-------- Messaggio inoltrato -------- Oggetto: [LyonDCL] Advocating for libraries as partners for development: IFLA’s International Advocacy Programme comes to the UN Data: Tue, 26 Jun 2018 09:22:09 +0000
*Advocating for libraries as partners for development: IFLA’s International Advocacy Programme comes to the UN*
https://www.ifla.org/node/59406/On 28-29 June, IFLA will hold the International Advocacy Programme (IAP) https://www.ifla.org/ldp/iap Global Convening in New York, USA. Nearly 40 participants from all regions have been invited by IFLA to celebrate success, look to the future, and tell the story of libraries and the SDGs to officials from the UN and governments./
The IAP Global Convening https://www.ifla.org/node/57718, the climax of two years’ work, will be hosted by two emblematic institutions: the Brooklyn Public Library https://www.bklynlibrary.org/ and the New York Public Library https://www.nypl.org/. It will be an opportunity for IAP participants to look back at successes, and draw on each other’s experience gained to take the global library field’s advocacy up a gear.
The IAP participants will meet in New York, the home town of the United Nations. This is no coincidence; a highlight of the Convening will be a chance to visit the UN’s Headquarters, and hear about latest news and future plans, directly from UN officials.
The event will also offer a unique opportunity to showcase exceptional awareness raising and advocacy work, honoured by the presence of UN officials and national diplomats.
IFLA Secretary General Gerald Leitner said:
/“Two years ago, we challenged librarians around the world to make the case for libraries as drivers of development. They have surpassed our expectations. Now we look to the future, to moving up a gear in our engagement with the UN, governments and communities.”/
*Global Goals: Local Action – the International Advocacy Programme So Far*
The IAP started in 2016 with one train-the-trainer workshop and six regional workshops around the world. Yet it rapidly become a powerful worldwide movement.
Librarians in all regions have gathered evidence and learnt how better to advocate for libraries as motors of development https://www.ifla.org/libraries-development, underlining their contribution to more informed, included, and engaged societies.
The United Nations 2030 Agenda, and the Sustainable Development Goal it establishes, have offered a vital framework. Thanks to this, it has been possible to explain the work of libraries in language that decision-makers understand.
Following the workshops, 150 participants signed contracts to take action, from 76 countries. Yet beyond this, IAP and its themes have spread across the library field, providing a strong and attractive strong advocacy theme for libraries around the world.
*A Crucial Year: Education, Employment and Access to Information on the Agenda*
But this is just the beginning: 2019 will be a crucial year as key SDGs for libraries become focus of UN discussions, particularly 4 (Quality Education), 8 (Decent Work), and 16 (Access to Information). The IAP Convening is part of the preparatory work carried out by IFLA to ensure we take advantage of this unique opportunity as a globally united library field.
The advocacy work done by IAP participants will be strengthened by the IFLA Library Map of the World http://librarymap.ifla.org/. This powerful advocacy tool underlines what the library field can do, by providing library data and stories demonstrating how libraries in different countries contribute to the SDGs.
The IAP Convening will include a workshop: “SDG Storytelling for Showing the Impact of Libraries” as a learning opportunity to apply the recently launched "Libraries and the Sustainable Development Goals: A Storytelling Manual https://www.ifla.org/publications/libraries-and-the-sustainable-development-goals-a-storytelling-manual" and see more and more stories published.
/Source: www.ifla.org/node/59406 http://www.ifla.org/node/59406 /