Submission - Ratification of 2005 UNESCO Convention on the Protection & Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions (2008)
Ratification of 2005 UNESCO Convention on the Protection & Promotion of
	    the Diversity of Cultural Expressions 
		  黑料情报站
Submission to the Department of Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts
5 November 2008
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
		  Level 8, 133    Castlereagh St 
		  GPO Box   5218 
		  Sydney NSW 2001
		  Ph. (02) 9284 9600
Table
		  of Contents
	      1	Introduction 
        
- 
The Australian Human Rights and Commission (the Commission) makes this 
 submission to the Department of Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts
 (DEWHA) in its inquiry into the ratification of the 2005 UNESCO Convention on
 the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions.
- 
This submission is written in response to an e-mailed invitation from Jane 
 Carter from DEWHA, and received on 30 September 2008, in which the Commission
 was invited to submit comments on policy, resourcing, infrastructure and
 opportunities associated with Australia鈥檚 proposed ratification of the
 2005 UNESCO Convention.
- 
The Commission wishes to acknowledge the expert advice of Professor 
 Amareswar Galla, UNESCO Chair in Museums and Sustainable Heritage Development at
 the University of Queensland, and Professor Gary Bouma, UNESCO Chair in
 Interreligious and Intercultural Relations - Asia Pacific, in preparing this
 submission.
- 
The Commission acknowledges that Australia provides significant leadership 
 for international instruments dealing with the cultural domain, both 鈥榟ard
 law鈥 (treaties and conventions) and 鈥榮oft law鈥 (resolutions,
 recommendations, charters and declarations).
- 
The Commission notes that there are seven binding UNESCO conventions 
 relating to culture. This includes The Hague Convention for the Protection of
 Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict (1954), and its two protocols
 and related instruments such as Protocol 1 to the Geneva Convention and
 contemporary tribunals which enforce them.
- 
The Commission notes there are seven binding UNESCO conventions relating to 
 culture, but the most significant - the 鈥渢hree pillars鈥 as described
 by UNESCO itself ()
 鈥 which protect and promote cultural diversity, are:- 
the Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural 
 Heritage (1972)
- 
the Convention Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage (2003), and 
- 
the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural 
 Expressions (2005).
 Australia has ratified the first 
 four of these seven conventions, but has not ratified the Convention on the
 Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage (2001).
- 
- 
At the time of lodging this submission, the Commission understands the 
 Government is still considering whether it should ratify the intangible cultural
 heritage convention; it is also considering whether it will ratify the
 Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples 鈥 another important
 international treaty 鈥
 and has signalled its intention to ratify the Convention on the 
 Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions (2005).
- 
The 黑料情报站 sent a submission to DEWHA on 24 
 September 2008 strongly endorsing that Australia does ratify the 2003 convention
 dealing with intangible cultural heritage. The Commission is of the view that if
 Australia is to have a consistent approach to culture and heritage, it must
 ratify all seven of the relevant UNESCO conventions.
- 
In anticipation of the Government ratifying the 2003 and 2005 conventions, 
 the Commission would like to acknowledge the importance of this decision,
 particularly at a time when the international financial system is under severe
 stress. This crisis highlights the global inter-connectedness of human
 activities and reminds us that such inter-reliance, generally, is not just a
 weakness but can be a strength. Commitment to the principles contained in the
 cultural diversity conventions will have the effect of harnessing the
 opportunities of globalisation as well as assisting the achievement of
 UNESCO鈥檚 goal of a world that is simultaneously harmonised, yet diverse.
2 Recommendation
- 
As argued below, the 黑料情报站 supports: 
- 
the ratification of the 2005 UNESCO Convention; 
- 
the language used in the draft reservations associated with articles 16 and 
 20, as included in Jane Carter鈥檚 email to the Commission; and
- 
that the Commission be integral to the policy, planning, legislation and 
 monitoring associated with ratification of this, and the other United Nations
 treaties, currently being considered by government.
 3	Significance of
          the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural
          Expressions
- 
The 黑料情报站, through its charter, aspires to 
 ensure that Australians of all cultural backgrounds (irrespective of linguistic,
 racial, ethnic, religious or cultural diversity) enjoy certain basic rights.
 While the Commission supports ratification of the Convention with respect to all
 Australians, it notes that the Convention is intended to particularly address
 issues for minorities and indigenous peoples.
- 
The 黑料情报站 also notes that this Convention is 
 framed clearly as a human rights treaty. This is significant for a number of
 reasons. It:- 
places rights to cultural practice and preservation as a human right, but 
 one that is also linked to sustainable development
 
- 
links support for domestic and international cultural activities as both a 
 human right and a human development issue, hence associating this with
 international co-operation and foreign aid. It also establishes an integrated
 approach to these issues, helping to contribute towards a global culture of
 peace (which has implications for national and international security)
- 
has wider implications for how Australia deals with its own: - 
cultural diversity 
- 
support and maintenance of multicultural policies and programs 
- 
funding of its public broadcasters (the Special Broadcasting 
 Service and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation), and
- 
national cultural institutions and how they reflect the diversity 
 of cultural expressions in their acquisitions, public access, collections,
 curation, exhibition, design, education, communications, community engagement
 and policies.
 
- 
 
- 
- 
The Commission wishes to emphasise that, in many regards, the 2005 UNESCO 
 Convention complements the 2003 intangible cultural heritage convention with the
 two designed to work in tandem. Again, it notes the importance of also ratifying
 this other treaty which pertains to culture, and to develop a whole-of-cultural
 suite-of-conventions approach, to ensure maximum public access, as well as to
 ensure there are economies of scale in their implementation.
- 
The Commission notes with concern the lack of cooperation and coordination 
 at the implementation level when dealing with international cultural
 instruments, especially when working with Indigenous and culturally and
 linguistically diverse communities in Australia.
 4	The
          Commission and its understanding of the human rights dimensions of the 2005
          UNESCO Convention 
- 
The Convention clearly articulates that it is a human rights instrument in a 
 number of articles, including:
- 
the preamble, which states 鈥淐elebrating the importance of cultural 
 diversity for the full realisation of human rights and fundamental freedoms
 proclaimed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other universally
 recognised instruments... (and)... the importance and vitality of cultures,
 including for persons belonging to minorities and indigenous peoples, as
 manifested in their freedoms to create, disseminate and distribute their
 traditional cultural expressions and to have access thereto, so as to benefit
 them for their own development.鈥
- 
Article 2 (Guiding Principles) emphasises (1) the principle of respect for 
 human rights and fundamental freedoms. The Convention states that cultural
 diversity can only be protected and promoted if those human rights such as
 freedom of expression, information and communication, as well the ability to
 choose cultural expressions, are guaranteed. At (3) the
 
- 
Article 5 (General rule regarding rights and obligations) states that the 
 parties to the Convention 鈥... in conformity with the Charter of the
 United Nations, the principles of international law and universally recognised
 human rights instruments...鈥 will work to achieve the purposes of the
 Convention.
Convention states that it presupposes the equal dignity
of, and respect for, all cultures, including those of minorities and indigenous
peoples. Elsewhere under this article (for example, Article 5) other human
rights, such as economic and cultural rights are referenced.
- 
These three references set the overall context for the Convention, 
 therefore, making it clear that it is a human rights treaty.
- 
The 鈥減rotection and promotion of the diversity of cultural 
 expressions鈥 is:- 
understood to mean all cultural expressions (tangible, intangible, moveable 
 and immoveable) and the relationships between culture, trade and economics. In
 particular, it refers to those most at risk, particularly those of minorities
 and Indigenous peoples. As explained by UNESCO, 鈥榩rotection鈥 refers
 to the preservation, safeguarding and enhancement of culture, and
 鈥榩romotion鈥 refers to the need to 鈥渒eep alive cultural
 expressions imperilled by the quickening pace of globalisation鈥 (see: )
- 
of significance to Australia because of its particular set of cultural 
 heritages: First Nations, diaspora, and colonial (many of which are in need of
 protection and promotion), as well as mainstream, and the consequent social,
 economic and cultural implications
- 
of importance to international cultural, human development, human rights, 
 inter-cultural and inter-religious dialogue, and security issues because of its
 emphasis on cultural diversity as a means of 鈥渉umanising
 globalisation鈥 and promoting a culture of peace.
 
- 
- 
As noted in the UNESCO Universal Declaration of Cultural Diversity (2001), 
 culture is the shared heritage of all humanity; it is the mainspring and a
 guarantee for continuing human creativity; and, it must be understood as
 inextricably linked to ecological sustainability, economic development as a
 process of human development, and human rights.
- 
At a time, therefore, of international concern about the effects of 
 human-made climate change; of the (so-called) 鈥榗lash of
 civilizations鈥; the negative impacts of globalisation and various
 international trading and financing agreements (which have often negatively
 impacted upon developing nations and their cultural and ecological heritages
 most severely), this Convention is an important international treaty that will
 assist Australia to combat challenges to human survival, as well as threats to
 its own economic integrity and cultural assets.
- 
While the larger matrix of ecological, social, technological, economic and 
 political relationships is too complex, too multi-faceted and nuanced to be
 reduced to the simple formula of the Convention, the Commission 
 recognises that the diversity of cultural expressions is under threat from a
 number of fronts, including:- 
the accelerated pace of globalisation in all its facets 
- 
cultural homogenisation, colonisation and mono-culturalism 
- 
the impacts of technological change 
- 
climate change 
- 
(particularly in Australia) the lack, in recent years, of the policies, 
 funding and leadership required by governments and national cultural
 institutions to protect and promote cultural diversity, and
- 
lack appropriate strategies to build capacity to safeguard cultural 
 diversity.
 
- 
- 
For these reasons, let alone the important human rights factors, the 
 Commission believes this Convention is critical and the Australian government
 should be commended for agreeing to its ratification.
- 
The Commission also notes that as of early October 2008 there were 91 state 
 parties to the Convention including Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and
 Ireland, most countries of the European Union, China and India. Others (such as
 Belgium) are also in the process of preparing for ratification.
- 
The Commission would like to underline the significance of this ratification 
 of the 2005 UNESCO Convention by these countries, many of which are the source
 countries for Australian immigrant populations and their descendants. There are
 transplanted and transformed cultural expressions from these sources that are
 unique and should be considered for safeguarding as part of the cultural
 diversity of diaspora populations.
 5	Benefits to
          Australia of ratification 
- 
Ratification of the Convention will provide an important international 
 statement about Australia鈥檚 commitment to the arts, Indigenous
 Australians, its immigrant communities, cultural diversity and human rights,
 foreign aid and international co-operation. It will be an historically
 progressive legacy of the Rudd government. Additional benefits are outlined
 below.
 5.1	Protecting
          and promoting the diversity of cultural expressions as an essential human
          right
- 
Australian ratification of the Convention will help to both preserve our 
 varied and significant cultural heritage, and protect new and emerging cultural
 industries, but will also do so as a cultural, and therefore, human right. The
 Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948 (article 27) first articulates
 this basic right, which is then elaborated in more detail in later treaties such
 as the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (which
 came into force on 3 January 1976).
 
- 
Subsequently, other treaties have recognised that various ethnic or other 
 minorities within states have not adequately enjoyed their rights, and that
 rights to cultural practice and maintenance are particularly important. The
 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (which came into force in
 23 March 1976) and the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to
 National or Ethnic, Religious or Linguistic Minorities (1993), for example,
 emphasize the importance of cultural practice and maintenance as basic human
 rights.
- 
Australia鈥檚 commitment to the diversity of cultural expressions will 
 also have impacts in the region, especially given its important links to foreign
 aid (see especially articles 12 through to 17 of the 2005 Convention). In many
 developing countries cultural heritage is under threat but is essential to the
 human development of its people, and can also be linked to environmental
 protection and economic growth. By funding programs related to culture, human
 rights and development, Australia will enhance its reputation
 internationally.
 5.2	Supporting
          the Australian economy 
- 
Maintaining the diversity of Australia鈥檚 cultural heritage, in all its 
 many forms, has a human capital as well as an economic capital dividend.
 Respecting, nurturing and supporting cultural heritage and arts industries has
 clear social benefits - happy, better functioning, more vibrant communities - as
 well as health benefits (freedom of cultural expression and to practice aspects
 of traditional life builds social and emotional well-being, which directly
 improves population-level health outcomes: an important economic saving to the
 health system).
- 
As well, the protection and promotion of the diversity of cultural 
 expressions will have significant benefits of enriching Australian cultural life
 and, consequently, supporting cultural industries and heritage tourism by
 helping to keep them sustainable. As stated in the Commission鈥檚 submission
 on the Convention Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage, inter alia, the
 Bureau of Tourism Research and the Australia Council for the Arts, have noted
 that cultural tourism provides significant economic benefit to Australia.
- 
Whatever costs are associated with those tasks necessary to bring the 
 Convention into effect in Australia, they will only represent a fraction of the
 financial benefits which accrued from maintaining Australia鈥檚 heritage
 from cultural, tourism, arts and other industries. As noted above, there are
 also likely cost savings, especially in the health and other social policy
 areas, from preserving cultural identities of Australia citizens.
- 
On the cost side, the Commission believes these activities will include: - 
establishing a body to co-ordinate/ administer the Convention 
 
- 
properly supporting the Convention through research and benchmarking (for 
 example, through the development of cultural indicators and auditing cultural
 institutions)
- 
additional policy and program development, and 
- 
ensuring that the human rights dimension of the Convention are adhered to 
 (please note 36-42 and 47-49, below).
 
- 
 5.3	Assisting
          the government鈥檚 social inclusion agenda
- 
A socially inclusive community is one in which the diversity of cultural 
 expressions, ethnicities, faiths, traditions and mores are freely practiced and
 respected by members of that community. All governments are committed to
 maintaining social cohesion, harmony, security and commitment to Australia. This
 is partly achieved through education, citizenship and multicultural programs.
 However, it is best achieved by nurturing a national civic culture where all
 members of society feel that they are respected, they can freely enjoy their own
 languages, heritage and related cultural practices, and that these cultures are
 respectfully and adequately reflected in the activities of the nation鈥檚
 principle cultural institutions and in the media.
- 
As part of a wider process of cross-cultural communication to maintain 
 social harmony, cohesion and help build a national, regional and global culture
 of peace, ratification of the Convention in Australia would complement other UN
 statements, such as the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity, the
 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and associated
 activities such as developing cultural indicators for human
 development.
 6	Responses
          to the reservations to Convention articles 
- 
The 黑料情报站 understands that the recommended 
 reservation associated with Article 16 is intended only to protect Australian
 rights (as a state party) to maintain policy and legislative consistency with,
 and to determine who, will be granted a visa or immigration rights to Australia.
 The Commission does not object to this reservation.
- 
The 黑料情报站 understands that the recommended 
 reservation associated with Article 20 is intended only to ensure that Australia
 can continue to freely negotiate in relation to rights, especially regarding
 trade rights, under future treaty negotiations. The Commission does not object
 to this reservation.
 7	The Convention and its impact upon the Australian
          Human Rights Commission 
- 
Ratification of the 2005 UNESCO Convention on the diversity of cultural 
 expressions will enhance the capacity of the Commission to safeguard the human
 rights of all Australians, but, only if it is given the capacity to fulfil this
 important function.
 
- 
For example, the rights of Indigenous Australians, in relation to culture, 
 would be better protected and promoted, especially in relation to the 2007
 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which
 emphasizes, in several places, the importance of indigenous heritage in all
 aspects, and the importance of living heritage for the continuity of cultures.
 Australia is at present considering its recognition of this Declaration, being
 only one of four nations which did not last year. In tandem with the Convention
 for the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, this
 will have significant monitoring and reporting responsibilities for the
 Commission.
- 
The Commission is also concerned with inter-faith dialogue and the right to 
 free religious practice for all Australians; it is involved with monitoring
 rights regarding this religious diversity. For example, the Commission is
 currently undertaking a major report into freedom of religion and belief that
 should be completed by early 2010. The diversity of cultural expressions
 clearly informs this religious diversity and, at present, the lack of
 appropriate research, understanding and legislative protection is a concern.
 This is not solely for cultural purposes but also for community harmony, social
 inclusion, and security. Australia, by becoming a state party to the Convention,
 would assist in many ways the roles of responsibilities of the Commission in
 addressing religious diversity.
- 
Religious diversity, religious vilification and religious freedom are all 
 relevant and connected. The existing legislation focuses on 鈥榬ace鈥,
 but this is a contentious term and the concept of the
 鈥榚thno-religious鈥 category (previously applied solely to Jews) is
 contested, especially with the rise of what is now described as
 鈥業slamophobia鈥. Increasingly, therefore, the cultural heritage
 aspects of, and intersections with faith, will require protecting and should
 fall under the mandate of the Commission
- 
The Commission administers Commonwealth laws relating to discrimination, in 
 particular race discrimination (the central prohibition against racial
 discrimination is contained in s9(1) of the Race Discrimination Act, 1975,) this
 covers 鈥...any act involving a distinction, exclusion, restriction or
 preference based on race, colour, descent or national or ethnic origin which has
 the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, enjoyment or
 exercise, on an equal footing, of any human right or fundamental freedom in the
 political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public
 濒颈蹿别.鈥
- 
This, inevitably, means that what the Convention for the Protection and 
 Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions describes as
 鈥渕inorities and indigenous peoples鈥 are clearly those who may be
 discriminated against on the grounds of race.
- 
The intention of the Convention is to ensure the human rights of cultural 
 minorities are respected and protected. This means the Commonwealth has specific
 responsibilities to monitor whether such groups can fully enjoy their human
 rights relating to (inter alia) culture, religion and belief, the arts, and
 freedom of expression.
 
- 
The Convention may have implications for protecting the intellectual and 
 cultural property rights of Australian artists and communities (for example
 issues associated with free trade agreements) although the explanatory UNESCO
 literature (referenced above) states that the Convention will 鈥渘either
 change or modify the rights and obligations deriving from other legal
 instruments... including trade agreements鈥.
- 
In several ways, Australia鈥檚 ratification of the Convention would 
 facilitate the Commission鈥檚 role to bring together the carriers of
 cultural heritage, individuals and communities and the relevant research
 agencies, cultural institutions and government authorities in ensuring the
 safeguarding of Australia鈥檚 unique and highly diverse intangible cultural
 heritage.
- 
It should also be noted that many countries from where immigrant Australians 
 come from are already state parties to the Convention. Australia, by ratifying
 the Convention could add a significant dimension to the way we safeguard the
 cultural diversity of our immigrant heritage.
- 
The Convention, if properly implemented in Australia, should involve a 
 number of activities. These include:- 
developing benchmark cultural indicators and applying them to all national 
 cultural institutions
- 
auditing national cultural institutions and related industries 
- 
applying existing frameworks to ensure that access and equity standards are 
 being met (for example, adherence to the Charter of Public Service in a
 Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Australia).
 
- 
 8	Resource implications of ratification on the
          Commission 
- 
In the Commission鈥檚 earlier submission to DEWHA it noted that 
 approximately two full time equivalent staff would be required to adequately
 monitor implementation of the Convention Safeguarding Intangible Cultural
 Heritage. Given this, and other important treaties pertaining to culture that
 the government is considering ratifying, it is critical that the Commission
 either establish a specific unit, or supplement teams within the existing units,
 to monitor the important human rights implications of ratifying these
 conventions so as to oversight (inter alia) Australian commitments, relevant
 laws, quality control pertaining to rights, and the auditing of human and
 cultural rights issues.
- 
The 黑料情报站 is not a cultural heritage 
 institution, however, it has an active concern with the culture and heritage of
 all Australians from a human rights perspective, given that the rights to
 practice or use languages, traditions, cultures and religions must be permitted
 and freely enjoyed unless they involve coercion or harm. When Australia ratifies
 the Convention, the Commission is the appropriate agency able to monitor
 national adherence to the operation directives, and the only agency able to
 monitor the overall impact from the many human rights perspectives.
 
- 
If the Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the Convention 
 Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage, and the Convention on the Protection
 and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions are all ratified in
 coming months (as has been indicated is likely to occur), as three, significant
 human rights treaties with monitoring and reporting components, the Australian
 Human Rights Commission would require six FTE staff (approximately $0.8m per
 annum) to undertake this work to a minimum standard. Specific details regarding
 responsibilities and roles can be provided at a later date.
