Chapter 2 Convention on the Protection and Promotion of
the Diversity of Cultural Expressions
Background
2.1
It is proposed that Australia, as a member of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), accede to the Convention
on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions
(the Convention).
2.2
The Convention identifies the expressions of culture by a country’s
citizens as tangible entities. The purpose of the Convention is to protect and
promote the diverse range of these ‘cultural expressions’.[1]
2.3
The Convention aims to protect and promote cultural expressions by
assisting the cultural activities, goods and services which give rise to these
cultural expressions. The Convention is particularly concerned with securing
cultural expressions that are at risk of extinction or otherwise under threat.
2.4
At the time of the Committee’s hearing into the Convention there were 96
Parties to the Convention.[2]
Obligations
2.5
The primary obligations of Parties to the Convention are to undertake to
assist the creation of cultural expressions, both domestically and abroad,
through regulatory, legislative, financial and technical assistance, and to
report to the United Nations on these measures. These obligations are not overly
prescriptive and are expressed in generalised ‘best endeavour’ language.[3]
2.6
Articles 6, 7, 10 and 11 of the Convention require Parties to endeavour
to encourage the recognition, production and dissemination of diverse cultural
expressions. Parties must endeavour to achieve this through providing
regulatory and financial support to cultural activities and industries. Parties
must also endeavour to conduct educational and public awareness programs to
increase the recognition of the diverse cultural contributions made by artists
and others involved in creative processes.[4]
2.7
Articles 8 and 9 of the Convention outline the reporting and information
sharing obligations of Parties. Parties must report every four years to both
the Intergovernmental Committee for the Protection and Promotion of the
Diversity of Cultural Expressions (established under Article 23 of the
Convention), and to UNESCO members as a whole, on measures taken to protect and
promote cultural expressions. Parties must also share and exchange with other
countries information relating to the protection and promotion of cultural
expressions.[5]
2.8
Articles 12 through to 19 outline the obligations of Parties to foster
cooperation and collaboration among stakeholders both domestically and
internationally. Domestically, Parties are required to encourage partnerships
among government, civil society, non-governmental organisations and the private
sector aimed at protecting and promoting diverse cultural expressions.
Internationally, Parties are required to promote inter-governmental cooperation
on cultural policy and to facilitate cultural exchanges.[6]
2.9
The Convention gives special attention to securing the cultural
expressions of citizens in developing nations. Dr Ben Goldsmith, a member of
the Steering Committee of the International Network for Cultural Diversity,
submitted that the cultural industries of many developing nations are not well-established.
Dr Goldsmith argued that in today’s climate of economic globalisation and open
markets, the cultural industries of these nations (and the cultural expressions
created by these industries) may be adversely affected by the increased
competition from the well-funded cultural industries of developed nations. Therefore,
the cultural expressions of developing nations are argued to be less secure
than those of developed nations. One of the primary intents of the Convention
is to address this issue.[7]
2.10
Articles 14, 15 and 17 require developed nations to endeavour to assist
developing nations in promoting and protecting their cultural expressions, with
special regard to cultural expressions under serious threat, through
strengthening the production capacity of cultural industries and their access
to world markets. Parties are required to endeavour to provide developing
nations with assistance in cultural policy development, private enterprise
development, technology and expertise transfer and also to encourage collaboration
between nations in areas such as music and film.[8]
2.11
Article 18 establishes the International Fund for Cultural Diversity to
provide financial support for the protection and promotion of cultural
expressions. Parties must endeavour to provide voluntary contributions on a
regular basis to the fund.[9]
2.12
Article 16 requires developed countries to facilitate cultural exchanges
with developing nations by granting preferential treatment to artists and other
cultural professionals from developing nations.[10]
2.13
Article 20 requires Parties to take into account the relevant
obligations of the Convention when interpreting and applying obligations under
other treaties.[11]
Interpretive declarations and reservations
2.14
The Government proposed to accede to the Convention with an
interpretative declaration to Article 16 to clarify that the Convention will
not affect the content or interpretation of Australia’s immigration laws, or
Australia’s discretion under those laws.[12]
2.15
Dr Ben Saul, the Director of the Sydney Centre for International Law at
the University of Sydney, in his submission to the inquiry noted that
Australia’s current immigration laws typically require migrants to have high
levels of formal ‘Western’ style training before they are admitted to
Australia. The submission argued that these requirements do not recognise the
value of the extensive informal training that many cultural practitioners from
developing nations may have. Dr Saul therefore asserted that Australia’s
immigration requirements disadvantage such people, and in turn the cultural
industries they represent. The submission therefore asserts that the
interpretive declaration to Article 16 reinforces this imbalance and recommends
that Australia provide for greater ease of admission for cultural practitioners
from developing nations.[13]
2.16
A representative from the Department of Immigration and Citizenship
informed the Committee that the interpretative declaration to Article 16 was
necessary in order to make it clear that the visa regime would continue as it
exists currently, and that the Convention would not mandate the creation of new
visa regimes.[14]
2.17
The Government also proposed to accede to the Convention with a
reservation to Article 20 to clarify that Australia will interpret and apply the
Convention in a manner that does not affect its rights and obligations under
other treaties and does not restrict Australia’s ability to negotiate future
treaty rights and obligations.[15]
2.18
Dr Goldsmith, in his submission to the inquiry, argued that the reservation
to Article 20 effectively negates the rights and obligations created by the
treaty and makes the Convention subordinate to other agreements, such as trade
agreements, which may impede upon or threaten cultural expressions.[16]
2.19
Representatives from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT)
and the Attorney-General’s (AG’s) Department told the Committee that the
reservation to Article 20 is needed due to the unusual and ambiguous wording of
the Article. Representatives noted that Article 20(1) states:
Parties recognize that they shall perform in good faith their
obligations under this Convention and all other treaties to which they are
parties … without subordinating this Convention to any other treaty…
Conversely, Article
20(2) states:
Nothing in this Convention shall be interpreted as modifying
rights and obligations of the Parties under any other treaties to which they
are parties.
Thus,
representatives told the Committee that the reservation to Article 20 is
necessary in order to clarify the operation of the Convention in relation to
Australia’s other current, and future, treaties.[17]
2.20
The AG’s Department assured the Committee that reservations are
permitted by the Convention and that at least one other signatory has made a
similar reservation to Article 20. The Committee was assured that there has
been no adverse reaction to the reservation.[18]
2.21
A representative from Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and
the Arts (DEWHA) informed the Committee that, particularly due to the reservation
to Article 20, any free trade aspirations of the Government will not be
compromised by accession to the Convention.[19]
2.22
Dr Ben Saul’s submission argued that Article 20 is ambiguous in nature
and acknowledged the reasoning for the Government’s proposed reservation to the
Article. However, Dr Saul further argued that, despite this reservation, the
Government must endeavour to ensure that Australia’s obligations under the
Convention are finely balanced with their obligations under other treaties,
including trade agreements, and that the Government must appropriately support
cultural industries.[20]
2.23
The Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) noted that several Parties
that have ratified or acceded to the Convention have done so with provisions similar
to the above mentioned interpretive declaration and reservation. The MEAA
argued that the need to make such provisions should not prevent Australia’s
accession to the Convention.[21]
Reasons for Australia to take treaty action
2.24
A representative from DEWHA informed the Committee of the Government’s
motivations for acceding to the treaty:
The Australian government committed to ratifying and giving
effect to the convention in the New direction for the arts policy paper
in 2007. Accession to the convention would be a positive contribution to the
government’s efforts to protect and promote Australia’s cultural goods,
services and activities, both here and overseas.
Adoption of the convention would also encourage Australian
artists to participate in cultural exchanges and to have further engagement
with international audiences. The convention has the potential to make a wider
range of cultural goods, services and activities available to Australian
audiences and consumers, fostering a greater recognition of the diversity among
Australia’s Indigenous and immigrant cultures and cultures from around the
world.
Becoming a party to the convention would also give Australia an opportunity for greater international engagement on cultural issues through
the UNESCO forum and be an expression of Australia’s ongoing commitment to
protecting and promoting cultural diversity.[22]
2.25
DEWHA also told the Committee that Australia’s accession to the
Convention may create impetus for cultural organisations and cultural
practitioners to promote and develop new cultural activities in line with the
aims of the Convention.[23]
2.26
The Government submitted to the Committee that, along with the
Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage
and the Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage,
the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural
Expressions is one of UNESCO’s ‘three pillars’ which protect and promote
cultural diversity. The Government considered that accession to the Convention
will demonstrate to the international community Australia’s commitment to
protecting cultural diversity and will expand Australia’s active engagement
with UNESCO.[24]
2.27
A submission from the Music Council of Australia (MCA) supported the
notion that accession to the Convention would contribute to Australia’s good
standing with UNESCO.[25]
2.28
A range of submissions received during the inquiry argued that Australia’s accession to the Convention would encourage nations to protect established
cultural expressions and promote emerging cultural expressions. These
submissions suggested that the Convention would encourage the Government to
consider the impact of all policy areas (including education, developmental and
financial policy), and the positive effect these policy areas could have, on
cultural industries both in Australia and abroad.[26]
2.29
One submitter noted a global benefit of the Convention:
The Convention has the potential not only to protect cultural
diversity within nations by supporting cultural policy development and
information exchange, but also to strengthen and nurture global cultural
diversity by … supporting “the free flow of ideas”, and by “constant exchanges
and interaction between cultures”.[27]
2.30
The MCA considered that accession to the Convention will better place
the Government to protect Australian cultural expressions during the
negotiation of free trade agreements. The submission suggested that, despite
Australian efforts to the contrary, some free trade agreement negotiations have
resulted in arrangements that expose some Australian cultural industries and jeopardise
some Australian cultural expressions. The MCA argued that accession to the
Convention would better place Australia to resist such concessions when
negotiating trade agreements in the future.[28]
2.31
The MCA further considered that a positive flow-on effect would result
from developed nations meeting their obligations to assist developing nations under
the Convention. The MCA suggested that despite the limited resources of some
developing nations, all of these nations have at least one resource which has
been highly developed over centuries, namely their cultural expressions. The
MCA argued that, under the Convention, developed nations will assist developing
nations to build viable industries which utilise these resources. In turn these
nations with limited resources will gain valuable export markets and much
needed economic prosperity which may lead to a reduction in poverty.[29]
2.32
The MCA argued that through the development of cultural industries in
developing nations, other sectors will also benefit. For example, the provision
of modern software to capture traditional music would have the additional
benefit of providing valuable skills in the use of software which could be
employed in other sectors.[30]
2.33
The MCA further argued that the reduction in poverty and increase in
education resulting from the building of cultural industries in developing
nations may foster social stability where previously the pressures of poor
economic performance may have led to social fragmentation. Further, the
recognition and promotion of these cultural expressions may foster recognition
of a common history and a stronger cultural identity which may in turn help to
build social stability in fragmented communities.[31]
2.34
The MCA argued that many of Australia’s neighbours, particularly in the
South Pacific, are in urgent need of such assistance and that Australia can play a major role through acceding to, and meeting its obligations under, the
Convention. The MCA suggested that through acceding to the Convention, and aiding
the development of these cultural industries, Australia can help to engender
economic and social stability in the region, thus improving both regional
relations and our regional security. The MCA also argued that Australia, through meeting its obligations under the Convention, will gain access to a
wider range of cultural goods and gain a better understanding of its neighbours.[32]
The Convention and Indigenous affairs
2.35
The MCA submitted that many forms of Indigenous expression in Australia, including forms of Indigenous music, are under threat of extinction. The MCA
argued that accession to the Convention would encourage the protection and
preservation of these Indigenous cultural expressions.[33]
2.36
During consultations on the Convention some argued that in order for Australia to meet its obligations to preserve cultural expressions under threat, heritage
and land access laws may have to be modified in order to protect lands and
territories that are culturally significant to Indigenous Australians.[34]
2.37
A representative from DEWHA stated that Australia already has in place a
range of measures to support Indigenous culture and cultural expression. DEWHA
was of the view that changes to current legislation are not currently needed.[35]
2.38
During consultations on the Convention further concerns were raised as
to the capacity of Australian cultural organisations, including Indigenous
organisations, to apply to the Convention’s International Fund for Cultural
Diversity. It was argued that this capacity would be undermined due to
Australia’s status as a relatively wealthy developed nation. Some argued that
special consideration should be provided to Indigenous communities.[36]
2.39
DEWHA submitted that the Fund will operate on a grants based system
where interested parties may apply for an allocation of resources from the Fund
for specific projects, programs and activities. The submission stated that the
resources of the fund will be allocated by the Intergovernmental Committee for
the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions according
to the Guidelines on the use of the resources of the International Fund for
Cultural Diversity. These Guidelines are currently in draft form. The draft
Guidelines state that the Intergovernmental Committee will consider requests
for resourcing towards specific projects and activities including those
identified by representatives of vulnerable groups such as Indigenous people.[37]
Further, DEWHA informed the Committee that whilst the details of how the fund
will operate for Australian cultural organisations are yet to be finalised,
there is nothing in the Convention to preclude Australian cultural
organisations, including Indigenous organisations, from accessing the fund.[38]
Implementation
2.40
No new Commonwealth or State/Territory legislative measures are required
to implement the obligations under the Convention. There will be no change to
the existing roles of the Commonwealth and States/Territories as a result of
implementing the Convention.
2.41
The secretariat for Australia’s participation in the Convention will be
overseen by the DEWHA in consultation with DFAT.[39]
2.42
Dr Goldsmith’s submission to the inquiry noted that whilst many
developed nations are Party to the Convention, few have so far contributed to
the International Fund for Cultural Diversity. The submission urged the
Government to assist in the implementation of the Convention by making a
significant contribution to the Fund, thus demonstrating Australia’s strong
commitment to the Convention.[40]
2.43
Dr Goldsmith further argued that civil society organisations can play a
major role in implementing Australia’s educational and cooperative obligations
under the Convention. The submission recommended that the Government recognise
and facilitate the role of civil society organisations in implementing the
Convention.[41]
2.44
The MCA urged the Government to implement its obligations under the
Convention to assist developing nations by providing funds (including through
the International Fund for Cultural Diversity) and technical expertise
(including through Government departments and contracted non-government organisations)
to cultural industries in developing nations, with a particular focus on its
regional neighbours.[42]
Costs
2.45
The Government anticipates that there would be some costs associated
with the secretariat for Australia’s participation in the proposed Convention.
It is anticipated that these costs would be absorbed by DEWHA.[43]
2.46
Costs incurred by other agencies in their participation in the
Convention, including international travel to attend meetings, will be borne by
those agencies.[44]
2.47
There is a high level of expectation that Australia would make voluntary
contributions to the International Fund for Cultural Diversity. The level of
contribution is yet to be determined, however there is potential for it to be
set at one per cent of a party’s annual UNESCO contribution. In Australia’s case, this would amount to approximately $70,000 per annum. This cost would be
met by DEWHA.[45]
Future treaty action
2.48
Future amendments may be voted on if half of the parties reply
favourably to the proposed amendment. The amendment must be adopted and
ratified by a two-thirds majority of Parties to the Convention.[46]
2.49
If a party is a Member of the Intergovernmental Committee for the
Convention, amendments shall enter into force for that party at the time they
are adopted by the Conference of Parties and are not subject to the normal
ratification process.[47]
2.50
A Party may withdraw from the Convention twelve months after the receipt
of an instrument in writing by the Director-General notifying of their
withdrawal. The financial obligations of the relevant party remain unaffected
until the date on which the withdrawal takes effect.[48]
Consultation
2.51
Relevant Commonwealth Ministers and agencies and State/Territory
Governments were consulted about the Convention and have provided support for
accession. During consultations both DFAT and the AG’s Department proposed the
above-mentioned interpretative declaration and reservation.[49]
2.52
DEWHA called for submissions commenting on Australia’s accession to the
Convention from a range of arts, culture, Indigenous affairs and academic
organisations. All submissions received supported accession to the Convention.[50]
Conclusions and recommendation
2.53
The Committee is of the view that the Convention will help to develop
and maintain cultural industries and protect valuable cultural expressions in
Australia and abroad. The Committee considers that accession to the Convention
will demonstrate to the international community Australia’s commitment to
cultural diversity and will expand Australia’s active engagement with UNESCO.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee supports the Convention on the Protection
and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions and recommends
that binding treaty action be taken. |