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Memory of the World Programme

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromMemory of the World Register)
UNESCO initiative to preserve heritage

Logo of the Memory of the World Programme

UNESCO'sMemory of the World (MoW)Programme is an international initiative that recognises documentary heritage of global importance. It aims to safeguard thedocumentary heritage of humanity againstcollective amnesia, neglect, decay over time and climatic conditions, as well as deliberate destruction. It calls for thepreservation of valuablearchival holdings, library collections, and private individual compendia all over the world for posterity and increased accessibility to, and public awareness of, these items.[1][2][3]

Following the establishment of the Memory of the World International Register, UNESCO and the Memory of the World Programme have encouraged the creation of autonomous national and regional committees as well as national and regional registers which focus on documentary heritage of great regional or national importance, but not necessarily of global importance.[4]

TheDeclaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789) was used to disseminate to the political community the firstFrench Constitution.[5]

Memory of the World International Register

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The Memory of the World International Register is a list of the world's documentary heritage with outstanding global significance – such asmanuscripts,oral traditions, audio-visual materials, and library and archive holdings.[6] It catalogues documentary heritage that has been recommended by the International Advisory Committee and endorsed by theDirector-General of UNESCO, using the selection criteria "world significance and outstanding universal value."[7] As well as raising awareness of this heritage, the register aims to promote its preservation, digitization, and dissemination by calling upon the programme's networks of experts.[3] The program also uses technology to provide wider accessibility and diffusion of information about the items inscribed on the register.[3]

The first inscriptions on the International Register were made in 1997.[1][3][8] The various properties in the register include recordings offolk music;ancient languages andphonetics; aged remnants of religious and secular manuscripts; collective lifetime works of renowned giants of literature; science and music; copies of landmark motion pictures and short films; and accounts documenting changes in the world's political, economic, and social stage.

As of April 2025, 570 pieces of documentary heritage had been inscribed in the International Register.[9]

The program is not without controversy. During the 2015 cycle, for example, there was a significant degree of conflict within East Asia, as registry with the MoW Program was becoming viewed as an approval of particular views of contested history, specifically with respect to theNanjing Massacre and thecomfort women.[10]

RegionNumber of inscriptions to the Register
Memory of the World Register – Africa35
Memory of the World Register – Arab States17
Memory of the World Register – Asia and the Pacific154
Memory of the World Register – Europe and North America274
Memory of the World Register – Latin America and the Caribbean77
Memory of the World Register – Other7
Total496

Top 10 countries by number of inscriptions

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RankCountryNumber of inscriptions
1Germany33
2United Kingdom27
3Netherlands26
4France22
5South Korea20
6Poland19
7China18
8Spain17
9Austria16
9Russia16
11India13

Process

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Any organization or individual can nominate a documentary item for inscription on the International Register viaUNESCO Member States through theirNational Commission for UNESCO. In the absence of a National Commission, the nomination is sent through the relevant government body in charge of relations with UNESCO, involving, if one exists, the relevant national MoW committee.[11] Two proposals per UNESCO Member State are considered in each nomination cycle. There is no limit on joint nomination proposals from two or more UNESCO Member States.

The program is administered by the International Advisory Committee (IAC), whose 14 members are appointed by theDirector-General of UNESCO.[6][3] During its meetings, the IAC examines the full documentation of the item's description, origin, world significance, contemporary state of conservation and other criteria for admissibility. The IAC recommends to theExecutive Board of UNESCO the items proposed for inscription.[12] The IAC is responsible for the formulation of major policies, including the technical, legal and financial framework for the program. It also maintains several subsidiary bodies:[13]

  • Bureau: Maintains an overview of the Programme between IAC meetings and makes tactical decisions in liaison with the Secretariat, reviews the use of the Memory of the World logo, and liaises with national Memory of the World committees and monitors their growth and operation.
  • The Preservation Sub-Committee: Develops, regularly revises and promulgates information guides on the preservation of documentary heritage, and offers advice on technical and preservation matters.
  • Register Sub-Committee: Oversees the assessment of nominations for the Memory of the World International Register and provides recommendations, with reasons, for their inscription or rejection to each meeting of the IAC.
  • Education and Research Sub-committee: Develops strategies and concepts for institutionalizing education and research on documentary heritage and helps developing innovative curricula and research on Memory of the World.
  • The Secretariat at UNESCO: Provides support services to the International Advisory Committee (IAC) and its subsidiary bodies, and the general administration and monitoring of the Program. It is the contact point of the Program.[14]
  • The Memory of the World Programme is implemented by UNESCO throughregional and national committees. These committees are autonomous from UNESCO and are composed of dedicated local heritage professionals.[15]

National and regional registers

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Some national and regional Memory of the World committees maintain their own Memory of the World registers, highlighting documentary heritage of great national or regional importance.[16][17] National registers include:

There are presently two regional registers: the Asia Pacific Regional Register and the Latin America and the Caribbean regional register'[17][21]

The Asia Pacific Regional Register and the Register for Latin America and the Caribbean[22] have already honoured important documentary heritage of their regions, while the African Regional Register is currently being established.[23] In the Asia-Pacific region, in 2014–2015, there were 18 member nations ofMOWCAP (6 without national committees), while in 2016, there were 16 national MoW committees.[10]

Jikji Prize

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TheJikji, created in 1377, is the earliest known book printed withmovable metal type.

TheJikji Prize was established in 2004 by UNESCO[24] in cooperation with the South Korean government to further promote the objectives of the Memory of the World Programme, and to commemorate the 2001 inscription of the country'sJikji on the Register.[25] The award, which includes a cash prize of $30,000 from the Korean government, recognizes institutions that have contributed to the preservation and accessibility of documentary heritage.[26]

The prize has been awarded biannually since 2005 during the meeting of the IAC.[26]

Recipients

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History

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In 1992, the program began as a way to preserve and promote documentary heritage, manuscripts, maps, rock inscriptions, court documents, diplomatic exchanges and more that are deemed to be of such global significance as to transcend the boundaries of time and culture.[6] This recorded memory reflects the diversity of languages, people, and cultures.[26] UNESCO, the world agency responsible for the protection of the world'scultural andnatural heritage, realized the need to protect such fragile yet important component of cultural heritage. The Memory of the World Programme was established to facilitate the preservation of, universal access to, and public awareness about humanity's documentary heritage.[33]

People the world over are creating [memories] in forms that are less and less permanent—be it sound recordings, film, videotape, newsprint, photographs, or computer-based documents. It must be said that the output of the present century alone is probably greater than the total output of all previous centuries put together; and ironically and tragically, it is being lost faster than ever before. It is a tragedy indeed, for what is at stake is the recorded memory of mankind.

— Dato' Habibah Zon, Director-General of theNational Archives of Malaysia,[6]

Regular meetings were held by the IAC in its interim capacity beginning in 1993, culminating in the creation of the Memory of the World International Register during its second meeting in 1995,[6][8] with the first inscriptions on the register in 1997, after the statutes that created the IAC as a standing committee took effect.[34]

Memory of the World IAC meetings

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Biennial meetings of the International Advisory Committee are used to discuss and inscribe items onto the register. The meeting normally takes place in odd-numbered years:

IAC SessionDateSiteIAC chairpersonNumber of nominations evaluatedNumber of inscriptions to the registerReferences
1st1993
Sept 12–14
Pułtusk, PolandJean-Pierre Wallot (Canada)[34]nonenone[6]
2nd1995
May 3–5
Paris, FranceJean-Pierre Wallot (Canada)[8]nonenone[6]
3rd1997
Sept 29 – Oct 1
Tashkent, UzbekistanJean-Pierre Wallot (Canada)6938[6][8]
Bureau Meeting1998
Sept 4–5
London, United KingdomJean-Pierre Wallot (Canada)nonenone[6]
4th1999
Jun 10–12
Vienna, AustriaBendik Rugaas (Norway)209[34]
5th2001
Jun 27–29
Cheongju, South KoreaBendik Rugaas (Norway)4221[35]
6th2003
Aug 28–30
Gdańsk, PolandEkaterina Genieva (Russian Federation)4123[3][36]
7th2005
Jun 13–18
Lijiang,ChinaDeanna B. Marcum (US)5329[26][27]
8th2007
Jun 1–15
Pretoria, South AfricaAlissandra Cummins (Barbados)5338[33][37]
9th2009
Jul 27–31
Bridgetown, BarbadosRoslyn Russell (Australia)5535[38][39]
10th2011
May 22–25
Manchester, United KingdomRoslyn Russell (Australia)8445[40]
11th2013
Jun 18–21
Gwangju, South KoreaHelena R Asamoah-Hassan (Ghana)8456[41]
12th2015
Oct 4–6
Abu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesAbdulla El Reyes (United Arab Emirates)8644[42]
13th2017
Oct 24–27
Paris, FranceAbdulla El Reyes (United Arab Emirates)13278[43]
14th2023
Mar 8–10,
Apr 11
Paris, France + online8864[44]
15th2025
Feb 26–28
Paris, France12274[45]

See also

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Footnotes

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References

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  1. ^abEdmondson, Ray (2020). "Memory of the World: An Introduction". In Edmondson, Ray; Jordan, Lothar; Prodan, Anca Claudia (eds.).The UNESCO Memory of the World Programme: Key Aspects and Recent Developments. Cham: Springer. pp. 21–22.ISBN 978-3-030-18441-4.
  2. ^"Official website". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  3. ^abcdef"Twenty-three new inscriptions on Memory of the World Register of Documentary Collections". UNESCO Press. 2003-09-01. Retrieved2009-09-06.
  4. ^UNESCO."MoW Committees".UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  5. ^"Original Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789–1791)". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  6. ^abcdefghi"UNESCO Memory of the World Programme: The Asia-Pacific Strategy". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. Archived fromthe original on 2005-02-28. Retrieved2017-08-01.
  7. ^"Memory of the World: Documentary heritage treasures of Africa". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 12 December 2023.Archived from the original on 2025-02-17. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  8. ^abcd"Third Meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme, Tashkent, 29 September-1st October 1997: final report". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. October 1997. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  9. ^"Memory of the World".UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. Retrieved2025-04-24.
  10. ^abYamamoto, Mayumi (2016)."Heritage and Diplomacy: A Cultural Approach to UNESCO's Document Registry Program in East Asia".Annual Journal of Cultural Anthropology.11. RetrievedMay 26, 2022.
  11. ^UNESCO."Memory of the World General Guidelines"(PDF).UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  12. ^"General Guidelines of the Memory of the World (MoW) Programme". UNESCO. Retrieved3 March 2025.
  13. ^"International Advisory Committee". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 2009-08-11. Archived fromthe original on 2016-03-11. Retrieved2009-12-09.
  14. ^UNESCO."Secretariat".UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  15. ^"MoW Committees".UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  16. ^"Unlocking the Past, Shaping the Future: UNESCO's Memory of the World Registers for Collective Memory". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. Retrieved15 July 2025.
  17. ^abRussell, Roslyn (2020). "The Memory of the World Registers and Their Potential". In Edmondson, Ray; Jordan, Lothar; Prodan, Anca Claudia (eds.).The UNESCO Memory of the World Programme: Key Aspects and Recent Developments. Cham: Springer. p. 44.ISBN 978-3-030-18441-4.
  18. ^Monkman, Lenard (11 September 2019)."National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation archives added to UNESCO world register".CBC. Archived fromthe original on 2023-12-05. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  19. ^"Canada Memory of the World Register".Canadian Commission for UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  20. ^UNESCO."National Register of the Memory of the World incorporates 14 new inscriptions".UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  21. ^Memory of the World Committee for Asia and the Pacific."MOWCAP Regional Register".Memory of the World Committee for Asia and the Pacific. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  22. ^UNESCO."Regional Register".UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  23. ^Africa Regional Committee of the Memory of the World Programme (ARCMoW)."Africa Regional Committee of the Memory of the World Programme (ARCMoW)".Africa Regional Committee of the Memory of the World Programme (ARCMoW). Retrieved2025-06-23.
  24. ^UNESCO."UNESCO/Jikji Memory of the World Prize".UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  25. ^UNESCO."About the Prize".UNESCO. Retrieved2025-06-23.
  26. ^abcde"Twenty-nine new documentary collections inscribed on the Memory of the World Register". UNESCO Press. 2005-06-21. Retrieved2009-09-06.
  27. ^ab"Seventh Meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme". UNESCO. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  28. ^"UNESCO/Jikji Memory of the World 2009 Prize awarded to National Archives of Malaysia". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 2009-08-21. Archived fromthe original on 2015-03-14. Retrieved2009-09-07.
  29. ^"National Archives of Australia to receive UNESCO/Jikji Memory of the World Prize". UNESCO News Service. 2011-05-30. Archived fromthe original on 2015-03-14. Retrieved2012-01-10.
  30. ^"UNESCO / Jikji Memory of the World Prize 2020 awarded to the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum (Cambodia)".UNESCO. April 9, 2020. RetrievedMay 26, 2022.
  31. ^"The American University in Cairo to receive 2022 UNESCO/Jikji Memory of the World Prize | UNESCO".www.unesco.org. Retrieved2023-01-09.
  32. ^"The National Library of Indonesia to receive 2024 UNESCO-Jikji Memory of the World Prize".UNESCO. September 3, 2024. RetrievedNovember 18, 2024.
  33. ^abJasmina Sopova (2007-06-20)."Thirty-eight new inscriptions for Memory of the World Register". UNESCO Press. Archived fromthe original on 2009-11-11. Retrieved2009-09-06.
  34. ^abc"Fourth meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme, Vienna, 10-12 June 1999: final report". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. July 1999. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  35. ^"Fifth Meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme". UNESCO. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  36. ^"Sixth Meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme". UNESCO. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  37. ^"Eighth Meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme". UNESCO. 2007. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  38. ^Joie Springer (2007-06-20)."Thirty-eight new inscriptions for Memory of the World Register". UNESCO Press. Archived fromthe original on 2015-03-14. Retrieved2009-09-06.
  39. ^"9th Meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme, Christ Church, Barbados, 29-31 July 2009: report". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. December 2009. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  40. ^"10th Meeting of the International Advisory Committee Memory of the World Programme Manchester, United Kingdom, 22–25 May 2011 Report". UNESCO. 2011. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  41. ^"54 new inscriptions on UNESCO Memory of the World Register". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 2013. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  42. ^"12th Meeting of the International Advisory Committee of the Memory of the World Programme, 4-6 October 2015, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates: final report".unesdoc.unesco.org. October 2015. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  43. ^"Report of 13th Meeting of the International Advisory Committee (IAC), UNESCO, Paris, 24-27 October 2017".unesdoc.unesco.org. November 2017. Retrieved2025-06-17.
  44. ^"Nominations of new items of documentary heritage to be inscribed on the Memory of the World international register: list of nominations".unesdoc.unesco.org. 14 April 2023. Retrieved2023-05-18.
  45. ^"Nominations of new items of documentary heritage to be inscribed on the Memory of the World International Register: list of nominations".unesdoc.unesco.org. 18 March 2025. Retrieved2025-06-17.

Further reading

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  • Buckley, Kristal; Darian-Smith, Kate (2023). "International Conflict, National Pasts, and UNESCO World Heritage and Memory of the World". In Sluga, Glenda; Darian-Smith, Kate; Herren, Madeleine (eds.).Sites of International Memory. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 294–320.doi:10.2307/j.ctv2zjz7d9.16.ISBN 978-1-5128-2406-3.OCLC 1376193602.

External links

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