The idea of a World Cultural Forum was thrown
during a major consultative meeting called by
the Ford Foundation in New York, in July 2000.
One year later, a second consultative meeting
with an even larger participation was called by
the Ford Foundation, the Texaco Foundation - USA,
the Prince Klaus Fund - Holland, and the Prince
of Astoria - Spain, during which the conceptual
bases were set for the development of the World
Cultural Forum.
The proposal to organize a World Cultural Forum
in the city of São Paulo was presented
during the III Cultural Market, in December 2001,
in Bahia, where, the following year, the I General
Meeting of the Forum Organizers was held, during
which the concept and structure of the World Cultural
Forum were presented.
In 2002, various meetings were held with the State Ministers
and high authorities specialized in the field of culture,
as well as institutes, foundations, and private companies
of Brazil and from all over the world, besides the Secretariats
for Culture, and civil society organizations of various
parts of the world.
In April 2003, a partnership with the City Secretariat
for Culture of São Paulo, the SESC-SP [Social
Trade Service], the Rede Brasil de Promotores
Culturais, and the Ministry for Culture, besides
the Instituto Cultural Casa Via Magia [Cultural
Institute] enabled the launching in São
Paulo of the World Cultural Forum. The event also
gave the opportunity to release folders, postcards;
and the site of the event went on air.
In 1998, the UNESCO organized the Intergovernmental
Conference On The Cultural Policies for Development
in Stockholm. This meeting enabled to set a wide
array of recommendations* for the country members,
which may be summarized as follows: to make cultural
policies become one of the key elements of the
development strategy; to promote creativity, and
participation in cultural life; to reinforce,
ensure, and expand the policy on the protection
of cultural patrimony, tangible and intangible,
movable and immovable, and to promote the cultural
industry; to supply information on cultural and
linguistic diversity within the communities, and
to society as a whole; to further more technical
and financial means for the development of culture.
* Final Report - Intergovernmental Conference
on Cultural Policies for Development, 30 March
- 2 April, 1998
CLT-98/Conf.210/5, 31 of August 1998, Original:
English
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