Recursos
Exploren una amplia gama de recursos valiosos en GCED para profundizar su comprensión y promover su búsqueda, incidencia, enseñanza y aprendizaje.
289 resultados encontrados
¡Conoce tus derechos!: Declaración de las Naciones Unidas sobre los Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas para adolescentes indígenas Año de publicación: 2013 Autor corporativo: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Esta publicación presenta, en un lenguaje dirigido específicamente a adolescentes indígenas, la Declaración de las Naciones Unidas sobre los Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas, sus implicaciones y relación con los movimientos indígenas.
Seamos amigos en la escuela: Una guía para promover la empatía y la inclusión Año de publicación: 2019 Autor corporativo: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) La empatía es una habilidad que nos permiten comprender las emociones y experiencias de las otras personas.Esta guía busca promocionar la empatia en el constexto educativo, para fomentar la convivencia pacifica,la inclusión y la no violencia en las escuelas. Centra su visión en la misión que tienen los docentes de educar además de lo que respecta a la malla curricular el manejo de las emociones propias y ajenas.
Aprender a vivir juntos: Un programa intercultural e interreligioso para la educación ética: Resumen Año de publicación: 2015 Autor corporativo: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) | Interfaith Council on Ethics Education for Children | Arigatou Foundation What is the Learning to Live Together? How was it developed? Where and how can it be used? In the Executive Summary you can find answers to all these questions, as well as information about outstanding projects that show the potential of the programme.
El camino hacia los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible Año de publicación: 2015 Autor corporativo: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Animated video to help children learn about important concepts for people and planet as covered in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Hacer las promesas realidad: La igualdad de género en la agenda 2030 para el desarrollo sostenible Año de publicación: 2018 Autor corporativo: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) “Hacer las promesas realidad: La igualdad de género en la Agenda 2030 para el Desarrollo Sostenible” presenta una evaluación exhaustiva y fidedigna de los avances, dificultades y posibilidades de la aplicación de los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible (ODS) desde una perspectiva de género. El informe hace seguimiento de las tendencias mundiales y regionales con miras a la consecución de los ODS para las mujeres y las niñas sobre la base de los datos disponibles, y ofrece orientación práctica para la ejecución de políticas sensibles al género y los consiguientes procesos de rendición de cuentas. Como fuente de análisis de alta calidad de datos y políticas, el informe es una referencia e instrumento de rendición de cuentas esencial para responsables de la formulación de políticas, organizaciones de mujeres, el sistema de las Naciones Unidas y otras partes interesadas.
Aprender a vivir juntos: Un programa intercultural e interreligioso para la educación ética: Serie de buenas prácticas; Massa-Massar: el viaje Año de publicación: 2012 Autor corporativo: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) | Interfaith Council on Ethics Education for Children | Arigatou Foundation The Massa-Massar programme creates opportunities for Jews and Palestinians to meet, learn from one another, challenge their prejudices and stereotypes, listen to new narratives and reflect on their relations with others and their role in their societies.
Nuestra diversidad creativa: informe de la comisión mundial de cultura y desarrollo, versión resumida Año de publicación: 1996 Autor corporativo: World Commission on Culture and Development This report is designed to address a diversified audience across the world that ranges from community activists, field workers, artists and scholars to government officials and politicians. We want it to inform the world’s opinion leaders and to guide its policy-makers. We want it to capture the attention of the world’s intellectual and artistic communities, as well as the general public. We aim to have shown them how culture shapes all our thinking, imagining and behaviour. It is the transmission of behaviour as well as a dynamic source for change, creativity, freedom and the awakening of innovative opportunities. For groups and societies, culture is energy, inspiration and empowerment, as well as the knowledge and acknowledgment of diversity: if cultural diversity is ‘behind us, around us and before us”, as Claude L&i-Strauss put it, we must learn how to let it lead not to the clash of cultures, but to their fruitful coexistence and to intercultural harmony. Just as in the tasks of building peace and consolidating democratic values, an indivisible set of goals, so too economic and political rights cannot be realized separately from social and cultural rights. The challenge to humanity is to adopt new ways of thinking, new ways of acting, new ways of organizing itself in society, in short, new ways of living. The challenge is also to promote different paths of development, informed by a recognition of how cultural factors shape the way in which societies conceive their own futures and choose the means to attain these futures. I have for some time been concerned with the “culture of peace”. There is now considerable evidence that neglect of human development has been one of the principal causes of wars and internal armed conflicts, and that these, in turn, retard human development. With government complicity and with the intention of raising export receipts, private businesses continue to sell advanced military technology, nuclear materials and equipment for the production of bacteriological and chemical warfare. The concept of state sovereignty which still prevails today has increasingly come under scrutiny. In the area of peace-keeping, the distinction between external aggression and internal oppression is often unrealistic. The predominant threat to stability are violent conflicts within countries and not between them. There is an urgent need to strengthen international human rights law. Many of the most serious troubles come from within states – either because of ethnic strife or repressive measures by governments. Conditions that lead to tyranny and large-scale violations of human rights at home sooner or later are likely to spill over into a search for enemies abroad. The temptation of repressive states to export internal difficulties is great. Consider the Soviet Union’s invasion of Hungary and Czechoslovakia after it had used domestic oppression and the persistent refusal - for many years - of the previous South African governments to grant independence to Namibia. An ounce of prevention is better than a ton of punishment.
Nuestra diversidad creativa: informe de la comisión mundial de cultura y desarrollo Año de publicación: 1996 Autor corporativo: World Commission on Culture and Development This report is designed to address a diversified audience across the world that ranges from community activists, field workers, artists and scholars to government officials and politicians. We want it to inform the world’s opinion leaders and to guide its policy-makers. We want it to capture the attention of the world’s intellectual and artistic communities, as well as the general public. We aim to have shown them how culture shapes all our thinking, imagining and behaviour. It is the transmission of behaviour as well as a dynamic source for change, creativity, freedom and the awakening of innovative opportunities. For groups and societies, culture is energy, inspiration and empowerment, as well as the knowledge and acknowledgment of diversity: if cultural diversity is ‘behind us, around us and before us”, as Claude L&i-Strauss put it, we must learn how to let it lead not to the clash of cultures, but to their fruitful coexistence and to intercultural harmony. Just as in the tasks of building peace and consolidating democratic values, an indivisible set of goals, so too economic and political rights cannot be realized separately from social and cultural rights. The challenge to humanity is to adopt new ways of thinking, new ways of acting, new ways of organizing itself in society, in short, new ways of living. The challenge is also to promote different paths of development, informed by a recognition of how cultural factors shape the way in which societies conceive their own futures and choose the means to attain these futures. I have for some time been concerned with the “culture of peace”. There is now considerable evidence that neglect of human development has been one of the principal causes of wars and internal armed conflicts, and that these, in turn, retard human development. With government complicity and with the intention of raising export receipts, private businesses continue to sell advanced military technology, nuclear materials and equipment for the production of bacteriological and chemical warfare. The concept of state sovereignty which still prevails today has increasingly come under scrutiny. In the area of peace-keeping, the distinction between external aggression and internal oppression is often unrealistic. The predominant threat to stability are violent conflicts within countries and not between them. There is an urgent need to strengthen international human rights law. Many of the most serious troubles come from within states – either because of ethnic strife or repressive measures by governments. Conditions that lead to tyranny and large-scale violations of human rights at home sooner or later are likely to spill over into a search for enemies abroad. The temptation of repressive states to export internal difficulties is great. Consider the Soviet Union’s invasion of Hungary and Czechoslovakia after it had used domestic oppression and the persistent refusal - for many years - of the previous South African governments to grant independence to Namibia. An ounce of prevention is better than a ton of punishment. 