Difference between revisions of "Forum of Slavic Cultures International Foundation"

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{{Teaser|
 
{{Teaser|
The initiative to set up the [[Forum of Slavic Culture International Foundation|Forum of Slavic Cultures]] was presented for the first time during the Bush-Putin Summit at Brdo pri Kranju in June 2001. The Forum of Slavic Cultures is an international institution established in [[established::2004]] as a legal entity of private law. In 2005 the Republic of Slovenia decided that all responsibilities of the [[Ministry of Culture]] regarding the organisation and operation of the Forum of Slavic Cultures should be transferred to the [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs]].  
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The initiative to set up the [[Forum of Slavic Culture International Foundation|Forum of Slavic Cultures]] was presented for the first time during the Bush-Putin Summit at Brdo pri Kranju in June 2001. The Forum of Slavic Cultures is an international institution established in [[established::2004]] as a legal entity of private law ("ustanova"). In 2005 the Republic of Slovenia decided that all responsibilities of the [[Ministry of Culture]] regarding the organisation and operation of the Forum of Slavic Cultures should be transferred to the [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs]].  
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==Mission and membership==
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The Forum aims to preserve and develop cultural values, traditions and contents shared by Slavic-speaking countries. To this end it promotes co-operation among these countries in the cultural, educational and scientific spheres, develops cultural exchanges, organises meetings and provides for the design of joint projects. Achievements in these spheres are presented to the broad international public. The Slovene EU Presidency of 2008 provided a unique opportunity to present the Forum and the achievements of its members to a broad European public.
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Members of the Forum include Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, the Russian Federation, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, and the Ukraine. The Czech Republic and Poland hold observer status
  
Members of the Forum include Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, the Russian Federation, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, and the Ukraine. The Czech Republic and Poland hold observer status. }}
 
 
In keeping with the standing statute of the Forum, each member country names one member of the Board as well as its own Programme Council (PC). The number of Council members is not limited, however, no more than three members per country can co-operate internationally or take part in international meetings.
 
In keeping with the standing statute of the Forum, each member country names one member of the Board as well as its own Programme Council (PC). The number of Council members is not limited, however, no more than three members per country can co-operate internationally or take part in international meetings.
  
The Forum aims to preserve and develop cultural values, traditions and contents shared by Slavic-speaking countries. To this end it promotes co-operation among these countries in the cultural, educational and scientific spheres, develops cultural exchanges, organises meetings and provides for the design of joint projects. Achievements in these spheres are presented to the broad international public. The Slovene EU Presidency of 2008 provided a unique opportunity to present the Forum and the achievements of its members to a broad European public.
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==Project support==
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The Forum of Slavic Cultures runs three major projects. The ''100 Slavic Novels'' collection is managed by the [[Slovene Writers’ Association]] and involves multilateral translations of 10 novels, selected by each member country. The first three Slovenian translations were: ''The Geographer Drank Away the Globe'' by Aleksej Ivanov, ''The First Second Coming'' by Aleksej Slapovski and a Macedonian novel ''Alphabet For the Disobedient'' by Venko Andonovski.
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The second major project is ''Slavic Heritage'' which fosters exhibition exchanges and the festivals dedicated to film (the Slavic Film Festival) and literature (the Slavic Bridge Festival and the [[Fabula Festival of Stories]]) while the third part of the programme is dedicated to ''Youth Exchange''.
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During 2009 the Forum of Slavic Cultures supported also some small-scale projects in Slovenia. The support was granted for the publishing of [[Studia Mythologica Slavica]] and a number of smaller international projects, e.g. a poetry translation workshop Golden Boat in Škocjan, Tomaj and Ljubljana, two international symposia in Ljubljana (''Rearticulation – the Law of Capital: History of Oppression'', ''Experimental Theatre Space in Central Europe''), a touring of the performance ''Atelier'' by Bara Kolenc, etc.
  
==Programme==
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In October 2009 the Forum supported participation of representatives of Bulgaria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Ukraine at the international symposium entitled ''1989-2009: Religion and the Turnaround in East Central and Southeast Europe' organised by [[Slovenian Scientific Institute in Vienna]].
The Forum of Slavic Cultures runs three major projects: The ''100 Slavic Novels'' collection is managed by the [[Slovene Writers’ Association]] and involves multilateral translations of 10 novels, selected by each member country. ''Slavic Heritage'' fosters exhibition exchanges and the festivals dedicated to film (the Slavic Film Festival) and literature (the Slavic Bridge Festival and the [[Fabula Festival of Stories]]); the third part of the programme is dedicated to ''Youth Exchange''.
 
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 15:45, 14 February 2010




Contact

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Mednarodna ustanova Forum slovanskih kultur
Grajska cesta 1, SI-1234 Loka pri Mengšu


Phone386 (0) 1 530 0664
LocationJablje Castle
Past Events
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The initiative to set up the Forum of Slavic Cultures was presented for the first time during the Bush-Putin Summit at Brdo pri Kranju in June 2001. The Forum of Slavic Cultures is an international institution established in 2004 as a legal entity of private law ("ustanova"). In 2005 the Republic of Slovenia decided that all responsibilities of the Ministry of Culture regarding the organisation and operation of the Forum of Slavic Cultures should be transferred to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.


Mission and membership

The Forum aims to preserve and develop cultural values, traditions and contents shared by Slavic-speaking countries. To this end it promotes co-operation among these countries in the cultural, educational and scientific spheres, develops cultural exchanges, organises meetings and provides for the design of joint projects. Achievements in these spheres are presented to the broad international public. The Slovene EU Presidency of 2008 provided a unique opportunity to present the Forum and the achievements of its members to a broad European public.

Members of the Forum include Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, the Russian Federation, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, and the Ukraine. The Czech Republic and Poland hold observer status

In keeping with the standing statute of the Forum, each member country names one member of the Board as well as its own Programme Council (PC). The number of Council members is not limited, however, no more than three members per country can co-operate internationally or take part in international meetings.

Project support

The Forum of Slavic Cultures runs three major projects. The 100 Slavic Novels collection is managed by the Slovene Writers’ Association and involves multilateral translations of 10 novels, selected by each member country. The first three Slovenian translations were: The Geographer Drank Away the Globe by Aleksej Ivanov, The First Second Coming by Aleksej Slapovski and a Macedonian novel Alphabet For the Disobedient by Venko Andonovski.

The second major project is Slavic Heritage which fosters exhibition exchanges and the festivals dedicated to film (the Slavic Film Festival) and literature (the Slavic Bridge Festival and the Fabula Festival of Stories) while the third part of the programme is dedicated to Youth Exchange.

During 2009 the Forum of Slavic Cultures supported also some small-scale projects in Slovenia. The support was granted for the publishing of Studia Mythologica Slavica and a number of smaller international projects, e.g. a poetry translation workshop Golden Boat in Škocjan, Tomaj and Ljubljana, two international symposia in Ljubljana (Rearticulation – the Law of Capital: History of Oppression, Experimental Theatre Space in Central Europe), a touring of the performance Atelier by Bara Kolenc, etc.

In October 2009 the Forum supported participation of representatives of Bulgaria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Ukraine at the international symposium entitled 1989-2009: Religion and the Turnaround in East Central and Southeast Europe' organised by Slovenian Scientific Institute in Vienna.

See also

External links

Mednarodna ustanova Forum slovanskih kultur +
46.049 +
Mednarodna ustanova Forum slovanskih kultur +
14.506 +
SI-1000 Ljubljana +
Cesta 27. aprila 47 +
The initiative to set up the Forum of Slavic Cultures was presented for the first time during the Bush-Putin Summit at Brdo pri Kranju in June 2001. +
The initiative to set up the Forum of Slavic Cultures was presented for the first time during the Bush-Putin Summit at Brdo pri Kranju in June 2001. +
+386 / 8 205 2800, 386 / 40 814 421 +
Ljubljana +
SI-1000 +
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