Portal de la Cultura de América Latina y el Caribe
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CELAC Special Declaration on Small Island Developing States. II Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), on 28 and 29 January 2014.


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CELAC.
Article. Culture & Development No. 11. The Heads of State and Government of the Latin America and the Caribbean States gathered in Havana, Cuba, on the occasion of the II Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), on 28 and 29 January 2014, recognized the particular vulnerabilities of Small Island Developing States (SIDS).
CELAC Special Declaration on Culture as a Promoter of Human Development. II Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), on 28 and 29 January 2014.


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CELAC.
Article. Culture & Development No. 11. The Heads of State and Government of the Latin America and the Caribbean States gathered in Havana, Cuba, on the occasion of the II Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), on 28 and 29 January 2014, recognized the importance of culture for the sustainable development of all Member States.
Cultura e desenvolvimento: a experiência brasileira em um contexto globalizado.


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Marta Suplicy, Senhora Ministra de Estado da Cultura.
Artículo. Revista Cultura y Desarrollo No. 9.
Como decorrência de uma nova e profunda reorientação na formulação de política social, o Brasil construiu uma coleção de marcos legais que constitui uma “caixa de ferramentas” para a gestão da cultura. Estas ferramentas foram desenvolvidas sob a égide de três importantes dimensões, que sobrepostas constituem o eixo norteador das políticas culturais atualmente empreendidas pelo Ministério da Cultura: a dimensão simbólica, que amplia o conceito de cultura numa visão antropológica; a dimensão cidadã, que consiste no reconhecimento do acesso à cultura como um direito e no envolvimento e corresponsabilização da sociedade civil na formulação das políticas e na sua gestão; e a dimensão econômica, em que se inscreve o potencial da cultura como vetor de desenvolvimento.
The Value of Works of Art.


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Luis Manuel Almeida Luis. Head of the Department of Registration and Inventory at the National Register of Cultural.
Article. Culture & Development No. 10.
Following the updating of the Cuban economic model, the category of value of a work of art will adopt new scope and recognition on the island, both economically and socially, and will become a book asset, requiring strict control by accounting departments.
Traffic After Disasters.


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Michéle Frisch. General Director of Musée du Panthéon National Haïtien (MUPANAH).
Article. Culture & Development No. 10.
The earthquake that struck Haiti in 2010 significantly increased the risk of illicit trafficking in cultural property. Whether it is museums, public buildings, private collections or objects belonging to individuals or families, this heritage was faced, more than ever, with a situation of vulnerability and defencelessness vis-à-vis plundering, theft and destruction.
Specialized Meetings in the Southern Cone.

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Frédéric Vacheron. Programme Specialist for Culture, UNESCO Office in Montevideo.
Article. Culture & Development No. 10.
Southern Cone countries have an enormous heritage wealth that is exposed to looting and trafficking. With the exception of Chile, all countries in the region have ratified the 1970 Convention, that is, the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property.
Peru in Egypt.


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Blanca Alva Guerrero. General Director, Cultural Heritage Protection. Ministry of Culture of Peru.
Article. Culture & Development No. 10.
In May 2005, the Republic of Peru and the Arab Republic of Egypt signed an agreement for the protection and restitution of stolen or illicitly transferred assets, shortly after having penned the 1970 and 1972 UNESCO Conventions as well as the 1995 UNIDROIT Convention. Under this agreement, the two countries undertook to prohibit and prevent from entering their territories any cultural, archaeological, artistic and/or historical assets resulting from theft, illegal trafficking or illicit export and transfer.
Four Tons of Fossils.


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Marcelo Daniel El Haibe. Chief Commissioner, Division of Cultural Heritage, INTERPOL - Argentina.
Article. Culture & Development No. 10.
On February 10, 2006, the National Centre for Cultural Heritage Protection received an anonymous call from the United States of America. The person on the phone advised that an international fair of palaeontology was being held at a hotel under the Howard Johnson Chain in the city of Tucson, Arizona. At the event, Rhodo Co. was offering for sale a large number of fossils of animal and plant origin which, as was indicated in the stand, were from Argentina.
Recommendations for the Caribbean.


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Tatiana Villegas. Assistant Programme Specialist. UNESCO Regional Office for Culture in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Article. Culture & Development No. 10.
On the occasion of the 42nd anniversary of the 1970 Convention, the UNESCO Regional Office for Culture for Latin America and the Caribbean of and the Saint Lucia National Commission for UNESCO, agreed to organize a regional workshop entitled “Sub-regional Capacity Building and Awareness Raising Programme to enable Caribbean Member States to effectively fight illicit trafficking in Cultural Property”. This activity was part of a UNESCO Capacity Building Program worldwide financed by the Director General Emergency Fund and also received additional funds from the UNESCO Havana Regular Program and from the Ministry of Culture and Education of the Netherlands.
Prevention of Illicit Trafficking of the Underwater Heritage.


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Tatiana Villegas. Assistant Programme Specialist, UNESCO Regional Office for Culture in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Article. Culture & Development No. 10.
The 2001 Convention establishes the basic principles for the protection of the underwater cultural heritage, provides a specific system for cooperation among States and a reporting and coordination mechanism that facilitates the management of this protection by the States Parties, and formulates practical rules for worldwide recognition, intended for archaeologists and cultural managers in the identification, protection and preservation of submerged remains.
   
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