About

Agenda 21 for culture has accumulated 15 years of practices and specific experiences. We have worked on capitalizing experiences to create, among other things, a database which we call “good practices” in the area of culture and local sustainable development. The projects presented here have been selected from a set of criteria, and indexed according to different parameters explained and detailed below.

The indexation tool

This database relates to 3 different kinds of indexation parameters which are also searching tags:

SDGs

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development was adopted at the United Nations in 2015 and will provide guidance for development policies around the world for 15 years. It includes 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and 169 specific targets. Cultural aspects play a pivotal role for the 2030 Agenda to be successful – as the examples in this database demonstrate, culture can be linked to most development themes.

CULTURE 21 ACTIONS

Culture 21 Actions is a key guiding document on culture and cities. It highlights the interdependent relationship between people, culture and sustainable development. Very practical and useful, it promotes 9 commitments (or ‘themes’) and 100 actions. It is being used by cities all over the world. More information can be found here.

KEYWORDS

The Committee on Culture of UCLG elaborated a list of keywords which can be used to describe, classify and define good practices in the local implementation of the Agenda 21 for culture and Culture 21 Actions. This list includes 75 keywords, addressing all areas of culture, cultural policies and sustainable cities.

Selection criteria for good practices

Culture plays a constitutive role in the sustainable development of cities and territories.Culture is both an end and a means. As an end, culture is a driver of the sustainable development of cities, a source of meaning and vitality for citizens, a source of creativity and innovation as well as the key to human development. As a means, culture is an enabler of sustainability thanks to its specific contributions to promoting social equity, inclusive economic progress and environmental balance.

Culture, which we consider the fourth pillar or dimension of sustainable development, encompasses heritage, creativity, diversity and the transmission of knowledge. Culture is intrinsically linked to human rights. Culture has a close relationship with identity, community, education, citizenship, participation and local governance.

The criteria that we have used to select the good practices are the following.

INNOVATION

The innovative nature of a project facilitates adopting a different approach from conventional approaches in which the ins and outs are known. It takes us from a narrow reflection on a particular problem to a broader reflection which considers more aspects and dimensions. Innovation refers to both contents and topics for development projects as well as processes and methodologies.

PARTICIPATION

Involvement and participation of citizens in cultural projects is paramount. It is essential for the final recipient of a cultural development project to be an actor from the beginning to the end of the project. Only the mobilization of bottom-up expertise (user / inhabitant / citizen) enables true appropriation of cultural projects.

SUSTAINABILITY

Local development cannot be conceived of without a sustainable and lasting dimension. Development projects and policies must be designed over time, in the short, medium and long term. This both allows the actions and decisions to be included in global dynamics and to be able to constantly readapt methodological practices and strategic thinking in regard to policies.

EFFICIENCY

The criterion of efficiency is in regard to the production of one or more positive, tangible and intangible impact(s) on the territories and on the populations. The effects of a cultural development project or policy must be measurable in terms of objectives determined by initially established diagnostics.

TRANSVERSALITY

The adoption of a transversal approach to a problem may combine different issues with different methodologies and different actors of society. Transversality thus favors the co-construction and co-implementation of cultural projects and includes them in the dynamics of exchange and shared responsibility.

REPRODUCIBILITY

Local development projects, actions and policies must be at least partially reproducible or transferable. Fully explaining contexts is essential to understand a good practice and for this reproducibility to be possible.

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