#Sharing Humanity, the new UNESCO Campaign

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https://www.unesco.org/en/sharing-humanity

https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/unesco-unveils-its-new-global-campaig...

For the past 75 years, UNESCO has been at the forefront of promoting, preserving and advancing humanity, because it is only through the sharing of knowledge, experience and foresight that we can build the defenses of peace and prosperity that will benefit all humankind.

 

 

Protecting biodiversity is sharing humanity

 

Safeguarding biodiversity has to become one of the major priorities of our time.

 

 

#SharingHumanity is sharing our cultural heritage

Our collective cultural heritage is more than just monuments and artefacts - it is an expression of who we are, where we come from, and what we value.

 

#SharingHumanity building inclusive societies

Only by working together towards a common shared goal of building inclusive societies, can we achieve a safe and equal environment for all.

 

In early 2022, UNESCO launched a global communication campaign, to strengthen its voice and positioning within the peace and development community. This initiative was meant to reaffirm the relevance of UNESCO’s mandate, modernize, and clarify its messages and values, in the light of emerging challenges and a new development landscape.

UNESCO’s communication revamp was an integral part of an in-depth strategic transformation process, aimed at increasing relevance amongst target audiences, providing also a global narrative to convey UNESCO’s values and goals beyond the diversity of its programmes in the fields of education, science, culture, communication and information.

The new tagline “Sharing Humanity” and the corresponding campaign brings together UNESCO goodwill ambassadors and artists engaged in UNESCO’s key programme areas, adding a diversity of voices to the brand platform, and developing the meaning of UNESCO’s signature, for each of its strategic objectives.

Part of an in-depth strategic transformation at UNESCO

The renovation of UNESCO’s communication approach is closely linked to the process of strategic transformation UNESCO has conducted over the past few years, under the leadership of the Director-General Audrey Azoulay, leading to an increased focus on key areas of interventions, and strengthened delivery mechanisms.

This includes the full overhaul of digital platforms, including UNESCO website, the renewal of UNESCO’s iconic “temple” logo and brand identity, and a clearer, more readable focus on 4 key strategic objectives and areas of work:

  • ensure quality education for all,
  • reconcile humans with the planet and with nature,
  • foster scientific and technological progress in the service of humanity,
  • promote respect and mutual understanding for inclusive societies.

UNESCO’s strategic transformation process touched upon all key dimensions of UNESCO’s structure, programme and budget, to achieve more efficiency and better impact, to modernize a 75 year-old institution. The revamp of UNESCO’s core message is one of the most recent examples of this sweeping change. The campaign was was made possible by the support of UNESCO’s partner, the Chinese Television Network Phoenix TV.

The UN Agency for Human dignity

UNESCO’s environment, both from a communication perspective and a programme delivery aspect, has changed markedly since its inception in 1945 and UNESCO had to adapt to this constantly changing landscape.

But some things do not change, and indeed should not. And this is certainly true for UNESCO’s core values, and core principles. A key challenge was to stay faithful to UNESCO’s roots and express them in a renewed compelling manner. This was the basis on which a modernized positioning for the organization was founded, and was enriched through further internal discussion, as well as engaging with an external consultancy firm WPP, who worked on the reform of the communications service and laid the ground of a renewed brand platform.

The opening lines of UNESCO Constitution place a strong focus on human dignity, seeking to bring out the best in our shared humanity, with a view to provide not only basic elements such as food or medicine, but instead focusing on the intellectual and moral dimension of peace building: “Since wars begin in the minds of men and women, it is in the mind of men and women that the defenses of peace shall be constructed”.

For 75 years UNESCO has been the UN agency whose mandate is about fostering the human dimension of peace and development, seeking to strengthen the “intellectual and moral solidarity of mankind”. One of UNESCO’s first programmes, entitled “the book of needs”, launched in 1948, identified, among the key prerequisites of recovery in Europe after World War II, was to invest in education and culture, as basic needs, just as fundamental as housing, food or health, for the future of the continent.

Indeed, all of UNESCO’s programmes, beyond the diversity of their focus, in education, sciences, culture, information and communication, appeal to what makes humans human, as a moral and intellectual species.

Today, this rather philosophical approach gains new impetus, and new relevance in the face of emerging trends.

In the face of new questions brought by artificial intelligence or advanced robotics, we are called to redefine who we are as human beings, and what is human intelligence or creativity compared with ChatGPT; what makes us different (if anything) from robots and computers. In the face of new questions raised by climate change and biodiversity crisis, we are also called upon to rethink our relationships with nature, plants and animals, and all living beings, and to question our place on the planet, rather as custodians than as "masters and commanders".

In the face of emerging divisions and fragmented societies, including through the rise of hate speech and mis/disinformation on social media and the streets, we are increasingly forced to insist on what unites us, and assert those key principles that can foster a sense of mutual understanding, a common ground… invigorated with a renewed urgency to “build the defenses of peace” in people’s minds.

In response to these challenges, we are called upon to strengthen our own humanity, uphold human traits and emotions, be curious, creative, imaginative and kind, build bonds and bridges among peoples and cultures. The more we share, the more we thrive as a human family and the more likely we are to find the solutions of our time.

The world needs UNESCO to maintain and promote the best in our shared humanity through the sharing of ideas and solutions, guided by the moral compass of human dignity and the sense of a shared human destiny. Having spent decades promoting, preserving, and documenting humanity’s most precious heritage sites, ideas, ethical principles, UNESCO is uniquely positioned to defend and share a sense of unity of the human family, in response to contemporary challenges, and divisions.

Messaging Strategy

UNESCO partnered with Rooftop, a creative company from South Africa, for the development of an updated brand strategy, implementation plan and the development content. Through an iterative and collaborative approach, UNESCO guided Rooftop’s strategy development phase to ensure an outcome that was true to the existing brand and updated vision.

While UNESCO’s vision and mission would remain consistent with the existing strategy, it was necessary to establish a new purpose and positioning. This would in turn filter down into the development of new branded content and its supporting key messaging. The catalyst for the new strategic direction was the development of a core brand concept that would be able to inspire and inform all that followed.

This core concept was built on the insight of what UNESCO has been doing during the whole of its mandate, that is, Sharing Humanity. This was based on the vision that UNESCO’s actions all serve this common goal, be it the preservation of cultural landmarks or the advocacy for quality education, it all pivots around ‘Sharing Humanity’. This also extends to the role of UNESCO’s audiences, as they share the responsibility is to continue this legacy and to play their part in Sharing Humanity. It’s only together that we can save our oceans, protect biodiversity, maintain peace, or rebuild our heritage. It’s the sum of the parts that make it happen.

A key challenge was to ensure this core concept would be translatable in all of UNESCO’s official languages, including French, Spanish, Arabic, Chinese and Russian. Translation adds something a different color to the main message, for instance non Latin languages insisting more on the need to unite the whole of humanity and human populations, while Latin languages are more at ease with the notion of cultivating or bringing out the best in our human essence.

 

Position: Co -Founder of ENGAGE,a new social venture for the promotion of volunteerism and service and Ideator of Sharing4Good

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