CCA Bulletin 02/07
Ottawa, January
24 2007
UNESCO
Cultural Diversity Convention set to be implemented
Just the facts
The
UNESCO Convention on the protection and promotion of the
diversity of cultural expressions will come into force
on March 18, 2007. This is the latest stage in a remarkable
campaign and process in which the Canadian Conference of the
Arts (CCA) has been an important player. The CCA celebrates
this historic achievement and Canada's international leadership,
and congratulates all those from the Canadian arts and culture
community who have been instrumental in this effort.
When
12 member countries of the European Union and the European
Commission deposited their instruments of ratification with
UNESCO on December 18 2006, the necessary minimum number
of countries had been achieved to ensure the Convention will
come into force in 2007. Canada, which had played a leading
role in this file, was the first country to ratify the Convention
in late November 2005. The threshold was reached only 14 months
after the Convention was adopted by UNESCO, remarkably quick
for a legally-binding international treaty.
The
coming into force of the new Convention is only the next milestone
in a long process and the CCA will continue to play an active
part. While some commentators feel the obligations on member
states under the Convention are inadequate to make it an effective
shield against trade and investment agreements, everyone agrees
the Convention must be supported as an important political
instrument that can make a difference. Campaigns are underway
to urge more countries to sign onto the Convention, since
its impact will increase in direct proportion to the number
of signatory countries. How the Convention is implemented
by UNESCO will also go a long way to determining how effective
it will be in achieving the objectives, and the Convention's
supporters have begun working on these issues.
For
more background, and analysis of the Convention and its potential,
please see www.incd.net,
www.cdc-ccd.org and
www.unesco.org.
Tell me more
CCA's
role in the process stretches back to October 1997 when it
released a significant study on the potential consequences
for Canada's cultural policies of the proposed Multilateral
Agreement on Investment (MAI). The report pointed out
that France's proposal for a “cultural exception” would have
offered only a partial protection. In Canada, debates around
the MAI and contemporary trade negotiations led many to conclude
that the “cultural exception” approach was inadequate. From
these discussions, the concept emerged that what was needed
was a new international instrument that would confirm the
sovereign right of states to implement policies to promote
their own cultures and write appropriate rules for trade in
cultural goods and services.
In
June 1998, CCA conve ned the At Home in the World conference
where delegates from a number of countries decided that civil
society organizations needed to work together to respond to
the adverse affects of economic globalization on cultures.
One of the outcomes of this meeting was the launch of the
organization that became the International
Network for Cultural Diversity (INCD). CCA members and
the Secretariat were heavily involved in the early days of
the INCD and Canadian delegates were by far the most numerous
at the September 2000 founding meeting of INCD, which endorsed
the concept of the Convention. In many presentations the CCA
has made in the current decade, it has urged Canadian governments
and civil society to support the Convention.
The
CCA and many of its important members have also been active
participants in Canada's Coalition
for Cultural Diversity (CCD), especially since it decided
in late 1999 to expand its scope beyond its initial membership
base in Québec. The CCD has helped to build coalitions
in many others countries and they have played an important
role in building support for the Convention, both domestically
and internationally.
From
1999 until just this past December, the CCA hosted the international
headquarters of the INCD. CCA regrets that the Department
of Canadian Heritage announced in October 2006 that it would
no longer provide funds for INCD in the current fiscal year
which started on April 01.
A Few Loose
Ends to Tie Up From Late 2006…
On
the 13 th of December of last year the Minister of Canadian
Heritage, the Hon. Bev Oda, confirmed
that Canada Post will maintain its $15 million contribution
to support Canadian magazines and community newspapers through
the Publications Assistance Program until
2009. The Publications Assistance Program, administered by
Canadian Heritage in cooperation with Canada Post Corporation,
subsidizes mailing costs of over 1200 Canadian magazines and
non-daily newspapers.
The
full
announcement also says that, “During
the period of funding stability for Canadian periodical publishers
resulting from this action, the Department of Canadian Heritage
will examine its current periodical policies and programs
to arrive at long-term solutions.”
Finally,
the program eligibility for the Government of Canada's new
Children's
Fitness Tax Credit took effect on January 1st. Dedicated readers of the Canadian Conference of the Arts'
Bulletins will recall that the CCA intervened
on this front when the Expert Panel was holding its consultations
this past autumn.
We
remain disappointed, however, that with the exception of some
forms of dance activities involving cardiovascular exercise,
the parents of the many young Canadians involved in culture
activities will not be eligible for this modest tax break,
which will amount to a $78.50 tax rebate for each application
meeting Revenue Canada's criteria. It is estimated that the
Children's Fitness Tax Credit will cost $ 160 M in lost revenue
per year to the federal Treasury, almost the equivalent of
the budget of the Canada Council.
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