<
 
 
 
 
×
>
You are viewing an archived web page, collected at the request of United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) using Archive-It. This page was captured on 13:13:31 Dec 21, 2015, and is part of the UNESCO collection. The information on this web page may be out of date. See All versions of this archived page.
Loading media information hide




The exhibition «A Child in my street » opens at UNESCO - (UNESCO)
2002-11-19 11:00 pm barbosa_spinetta_sm1.jpgIn the presence of Anne-Marie Raffarin, wife of the French Prime Minister, Mr Jean-Cyril Spinetta, President of Air France Company and members of organizations from Brazil, Burkina Faso, Morocco, Philippines, Romania, Senegal and Cambodia, the Deputy Director-General of UNESCO Marcio Barbosa inaugurated the exhibition "A Child in My Street". More

Street Children the focus of international seminar and photo exhibit at UNESCO - (UNESCO Media Advisory)
2002-11-14 11:00 pm children-visition-the-exhib.gif“A child on my street” is the theme of a forthcoming exhibit presented by UNESCO and the Air France Foundation, featuring photographs shot by Eric Dexheimer in Fortaleza (Brazil), Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso), Casablanca (Morocco), Manila (Philippines), Bucharest (Romania), Thičs (Senegal) and Cambodia, where the photographer shared the daily life of street children for ten months.
More

 
Colloquium: A Child in my Street
COLLOQUE.jpg 21/11/2002 - Numerous speakers and over 250 participants concluded during the colloquium “A Child in my street” that only a better understanding of this problem can help in elaborating strategies, policies, programmes and projects more focused on the real life experienced by these children. More

EDISCA - Contemporary Ballet
scene_ballet_edisca.jpg Performed by The EDISCA Troupe and choreographed by Dora Isabel do Araůjo Andrade
21/11/2002 - This ballet was inspired by the culture and inhabitants of north-east Brazil and is a metaphor on the duality between the material and spiritual life. “Two Seasons” mixes traditions and surrealism evoking the passage from one life to another. More

 ID: 9618 guest (Read) - Updated: 2003-06-07 10:11 am © 2002 - UNESCO - Contact