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The Governments of the States Parties to this Constitution on
behalf of their peoples declare:
That since wars begin in the minds of men, it is in the minds of
men that the defenses of peace must be constructed;
That ignorance of each other's ways and lives has been a common
cause, throughout the history of mankind, of that suspicion and
mistrust between the peoples of the world through which their
differences have all too often broken into war;
That the great and terrible war which has now ended was a war
made possible by the denial of the democratic principles of the
dignity, equality and mutual respect of men, and by the
propagation, in their place, through ignorance and prejudice, of
the doctrine of the inequality of men and races;
That the wide diffusion of culture, and the education of humanity
for justice and liberty and peace are indispensable to the
dignity of man and constitute a sacred duty which all the nations
must fulfil in a spirit of mutual assistance and concern;
That a peace based exclusively upon the political and economic
arrangements of governments would not be a peace which could
secure the unanimous, lasting and sincere support of the peoples
of the world, and that the peace must therefore be founded, if it
is not to fail, upon the intellectual and moral solidarity of
mankind.
For these reasons, the States Parties to this Constitution,
believing in full and equal opportunities for education for all,
in the unrestricted pursuit of objective truth, and in the free
exchange of ideas and knowledge, are agreed and determined to
develop and to increase the means of communication between their
peoples and to employ these means for the purposes of mutual
understanding and a truer and more perfect knowledge of each
other's lives;
In consequence whereof they do hereby create the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization for the purpose
of advancing, through the educational and scientific and cultural
relations of the peoples of the world, the objectives of
international peace and of the common welfare of mankind for
which the United Nations Organization was established and which
its Charter proclaims.
Article I
Purposes and functions
- The purpose of the Organization is to contribute to peace and
security by promoting collaboration among the nations through
education, science and culture in order to further universal
respect for justice, for the rule of law and for the human rights
and fundamental freedoms which are affirmed for the peoples of
the world, without distinction of race, sex, language or
religion, by the Charter of the United Nations.
- To realize this purpose the Organization will:
- Collaborate in the work of advancing the mutual
knowledge and understanding of peoples, through all means of mass
communication and to that end recommend such international
agreements as may be necessary to promote the free flow of ideas
by word and image;
- Give fresh impulse to popular education and to the spread of
culture;
By collaborating with Members, at their request, in the
development of educational activities;
By instituting collaboration among the nations to advance
the ideal of equality of educational opportunity without
regard to race, sex or any distinctions, economic or
social;
By suggesting educational methods best suited to prepare the
children of the world for the responsibilities of
freedom;
- Maintain, increase and diffuse knowledge;
By assuring the conservation and protection of the world's
inheritance of books, works of art and monuments of history
and science, and recommending to the nations concerned the
necessary international conventions;
By encouraging co-operation among the nations in all
branches of intellectual activity, including the
international exchange of persons active in the fields of
education, science and culture and the exchange of
publications, objects of artistic and scientific interest
and other materials of information;
By initiating methods of international co-operation
calculated to give the people of all countries access to the
printed and published materials produced by any of
them.
- With a view to preserving the independence, integrity and
fruitful diversity of the cultures and educational systems of the
States members of this Organization, the Organization is
prohibited from intervening in matters which are essentially
within their domestic jurisdiction.
Article II
Membership
- Membership of the United Nations Organization shall carry
with it the right to membership of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
- Subject to the conditions of the Agreement between this
Organization and the United Nations Organization, approved
pursuant to Article X of this Constitution, States not members of
the United Nations Organization may be admitted to membership of
the Organization, upon recommendation of the Executive Board, by
a two-thirds majority vote of the General Conference.
- Territories or groups of territories which are not
responsible for the conduct of their international relations may
be admitted as Associate Members by the General Conference by a
two-thirds majority of Members present and voting, upon
application made on behalf of such territory or group of
territories by the Member or other authority having
responsibility for their international relations. The nature and
extent of the rights and obligations of Associate Members shall
be determined by the General Conference.
- Members of the Organization which are suspended from the
exercise of the rights and privileges of membership of the United
Nations Organization shall, upon the request of the latter, be
suspended from the rights and privileges of this Organization.
- Members of the Organization which are expelled from the
United Nations Organization shall automatically cease to be
members of this Organization.
- Any Member State or Associate Member of the Organization may
withdraw from the Organization by notice addressed to the
Director-General. Such notice shall take effect on 31 December of
the year following that during which the notice was given. No
such withdrawal shall affect the financial obligations owed to
the Organization on the date the withdrawal takes effect. Notice
of withdrawal by an Associate Member shall be given on its behalf
by the Member State or other authority having responsibility for
its international relations.
Article III
Organs
The Organization shall include a General Conference, an Executive
Board and a Secretariat.
Article IV
The General Conference
A. Composition
- The General Conference shall consist of the
representatives of the States members of the Organization. The
Government of each Member State shall appoint not more than five
delegates, who shall be selected after consultation with the
National Commission if established, or with educational,
scientific and cultural bodies.
B. Functions
- The General Conference shall determine the policies and the
main lines of work of the Organization. It shall take decisions
on programmes submitted to it by the Executive Board.
- The General Conference shall, when it deems desirable and in
accordance with the regulations to be made by it, summon
international conferences of States on education, the sciences
and humanities or the dissemination of knowledge;
non-governmental conferences on the same subjects may be summoned
by the General Conference or by the Executive Board in accordance
with such regulations.
- The General Conference shall, in adopting proposals for
submission to the Member States, distinguish between
recommendations and international conventions submitted for their
approval. In the former case a majority vote shall suffice; in
the latter case a two-thirds majority shall be required. Each of
the Member States shall submit recommendations or conventions to
its competent authorities within a period of one year from the
close of the session of the General Conference at which they were
adopted.
- Subject to the provisions of Article V, paragraph 5(c), the
General Conference shall advise the United Nations Organization
on the educational, scientific and cultural aspects of matters of
concern to the latter; in accordance with the terms and procedure
agreed upon between the appropriate authorities of the two
Organizations.
- The General Conference shall receive and consider the reports
sent to the Organization by Member States on the action taken
upon the recommendations and conventions referred to in paragraph
4 above or, if it so decides, analytical summaries of these
reports.
- The General Conference shall elect the members of the
Executive Board and, on the recommendation of the Board, shall
appoint the Director-General.
C. Voting
- Each Member State shall have one vote in the
General Conference. Decisions shall be made by a simple majority
except in cases in which a two-thirds majority is required by the
provisions of this Constitution, or of the Rules of Procedure of
the General Conference. A majority shall be a majority of the
Members present and voting.
- A Member State shall have no vote in the General Conference
if the total amount of contributions due from it exceeds the
total amount of contributions payable by it for the current year
and the immediately preceding calendar year.
- The General Conference may nevertheless permit such a Member
State to vote, if it is satisfied that failure to pay is due to
conditions beyond the control of the Member State.
D. Procedure
- The General Conference shall meet in ordinary
session every two years. It may meet in extraordinary session if
it decides to do so itself or if summoned by the Executive Board,
or on the demand of at least one-third of the Member States.
- At each session the location of its next ordinary session
shall be designated by the General Conference. The location of an
extraordinary session shall be decided by the General Conference
if the session is summoned by it, or otherwise by the Executive
Board.
- The General Conference shall adopt its own rules of
procedure. It shall at each session elect a President and other
officers.
- The General Conference shall set up special and technical
committees and such other subordinate organs as may be necessary
for its purposes.
- The General Conference shall cause arrangements to be made
for public access to meetings, subject to such regulations as it
shall prescribe.
E. Observers
- The General Conference, on the recommendation of the
Executive Board and by a two-thirds majority may, subject to its
rules of procedure, invite as observers at specified sessions of
the Conference or of its Commissions representatives of
international organizations, such as those referred to in Article
XI, paragraph 4.
- When consultative arrangements have been approved by the
Executive Board for such international non-governmental or semi-
governmental organizations in the manner provided in Article XI,
paragraph 4, those organizations shall be invited to send
observers to sessions of the General Conference and its
Commissions.
Article V
Executive Board
A. Composition
- The Executive Board shall be elected by the General
Conference from among the delegates appointed by the Member
States and shall consist of fifty-one members each of whom shall
represent the Government of the Member State of which he is a
national. The President of the General Conference shall sit ex
officio in an advisory capacity on the Executive Board.
- In electing the members of the Executive Board the General
Conference shall endeavour to include persons competent in the
arts, the humanities, the sciences, education and the diffusion
of ideas, and qualified by their experience and capacity to
fulfil the administrative and executive duties of the Board. It
shall also have regard to the diversity of cultures and a
balanced geographical distribution. Not more than one national of
any Member State shall serve on the Board at any one time, the
President of the Conference excepted.
- Members of the Board shall serve from the close of the
session of the General Conference which elected them until the
close of the second ordinary session of the General Conference
following that election. They shall not be immediately eligible
for a second term. The General Conference shall, at each of its
ordinary sessions, elect the number of members required to fill
vacancies occurring at the end of the session.
- In the event of the death or resignation of a
member of the Executive Board, his replacement for the remainder
of his term shall be appointed by the Executive Board on the
nomination of the Government of the Member State the former
member of the Board represented.
- The Government making the nomination and the Executive Board
shall have regard to the factors set forth in paragraph 2 of this
Article.
- When exceptional circumstances arise, which, in the
considered opinion of the represented State, make it
indispensable for its representative to be replaced, even if he
does not tender his resignation, measures shall be taken in
accordance with the provisions of sub-paragraph (a) above.
- In the event of the withdrawal from the Organization of a
Member State a national of which is a member of the Executive
Board, that member's term of office shall be terminated on the
date the withdrawal becomes effective.
B. Functions
- The Executive Board shall prepare the agenda
for the General Conference. It shall examine the programme of
work for the Organization and corresponding budget estimates
submitted to it by the Director-General in accordance with
paragraph 3 of Article VI and shall submit them with such
recommendations as it considers desirable to the General
Conference.
- The Executive Board, acting under the authority of the
General Conference, shall be responsible for the execution of the
programme adopted by the Conference. In accordance with the
decisions of the General Conference and having regard to
circumstances arising between two ordinary sessions, the
Executive Board shall take all necessary measures to ensure the
effective and rational execution of the programme by the
Director-General.
- Between ordinary sessions of the General Conference, the
Board may discharge the functions of adviser to the United
Nations, set forth in Article IV, paragraph 5, whenever the
problem upon which advice is sought has already been dealt with
in principle by the Conference, or when the solution is implicit
in decisions of the Conference.
- The Executive Board shall recommend to the General Conference
the admission of new Members to the Organization.
- Subject to decisions of the General Conference, the Executive
Board shall adopt its own rules of procedure. It shall elect its
officers from among its members.
- The Executive Board shall meet in regular session at least
twice a year and may meet in special session if convoked by the
Chairman on his own initiative or upon the request of six members
of the Board.
- The Chairman of the Executive Board shall present, on behalf
of the Board, to each ordinary session of the General Conference,
with or without comments, the reports on the activities of the
Organization which the Director-General is required to prepare in
accordance with the provisions of Article VI.3(b).
- The Executive Board shall make all necessary arrangements to
consult the representatives of international organizations or
qualified persons concerned with questions within its
competence.
- Between sessions of the General Conference, the Executive
Board may request advisory opinions from the International Court
of Justice on legal questions arising within the field of the
Organization's activities.
- Although the members of the Executive Board are
representative of their respective Governments they shall
exercise the powers delegated to them by the General Conference
on behalf of the Conference as a whole.
Article VI
Secretariat
- The Secretariat shall consist of a Director-General and such
staff as may be required.
- The Director-General shall be nominated by the Executive
Board and appointed by the General Conference for a period of six
years, under such conditions as the Conference may approve. The
Director-General may be appointed for a further term of six years
but shall not be eligible for reappointment for a subsequent
term. The Director-General shall be the chief administrative
officer of the Organization.
- The Director-General, or a deputy designated
by him, shall participate, without the right to vote, in all
meetings of the General Conference, of the Executive Board, and
of the Committees of the Organization. He shall formulate
proposals for appropriate action by the Conference and the Board,
and shall prepare for submission to the Board a draft programme
of work for the Organization with corresponding budget
estimates.
- The Director-General shall prepare and communicate to Member
States and to the Executive Board periodical reports on the
activities of the Organization. The General Conference shall
determine the periods to be covered by these reports.
- The Director-General shall appoint the staff of the
Secretariat in accordance with staff regulations to be approved
by the General Conference. Subject to the paramount consideration
of securing the highest standards of integrity, efficiency and
technical competence, appointment to the staff shall be on as
wide a geographical basis as possible.
- The responsibilities of the Director-General and of the staff
shall be exclusively international in character. In the discharge
of their duties they shall not seek or receive instructions from
any Government or from any authority external to the
Organization. They shall refrain from any action which might
prejudice their position as international officials. Each State
member of the Organization undertakes to respect the
international character of the responsibilities of the
Director-General and the staff, and not to seek to influence them
in the discharge of their duties.
- Nothing in this Article shall preclude the Organization from
entering into special arrangements within the United Nations
Organization for common services and staff and for the
interchange of personnel.
Article VII
National Co-operating Bodies
- Each Member State shall make such arrangements as suit its
particular conditions for the purpose of associating its
principal bodies interested in educational, scientific and
cultural matters with the work of the Organization, preferably by
the formation of a National Commission broadly representative of
the Government and such bodies.
- National Commissions or National Co-operating Bodies, where
they exist, shall act in an advisory capacity to their respective
delegations to the General Conference and to their Governments in
matters relating to the Organization and shall function as
agencies of liaison in all matters of interest to it.
- The Organization may, on the request of a Member State,
delegate, either temporarily or permanently, a member of its
Secretariat to serve on the National Commission of that State, in
order to assist in the development of its work.
Article VIII
Reports by Member States
Each Member State shall submit to the Organization, at such times
and in such manner as shall be determined by the General
Conference, reports on the laws, regulations and statistics
relating to its educational, scientific and cultural institutions
and activities, and on the action taken upon the recommendations
and conventions referred to in Article IV, paragraph 4.
Article IX
Budget
- The Budget shall be administered by the Organization.
- The General Conference shall approve and give final effect to
the budget and to the apportionment of financial responsibility
among the States members of the Organization subject to such
arrangement with the United Nations as may be provided in the
agreement to be entered into pursuant to Article X.
- The Director-General may accept voluntary contributions,
gifts, bequests, and subventions directly from Governments,
public and private institutions, associations and private
persons, subject to the conditions specified in the Financial
Regulations.
Article X
Relations with the United Nations Organization
This Organization shall be brought into relation with the United
Nations Organization, as soon as practicable, as one of the
Specialized Agencies referred to in Article 57 of the Charter of
the United Nations. This relationship shall be effected through
an agreement with the United Nations Organization under Article
63 of the Charter, which agreement shall be subject to the
approval of the General Conference of this Organization. The
agreement shall provide for effective co-operation between the
two Organizations in the pursuit of their common purposes, and at
the same time shall recognize the autonomy of this Organization,
within the fields of its competence as defined in this
Constitution. Such agreement may, among other matters, provide
for the approval and financing of the budget of the Organization
by the General Assembly of the United Nations.
Article XI
Relations with other Specialized International
Organizations and Agencies
- This Organization may cooperate with other specialized inter
governmental organizations and agencies whose interests and
activities are related to its purposes. To this end the Director-
General, acting under the general authority of the Executive
Board, may establish effective working relationships with such
organizations and agencies and establish such joint committees as
may be necessary to assure effective co-operation. Any formal
arrangements entered into with such organizations or agencies
shall be subject to the approval of the Executive Board.
- Whenever the General Conference of this Organization and the
competent authorities of any other specialized intergovernmental
organizations or agencies whose purpose and functions lie within
the competence of this Organization, deem it desirable to effect
a transfer of their resources and activities to this
Organization, the Director-General, subject to the approval of
the Conference, may enter into mutually acceptable arrangements
for this purpose.
- This Organization may make appropriate arrangements with
other intergovernmental organizations for reciprocal
representation at meetings.
- The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization may make suitable arrangements for consultation and
co-operation with non-governmental international organizations
concerned with matters within its competence, and may invite them
to undertake specific tasks. Such co-operation may also include
appropriate participation by representatives of such
organizations on advisory committees set up by the General
Conference.
Article XII
Legal status of the Organization
The provisions of Articles 104 and 105 of the Charter of the
United Nations Organization concerning the legal status of that
Organization, its privileges and immunities, shall apply in the
same way to this Organization.
Article XIII
Amendments
- Proposals for amendments to this Constitution shall become
effective upon receiving the approval of the General Conference
by a two-thirds majority; provided, however, that those
amendments which involve fundamental alterations in the aims of
the Organization or new obligations for the Member States shall
require subsequent acceptance on the part of two-thirds of the
Member States before they come into force. The draft texts of
proposed amendments shall be communicated by the Director-General
to the Member States at least six months in advance of their
consideration by the General Conference.
- The General Conference shall have power to adopt by a
two-thirds majority rules of procedure for carrying out the
provisions of this Article.
Article XIV
Interpretation
- The English and French texts of this Constitution shall be
regarded as equally authoritative.
- Any question or dispute concerning the interpretation of this
Constitution shall be referred for determination to the
International Court of Justice or to an arbitral tribunal, as the
General Conference may determine under its rules of
procedure.
Article XV
Entry into force
- This Constitution shall be subject to acceptance. The
instrument of acceptance shall be deposited with the Government
of the United Kingdom.
- This Constitution shall remain open for signature in the
archives of the Government of the United Kingdom. Signature may
take place either before or after the deposit of the instrument
of acceptance. No acceptance shall be valid unless preceded or
followed by signature. However, a State that has withdrawn from
the Organization shall simply deposit a new instrument of
acceptance in order to resume membership.
- This Constitution shall come into force when it has been
accepted by twenty of its signatories. Subsequent acceptances
shall take effect immediately.
- The Government of the United Kingdom will inform all Members
of the United Nations of the receipt of all instruments of
acceptance and of the date on which the Constitution comes into
force in accordance with the preceding paragraph.
In faith whereof, the undersigned, duly authorized to that
effect, have signed this Constitution in the English and French
languages, both texts being equally authentic.
Done in London the sixteenth day of November, one thousand nine
hundred and forty-five, in a single copy, in the English and
French languages, of which certified copies will be communicated
by the Government of the United Kingdom to the Governments of all
the Members of the United Nations.
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