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Crown Prince Naruhito Addresses Nagoya ESD |
The World Conference on Education for Sustainable Development (ESD)
held in Nagoya, Japan, closed today with a declaration urging
action to mainstream education in the United Nations post-2015
development agenda.
The Aichi-Nagoya Declaration calls on all nations to implement the Global Action Programme on ESD to move the relevant agenda forward.
In his closing remarks, Qian Tang, who is Assistant Director-General for
Education at the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) – a conference co-organizer along with Japan – said the declaration is instrumental in helping streamline education in national post-2015 development agendas.
“We were able to share successful initiatives from all over the world,
to help government representatives and other key stakeholders formulate
new goals and objectives. We have shaped these into a Roadmap for ESD
that will implement the Global Action Programme,” Mr. Tang said.
More than 1,000 participants gathered for the three-day conference under the theme “Learning Today for a Sustainable Future.”
Among them were 76 ministerial-level representatives of UNESCO Member
States, non-governmental organizations, academia, the private sector and
UN agencies, as well as individual experts and youth participants from
150 countries.
The Action Plan is a follow up to the UN Decade of ESD, which is ending
this year. It will generate and scale up ESD actions in each of five
priority areas of policy support, whole –institution approaches,
educators, youth, and local communities.
UNESCO has called on stakeholders to make specific contributions to
launch the GAP. Stakeholders from 80 countries have responded with 363
commitments.
The Aichi-Nagoya Declaration adopted unanimously today, builds on the
achievements of the Decade and the deliberations and stakeholder
meetings which were held last week in Okayama.
The Declaration also ensures that the outcomes of the Conference will be
taken into account at the World Education Forum 2015 to be held in
Incheon, Republic of Korea.
Representing the host country, Japan’s State Minister of Education,
Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Hideki Niwa said “ESD will not
end with the last year of the Decade of ESD. Instead let us recharge our
efforts for ESD with even greater commitment, making the most of the
experiences we have gained so far.”
UNESCO