Slovenia National Commission for UNESCO

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Slovenska nacionalna komisija za UNESCO
Kotnikova 38, SI-1000 Ljubljana
Phone386 (0) 1 478 4799




UNESCO has a National Commission in each Member State, comprising eminent members of the intellectual and scientific communities and forming the essential link between those communities and UNESCO, helping each Member States to take maximum advantage of their adhesion to the organisation. Slovenia joined UNESCO on 27 May 1992.


Educational programmes

The Commission has been actively participating in the UNESCO's educational programmes which have a broader, more basic and global scope providing for lifelong learning and ‘education for all’. The Associated Schools Project Network (ASP) is active within the framework of the Commission and includes 29 institutions, among them 18 elementary schools and nine secondary schools. The schools take part in international projects and every year a one-week international meeting is held in Piran. A brochure has been published by UNESCO and sent to all the countries.

World Heritage programmes

The Commission is also active in the field of heritage programmes. The Škocjan Caves World Heritage Site, one of the most famous sites in the world for the study of karst (limestone) phenomena, was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1986. Other Slovene properties submitted on the tentative list include Classic Karst (1994), the Fužina Hills in Bohinj (1994), the Franja Partisan Hospital (2000) and Idrija on the "Mercury Route of the Intercontinental Camino Real" (2007). In 2010 the two remains of prehistoric pile dwellings from the Ljubljansko Barje marshlands were selected to become part of the transnational heritage site "Prehistoric Pile Dwellings around the Alps".

Funding

In 2010 Municipality of Ljubljana took over the prestigious World Book Capital UNESCO title.

In 2008 the National Commission included the 500th anniversary of the founder of the literary Slovene language and leader of the Protestant Reformation movement in Slovenia Primož Trubar's birthday on the world's anniversaries list.

UNESCO supported also the Crossradio multicultural radio station network (2001–2009), which included Radio Študent (RŠ) and Mariborski radio Študent (MARŠ) from Slovenia along with independent radio stations from Banja Luka, Belgrade, Mostar, Novi Sad, Sarajevo, Sombor, Skopje, Zrenjanin, Zuerich and Basel. Each week one of these stations contributed a half-hour programme which was broadcast by all members of the network. The aim of the project was to help reduce distrust and tension between the different cultures in South East Europe, to encourage cultural dialogue and to promote the plurality of media while supporting freedom of expression.

See also

External links

Slovenska nacionalna komisija za UNESCO +
Slovenska nacionalna komisija za UNESCO +
SI-1000 Ljubljana +
Kotnikova 38 +
UNESCO has a National Commission in each MUNESCO has a National Commission in each Member State, comprising eminent members of the intellectual and scientific communities and forming the essential link between those communities and UNESCO, helping each Member States to take maximum advantage of their adhesion to the organisation.age of their adhesion to the organisation. +
UNESCO has a National Commission in each MUNESCO has a National Commission in each Member State, comprising eminent members of the intellectual and scientific communities and forming the essential link between those communities and UNESCO, helping each Member States to take maximum advantage of their adhesion to the organisation.age of their adhesion to the organisation. +
+386 / 1 478 4799 +
Ljubljana +
SI-1000 +
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