Home » International » Kozhikode in Kerala has been designated as the UNESCO ‘City of Literature’ and Gwalior as the ‘City of Music’ in the latest @UNESCO List of Creative Cities Network

Kozhikode in Kerala has been designated as the UNESCO ‘City of Literature’ and Gwalior as the ‘City of Music’ in the latest @UNESCO List of Creative Cities Network

Newdelhi:1/11/23:On World Cities Day, 55 cities join the UNESCO Creative Cities Network (UCCN), following their designation by UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay. New cities were acknowledged for their strong commitment to harnessing culture and creativity as part of their development strategies, and displaying innovative practices in human-centred urban planning. With the latest additions, the Network now counts 350 cities in more than one hundred countries, representing seven creative fields: Crafts and Folk Art, Design, Film, Gastronomy, Literature, Media Arts and Music.

The new members of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network are:

  • Asaba – Film
  • Ashgabat – Design
  • Banja Luka – Music
  • Battambang – Gastronomy
  • Bissau – Music
  • Bolzano – Music
  • Bremen – Literature
  • Buffalo City – Literature
  • Bukhara – Crafts and Folk Art
  • Bydgoszcz – Music
  • Caen – Media Arts
  • Caracas – Music
  • Casablanca – Media Arts
  • Castelo Branco – Crafts and Folk Art
  • Cetinje – Design
  • Chaozhou – Gastronomy
  • Chiang Rai – Design
  • Chongqing – Design
  • Concepción – Music
  • Da Lat – Music
  • Fribourg – Gastronomy
  • Gangneung – Gastronomy
  • Granada[1] – Design
  • Gwalior – Music
  • Herakleion – Gastronomy
  • Hobart – Literature
  • Hoi An – Crafts and Folk Art
  • Iasi – Literature
  • Iloilo City – Gastronomy
  • Ipoh – Music
  • Kathmandu – Film
  • Kozhikode – Literature
  • Kutaisi – Literature

  • Mexicali – Music

  • Montecristi – Crafts and Folk Art

  • Montreux – Music

  • Nkongsamba – Gastronomy

  • Novi Sad – Media Arts

  • Okayama – Literature

  • Ouarzazate – Film

  • Oulu – Media Arts

  • Penedo – Film

  • Rio de Janeiro – Literature

  • Şanlıurfa – Music

  • Suphanburi – Music

  • Surakarta – Crafts and Folk Art

  • Taif – Literature

  • Toulouse – Music

  • Tukums – Literature

  • Ulaanbaatar – Crafts and Folk Art

  • Umngeni Howick – Crafts and Folk Art

  • Valencia – Design

  • Varaždin – Music

  • Veliky Novgorod – Music

  • Vicente Lopez – Film

The city of Lyon, Creative City of Media Arts since 2008, has been granted a status of a Creative City of Literature, following its request to change creative field.

Newly designated cities will cooperate with Network members to strengthen their resilience the face of evolving threats such as climate change, rising inequality, as well as rapid urbanization, with 68% of the world’s population projected to live in urban areas by 2050[2].

“The cities in our Creative Cities Network are leading the way when it comes to enhancing access to culture and galvanizing the power of creativity for urban resilience and development,” says Audrey Azoulay, UNESCO Director-General.

An upcoming policy paper – “The added value of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network at local, national and international level” – will testify to the leading role played by cities towards the achievement of the 2030 Agenda, while demonstrating ways in which UNESCO supports the UCCN members by fostering dialogue, peer-to-peer learning and collaboration.

The newly designated Creative Cities are invited to participate in the 2024 UCCN Annual Conference (1 – 5 July 2024) in Braga, Portugal, under the theme “Bringing Youth to the table for the next decade”

 

About Editor in chief

Ashok Palit has completed his graduation from Upendranath College Soro, Balasore and post graduation from Utkal University in Odia Language and literture.. He has also carved out a niche for himself as a scribe of eminence after joining the profession in 1988. He is also an independent media production professional. He brings loads of experience to Advanced Media, Ashok Palit as a cineaste has been active in film criticism for over three decades. As a film society activist, he soared to eminence for his profound commitment to the art film appreciation and aesthetics of cinema. His mode of discourse is often erudite but always lucid and comprehensible marked by a perfect acumen so rare in the field. A film aesthete with an immense fond of critical sensibilities, he wrote about growth and development of odia cinema in New Indian Express, The Times of India, The Hindustan Times, The Asian Age and Screen. He has been working as an Editor for Cine Samaya from 2002-2004.. He had made solid contribution on cinema in many odia Dailies and weekly such as Samaj, Prajatantra, Dharatri, Samaya, Satabadi, and weekly Samaya.
x

Check Also

Heartfelt Homage to Gandhiji on Martyrs’ Day

Bhubaneswar:30/1/25:The death anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, the ardent apostle of truth and nonviolence is observed every year as Martyrs’ Day. Today on this occasion the state-level event was held on ...