<
 
 
 
 
×
>
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 21:55:11 Dec 22, 2021, 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 The information on this web page may be out of date.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

Fit for Life: UNESCO launches its new sport initiative

02/12/2021
03 - Good Health & Well Being
04 - Quality Education
10 - Reduced Inequalities

Physical inactivity, mental health issues and social inequalities are three intersecting crises that have been aggravated by COVID-19. New UNESCO data revealed that 70% of physical education teachers reported that the mental and physical health of their students worsened during the pandemic.

Despite this and the numerous benefits of sport and physical activity in terms of physical and mental health, education, equality, inclusion and peacebuilding, 57% of countries invest less than 2% of their national education budgets in physical education.

To tackle this, UNESCO developed Fit for Life, a new sport-based initiative designed to activate smart investments in sport, increase grassroot participation and accelerate COVID-19 recovery.

Launched on 15 November 2021, during UNESCO’s General Conference, Gabriela Ramos, Assistant-Director General for Social and Human Sciences, set the scene by calling on partners to join the Fit for Life Coalition.

Sport is the glue which can bind us across regional, cultural, socio-economic and individual differences. We need to systematize our approaches if we are to increase our impacts and make the case for more and better investments in sport.

Gabriela Ramos, Assistant-Director General for Social and Human Sciences

The event engaged high-level personalities including Roxana Maracineanu, Deputy Minister of Sport of France, Oleg Matystin, Minister of Sport of the Russian Federation and Rt Hon Patricia Scotland, Secretary-General of the Commonwealth Secretariat.


© UNESCO

 

Key highlights included:

We are convinced that with the help of Fit for Life, we will be able to achieve our common goals, to raise the importance and value of physical activity to every person, and improve their quality of life, as well as to create all the necessary conditions for the healthy development of our countries.

Oleg Matytsin, Minister of Sport of the Russian Federation


© UNESCO / Luis Abad-Banda

Stefania Giannini, Assistant Director-General for Education, closed the session by underlining the need for different UNESCO Programmes, such as the Education Programme, to join the Social and Human Sciences Programme and work closely together to develop this project.


© UNESCO

I am proud that we are leveraging UNESCO’s unique transdisciplinary mandate to harness the joy of sport for well-being, inclusion, and resilience.

Stefania Giannini, Assistant-Director-General for Education

***

Following the official launch of the initiative, UNESCO calls on all interested parties, including Member States, the private sector, sports organizations and civil society to get in contact to learn how they can take part in Fit for Life, in view of the first phase of the project on advocacy and knowledge components which will initiate in 2022.

Contact

For more information on the project and how to engage please contact: Nancy McLennan, n.mclennan@unesco.org