Pakistan 4 March 2022 A November 2007 meeting of delegates from 59 member states of the Commonwealth produced the Kampala Civil Society Statement which made recommendations to the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting One recommendation was that Commonwealth states should ratify the convention and work with civil society to implement it Some Arab states states in the Asia Pacific region Russia and Japan have not ratified or implemented the convention The United States refused to ratify despite actively participating in the negotiations and drafting The main argument of their opposition is that cultural products are commodities in the same way as other goods and services They argue that the benefits of free trade extend to cultural goods and services The United States left UNESCO at the end of 2018 but officially rejoined in July 2023 Implementation monitoring The monitoring framework is structured by four overarching objectives from the convention as well as by the desired outcomes core indicators and means of verification The four objectives are 1 supporting sustainable cultural governance systems 2 achieving a balanced exchange of cultural goods and services and increasing the mobility of artists and cultural professionals 3 including culture in sustainable development frameworks and 4 promoting human rights and fundamental freedoms The monitoring framework is based on Article 9 of the convention It is specified by the Operational Guidelines for information sharing and transparency In order to respect this commitment the parties designate a point of contact and must produce periodic reports every four years starting from the date of deposit of its instrument of ratification acceptance approval or accession These reports are examined by the Conference of the Parties in order to plan international cooperation by identifying innovative measures and targeting the needs of countries that could benefit As of 2021 it was reported that just half the ratifying states have complied with their reporting duties there are no penalties for failing to comply The UNESCO Institute for Statistics UIS has worked to support the convention by creating a Framework for Cultural Statistics and establishing an Expert Group on Measuring the Diversity of Cultural Expressions Effect on subsequent international agreements UNESCO reports that at least eight bilateral and regional free trade agreements concluded between 2015 and 2017 have introduced cultural clauses or list sic of commitments that promote the objectives and principles of the 2005 Convention Implementation in the online environment The convention was negotiated at a time when music and films were mainly sold on CD and DVD formats The subsequent years saw the rise of online streaming media meaning that cultural works could be exported from one country to another without a physical medium This increased the risk that cultural diversity would be threatened as more people had immediate access to the cultural productions of particular countries The convention was intended to be technologically neutral so that future advancements would not leave it outdated The definitions in section III allow states to develop cultural policies for digital cultural products However this rapid technological change raised the question of how to interpret the convention s rights and obligations relating to online cultural works The community responded in 2017 by creating and adopting the Operational Guidelines on the Implementation of the Convention in the Digital Environment The role of civil society The convention repeatedly mentions civil society including non governmental organizations NGOs cultural professionals and cultural groups as necessary for implementation of its desired changes Civil society organizations are involved at several levels in the implementation and promotion of the convention Although they cannot attend the Conferences of the Parties they can attend by invitation the meetings of the Intergovernmental Committee participate in funding contribute their expertise or receive grants from the International Fund for Cultural Diversity A 2015 study found that many activities arising from the convention involved civil society or partnerships between civil society and government although fewer than half of the national reports mentioned involving civil society It also found that the NGOs most involved in these activities were usually already well established and used to working with government which tend to be organizations in the Global North The authors conclude that there are successful cases of involving civil society in the convention s implementation but that the participating organisations were not yet truly diverse In 2009 the Intergovernmental Committee identified three general reasons why in some countries civil society participation was less than expected 1 an organisationally weak cultural sector 2 an excessively top down approach by government and public bodies and 3 poor communication between public bodies civil society and the cultural sector Civil society includes UNESCO Chairs professors whose research objectives are linked to those of the 2005 convention The UNESCO Chair on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions launched in November 2016 participates in the implementation of the convention and in the development of knowledge Global reportsCover of the 2018 global report Re shaping cultural policies advancing creativity for development UNESCO has published a series of reports that monitor the outcomes of the 2005 Convention and the progress being made within signatory states UNESCO 2015 Re shaping cultural policies a decade promoting the diversity of cultural expressions for development UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 100136 9 foreword by Irina Bokova UNESCO 2017 Re shaping cultural policies advancing creativity for development UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 100256 4 foreword by Audrey Azoulay Cuny Lawrence 2020 Freedom amp Creativity Defending art defending diversity UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 100379 0 foreword by Ernesto Ottone Conor Bridget 2021 Gender amp creativity progress on the precipice UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 100444 5 foreword by Ernesto Ottone UNESCO 2022 Re shaping policies for creativity addressing culture as a global public good UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 100503 9 foreword by Audrey Azoulay Scholarly receptionThe convention has received both praise and criticism from academic sources According to Lilian Richieri Hanania of the University of Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne the convention was significantly watered down by the negotiation process and so it has been strongly questioned whether it can provide a counterbalance to trade agreements Despite this she argued in 2014 the core elements of the convention are still relevant and should inform the co ordination of policy and regulation The Australian economist David Throsby argued in 2016 that the convention as a legally binding treaty with many signatories has achieved much more than the Sustainable Development Goals to advance cultural and economic development in a sustainable context Reading the national reports on the implementation of the convention he found that many countries have benefited by making the required policy changes Evaluating the convention ten years after its creation Christiaan De Beukelaer and Miikka Pyykkonen described it as a useful and important instrument in the debate on cultural diversity but warn that it is not broad and sufficient enough to confront cultural diversity as a whole including challenges concerning human rights and sustainability Sociologist John Clammer praised the convention for highlighting the role of culture but said it lacks a hard edged analysis or concrete policy proposals of how to address the very issues that it itself raises Cultural policy scholar Johnathan Vickery warned that the democratic pluralist values motivating the convention could lead to practices undermining those same values that the document can be used to legitimise and bolster current patriarchal traditional customary superstitious or religious culture He described it as setting out a desirable democratic system of cultural governance without specifying how this could be achieved it is hard to see how many of the non democratic members of the UN Assembly could ever implement many of its Articles In 2018 the Polish sociologist Dobroslawa Wiktor Mach described the political support for the convention leading to its rapid ratification by many states as impressive She said that the convention has had a direct impact on current debates on culture and sustainability but that the interpretation of cultural diversity that has been implemented is narrow focused on the market for creative goods compared to the broad language of the declaration She observed that the International Fund for Cultural Diversity being reliant on donations has difficulties making real change According to Nancy Duxbury and co authors although the convention mentions sustainability it does not truly integrate sustainability requirements into its account of development They drew a contrast with the 1996 Our Creative Diversity report by the World Commission on Culture and Development which considered culture not as a sector of the economy but in terms of the values and practices that define desirable futures Reviewing the second global report in 2018 Barbara Lovrinic of the Institute for Development and International Relations observed that the reports show that countries have made progress and have come up with new ways to address the strategic issues of promoting cultural diversity but that the stated long term goal of reshaping cultural policy was not yet being achieved She criticised UNESCO for not promoting more public awareness of the 2005 Convention and the Sustainable Development Goals NotesFor example Coalitions for the Diversity of Cultural Expressions are active around the world Canada Australia Belgium Benin Chad Chile France Gabon Germany Mali Nigeria Paraguay Portugal Slovakia Switzerland Togo and Turkey There is also the International Network of Jurists for the Diversity of Cultural Expressions the World Organization of the Francophonie References2005 Convention The Preamble Graber Christoph Beat 1 September 2006 The New UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity A Counterbalance to the WTO Journal of International Economic Law 9 3 553 574 doi 10 1093 jiel jgl018 ISSN 1464 3758 Anheier amp Hoelsche 2015 p 182 De Beukelaer amp Pyykkonen 2015 p 2 De Beukelaer amp Pyykkonen 2015 p 7 Neil 2006 p 257 Coalition for Cultural Diversity PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 15 April 2011 Ten Keys to the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions PDF UNESCO 2006 2005 Convention Article 4 Paragraph 8 De Beukelaer amp Pyykkonen 2015 p 4 Theoret 2008a p 47 Neuwrith Rostam J La Convention de l UNESCO et les technologies du futur Un voyage au centre de l elaboration des lois et des politiques culturelles in Hanania amp Norodom 2016 Voon Tania May 2006 State Support for Audiovisual Products in the World Trade Organization Protectionism or Cultural Policy International Journal of Cultural Property 13 2 130 doi 10 1017 S0940739106060073 ISSN 0940 7391 S2CID 159822250 Panel on Canada Certain Measures Concerning Periodicals 14 March 1997 Report of the Panel World Trade Organization p 5 25 WT DS 31R 5 24 5 27 Bernier Ivan Ruiz Fabri Helene 2002 Evaluation de la faisabilite juridique d un instrument international sur la diversite culturelle PDF in French Groupe de travail Franco Quebecois sur la diversite culturelle pp 2 24 25 ISBN 2 550 39185 3 Hahn 2007 p 231 Bernier 2008 pp 1 2 2005 Convention Preamble para 19 Guevremont Veronique Otasevic Ivana Culture in Treaties and Agreements PDF 2017 ed Paris UNESCO pp 19 42 46 CLT 2017 WS 10 Theoret 2008a pp 36 37 George 2008 pp 239 Voon Tania 2007 Cultural Products and the World Trade Organization Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 249 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511674501 ISBN 978 0 521 87327 7 UNESCO Convention establishing a United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization known as the Constitution 1945 London as amended by the General Conference at its 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 12th 15th 17th 19th 20th 21st 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th 29th and 31st sessions art 1 online http portal unesco org fr ev php URL ID 15244 amp URL DO DO TOPIC amp URL SECTION 201 html Hahn 2007 p 234 Intergovernmental Conference on Cultural Policies for Development Action Plan on Cultural Policies for Development in Final Report Stockholm CLT 98 Conf 210 5 30 March to 2 April 1998 online https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000113935 fre p 11 Theoret 2008a p 38 Records of the General Conference 31st session Volume 1 Resolutions PDF UNESCO 2001 Matsuura Koichiro 2002 The World s Cultural Wealth is its Diversity in Dialogue In Stenou Katerina ed Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity A Vision a Conceptual Platform a Box of Ideas a New Paradigm Document prepared for the World Summit on Sustainable Development Johannesburg UNESCO p 3 Passer Juliette Autumn 2020 Did You Know That There Is the Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity And Why You Should Care International In House Counsel Journal 13 53 6811 ISSN 1754 0607 Desirability of drawing up an international standard setting instrument on cultural diversity 32nd session Paris UNESCO 18 July 2003 Records of the General Conference 32nd Session Volume 1 Resolutions 32C34 UNESCO 2004 p 34 Bernier 2008 pp 1 3 Bernier Ivan November December 2004 The First Intergovernmental Meeting of Experts on UNESCO s Preliminary Draft Convention on the Protection of the Diversity of Cultural Contents and Artistic Expressions Implications for the Following Meeting PDF Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications Bernier Ivan May 2005 UNESCO s Second Session of the Intergovernmental Meeting of Experts on the Preliminary Draft Convention on the Protection of the Diversity of Cultural Contents and Artistic Expressions PDF Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications p 29 Bernier Ivan February 2006 La troisieme session de la reunion intergouvernementale d experts sur l Avant projet de Convention sur la protection et la promotion de la diversite des expressions culturelles et l examen du Projet de Convention par la Conference generale de l Unesco PDF in French Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications Turp 2013 pp 410 414 Turp 2013 pp 410 411 Bernier Ivan Ruiz Fabri Helene 2002 Evaluation de la faisabilite juridique d un instrument international sur la diversite culturelle PDF in French Groupe de travail Franco Quebecois sur la diversite culturelle ISBN 2 550 39185 3 Vlassis 2012 p 495 Bernier Ivan August 2009 The Relationship Between the UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions and Other International Instruments the Emergence of a New Balance in the Interface Between Commerce and Culture PDF Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications pp 1 2 Turp 2013 p 418 Bernier Ivan February 2006 La troisieme session de la reunion intergouvernementale d experts sur l Avant projet de Convention sur la protection et la promotion de la diversite des expressions culturelles et l examen du Projet de Convention par la Conference generale de l Unesco PDF in French Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications pp 5 6 Aylett Holly July 2010 An international instrument for international cultural policy The challenge of UNESCO s Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions 2005 International Journal of Cultural Studies 13 4 359 doi 10 1177 1367877910369975 ISSN 1367 8779 30 frequently asked questions concerning the Convention and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions 2005 Convention Article 2 Paragraph 1 Bernier 2008 p 5 Bernier Ivan October 2004 Preliminary Draft of the Convention on the Protection of the Diversity of Cultural Contents of Artistic Expressions analysis and commentary PDF Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications p 5 Turp 2013 p 371 Turp 2013 p 362 Neil 2006 p 258 Bernier Ivan April 2009 Cultural expressions under threat in the UNESCO Convention on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions PDF Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications pp 5 10 2005 Convention art 8 1 2005 Convention art 8 3 23 6 d 2005 Convention art 14 UNESCO Operational Guidelines Modalities for Partnerships Article 15 of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions Conference of Parties 2nd session Paris June 2009 online https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000370521 page 63 UNESCO Operational Guidelines Preferential Treatment for Developing Countries Article 15 of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions Conference of Parties 2nd sess Paris June 2009 online https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000370521 page 66 Turp 2013 p 408 What is the IFCD UNESCO Retrieved 25 April 2023 Bernier Ivan April 2007 An Important Aspect of the Implementation of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions The International Fund for Cultural Diversity PDF Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications Vlassis 2012 pp 498 499 Governing bodies UNESCO Diversity of Cultural Expressions 15 February 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2023 Governance UNESCO 15 February 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2023 2005 Convention Art 24 Rules of Procedure of the Intergovernmental Committee Art 39 Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions UNESCO Retrieved 15 May 2023 UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee for the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions Report on the Results Achieved between 2010 and 2013 Following the Implementation of the Strategy to Encourage Ratification of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions Off CE 13 7 IGC 10 2013 p 2 online https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000224652 Aylett Holly July 2010 An international instrument for international cultural policy The challenge of UNESCO s Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions 2005 International Journal of Cultural Studies 13 4 369 doi 10 1177 1367877910369975 ISSN 1367 8779 Ivana Otasevic The emergence of an unwritten norm for the protection of cultural diversity in international law PhD thesis Quebec City Universite Laval defended 2018 p 111 Vlassis 2012 pp 493 496 Hahn 2007 p 232 Lazaroff Tovah 31 December 2018 Israel U S slated to leave UNESCO today to protest anti Israel bias The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 31 December 2018 Voon Claire 12 July 2023 The United States officially rejoins Unesco The Art Newspaper Retrieved 27 July 2023 Falk Pamela 11 July 2023 U S rejoins UNESCO It s a historic moment CBS News Retrieved 27 July 2023 Monitoring Framework UNESCO Retrieved 26 April 2023 UNESCO Framework for Monitoring the 2005 Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions online https en unesco org creativity sites creativity files 2018gmr framework en pdf accessed 11 January 2020 UNESCO Operational Guidelines Information Sharing and Transparency Conference of Parties 3rd sess 2011 revised at the 7th sess online https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000370521 page 37 2005 Convention art 28 2005 Convention Art 9 Operational Guidelines on Information Sharing and Transparency online https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000260710 page 36 2005 Convention Art 22 4 b Betzler Diana 17 May 2021 Implementing UNESCO s Convention on Cultural Diversity at the regional level Experiences from evaluating cultural competence centers International Journal of Cultural Property 27 4 524 doi 10 1017 S0940739121000059 ISSN 0940 7391 Singh 2015 p 38 Guevremont Veronique 2017 The Convention in other international forums a crucial commitment Re shaping cultural policies advancing creativity for development UNESCO p 143 ISBN 978 92 3 100256 4 Guevremont 2015 pp 147 148 Guevremont Veronique Preliminary reflection on the implementation of the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in the digital age PDF Quebec Universite Laval pp 2 18 19 Varin Clemence 2021 The contribution of international forums apart from UNESCO in achieving the objectives of the Convention on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in the digital environment In Beauregard Devin Paquette Jonathan eds Canadian cultural policy in transition First ed London Routledge ISBN 9781003134022 Anheier amp Hoelsche 2015 p 184 Turp 2013 p 397 Civil society change agent and cultural watchdog UNESCO August 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2020 Anheier amp Hoelsche 2015 pp 199 200 Anheier amp Hoelsche 2015 pp 188 189 Chairs UNESCO Diversity of Cultural Expressions 15 February 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2023 Al Khamees Omar A Yecies Brian Moore Christopher 2 November 2022 Cultural policy aspirations and the turn in Saudi Arabia s video game industry International Journal of Cultural Policy 1 14 doi 10 1080 10286632 2022 2135705 S2CID 253286030 Throsby David 4 March 2017 Culturally sustainable development theoretical concept or practical policy instrument International Journal of Cultural Policy 23 2 133 147 doi 10 1080 10286632 2017 1280788 S2CID 149418865 Hanania Lilian Richieri 7 August 2016 The UNESCO Convention on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions as a coordination framework to promote regulatory coherence in the creative economy International Journal of Cultural Policy 22 4 574 593 doi 10 1080 10286632 2015 1025068 ISSN 1028 6632 S2CID 214652409 Clammer 2015 p 113 Vickery Johnathan 19 January 2016 Book Review Globalization Culture and Development The UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity edited by Christiaan De Beukelaer Miikka Pyykkonen and J P Singh LSE Review of Books Retrieved 4 August 2023 Wiktor Mach Dobroslawa 24 October 2018 What role for culture in the age of sustainable development UNESCO s advocacy in the 2030 Agenda negotiations International Journal of Cultural Policy 26 3 312 327 doi 10 1080 10286632 2018 1534841 ISSN 1028 6632 S2CID 149625996 Duxbury Nancy Kangas Anita De Beukelaer Christiaan 28 February 2017 Cultural policies for sustainable development four strategic paths International Journal of Cultural Policy 23 2 214 230 doi 10 1080 10286632 2017 1280789 ISSN 1028 6632 S2CID 151387157 Lovrinic Barbara 2018 UNESCO Global Report Reshaping Cultural Policies Advancing Creativity for Development Croatian International Relations Review XXIV 82 134 137 Retrieved 12 May 2023 Sources Bernier Ivan May 2008 The UNESCO Convention on the Diversity of Cultural Expressions A Cultural Instrument at the Crossroads of Law and Policy PDF Quebec Chronique Ministere de la Culture et des Communications Beukelaer Christiaan Pyykkonen Miikka Singh J P eds 2015 Globalization culture and development the UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 39763 8 Anheier Helmut K Hoelsche Michael The 2005 UNESCO Convention and Civil Society An Initial Assessment In Beukelaer Pyykkonen amp Singh 2015 De Beukelaer Christiaan Pyykkonen Miikka Introduction UNESCO s Diversity Convention Ten Years on In Beukelaer Pyykkonen amp Singh 2015 Guevremont Veronique The 2005 Convention in the Digital Age In Beukelaer Pyykkonen amp Singh 2015 Singh J P Cultural Globalization and the Convention In Beukelaer Pyykkonen amp Singh 2015 Clammer John Cultural Diversity Global Change and Social Justice Contextualizing the 2005 Convention in a World in Flux In Beukelaer Pyykkonen amp Singh 2015 Hahn Michael 2007 The Convention on Cultural Diversity and International Economic Law Asian Journal of WTO amp International Health Law and Policy 2 2 SSRN 1019387 Neil Garry 2006 Policy Review Assessing the effectiveness of UNESCO s new Convention on cultural diversity Global Media and Communication 2 2 257 262 doi 10 1177 1742766506066278 ISSN 1742 7665 S2CID 146884655 Turp Daniel 2013 La Contribution Du Droit International Au Maintien de La Diversite Culturelle Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law in French Vol 363 Brill Reference Online Hanania Lilian Richieri Norodom Anne Thida eds 2016 Diversite des expressions culturelles a l ere du numerique in French Buenos Aires Teseopress doi 10 55778 ts096909001 ISBN 979 10 96909 00 1 S2CID 252803309 Theoret Yves ed 2008 David contre Goliath la Convention sur la protection et la promotion de la diversite des expressions culturelles de l UNESCO in French Montreal Hurtubise HMH OCLC 1319339094 Theoret Yves 2008a Petite histoire de la reconnaissance de la diversite des expressions culturelles In Theoret 2008 George Eric La politique de contenu canadien a l ere de la diversite culturelle dans le contexte de la mondialisation In Theoret 2008 Vlassis Antonios 5 January 2012 La mise en oeuvre de la Convention sur la diversite des expressions culturelles Portee et enjeux de l interface entre le commerce et la culture Etudes internationales in French 42 4 493 510 doi 10 7202 1007552ar Further readingBarreiro Carril Beatriz Jakubowski Andrzej Lixinski Lucas eds 2023 15 Years of the UNESCO Diversity of Cultural Expressions Convention Actors Processes and Impact Hart Publishing doi 10 5040 9781509961474 ISBN 978 1 50996 147 4 S2CID 257242641 Garner B O Connor J 23 December 2019 Rip it up and start again The contemporary relevance of the 2005 UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity The Journal of Law Social Justice and Global Development 24 8 23 doi 10 31273 LGD 2019 2401 S2CID 213154050 Schorlemer Sabine Stoll Peter Tobias eds 2012 The UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions explanatory notes Berlin Springer ISBN 978 3 642 25995 1 External linksConvention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions full text list of parties and documents from the Conference of Parties and the Intergovernmental Committee Texts in all official languages plus Operational Guidelines Procedural history and related documents on the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in the Historic Archives of the United Nations Audiovisual Library of International Law