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Right to PlayPaísAngola, Azerbaijan, Benin, Canadá, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Mozambique, Pakistan, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda, Zambia RegiónGlobal, África, Europa Central y del este Nuevas Repúblicas, Norteamérica, Asia, Oriente y Suroriente Asiático ResumenRight To Play (RTP) is a humanitarian organisation using sport and play programmes to encourage the healthy physical, social, and emotional development of refugee children, former child combatants, and young people at risk for - or orphaned by - HIV/AIDS. RTP's communication-centred projects are informed by a stated commitment to improving the lives of children and to strengthening their communities by translating positive values of sport into opportunities to promote development, health, and peace. As of this writing, RTP is working in Angola, Azerbaijan, Benin, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Israel, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Pakistan, Palestinian Territories, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda, and Zambia. Estrategias de comunicaciónRight To Play is built on the belief that sport has the power to help create healthier children and safer communities. The belief is that, in addition to the physical benefits they can deliver, well-designed sport and play programmes can enhance holistic development, foster resilience, and create meaningful connections between young people and adults. RTP also holds that sport and play can be used to teach values and life skills including optimism, respect, conflict resolution, compassion, courage, leadership, inspiration, self-confidence, teamwork, discipline, fair play, and joy. RTP's central programmes include:
To carry out these programmes, Right To Play engages and trains international and local volunteers who work with communities to implement projects. Among others, these volunteers include an international team of Olympic and professional athletes who donate their time to give back through sport. Led by 4-time Olympic gold medalist (and RTP President and CEO) Johann Olav Koss, these athlete ambassadors include Wayne Gretzky, Dikembe Mutombo, Anni Friesinger, Summer Sanders, Haile Gebrselassie, Silken Laumann, Tegla Loroupe, and Ian Thorpe. RTP draws on various types of media to communicate its messages to young people and adults in a position to reach them. For example, in August 2004, Canada's CTV broadcast an exploration about a specific RTP programme: a group of pre-adolescent soccer players, half of them Palestinian, half of them Israeli, were put together to play on an all-star team - The Peace Team - and to compete in the world's largest international youth soccer tournament, the Norway Cup in Oslo. "A Team for Peace" asked such questions as: "Can mutual respect and understanding be discovered on the soccer field? More important, can it be translated to off-field life in the tinderbox of the Middle East?" RTP aims to be community-centred in its strategy. The organisation works closely with communities to help set up the networks and infrastructure necessary to support sustainable local ownership of its sport and play programmes. Right To Play also trains local youth to be coaches, in an effort to expand the reach of the programmes and to impart leadership skills. Based on its commitment to every child's right to play, this organisation takes an active role in research and policy development in an effort to engage leaders in the fields of development, sport, business, and media. TemasChildren, Youth, Rights, Health, Peace. Puntos clave
Right To Play evolved out of Olympic Aid, the legacy project of the Lillehammer Olympic Organizing Committee. The focus of Olympic Aid during the Winter Games in Lillehammer was to show support for people in war torn countries and areas of distress. In early 2003, Olympic Aid evolved into Right To Play in order to meet the growing demands of programme implementation and fundraising. RTP is based on the philosophy of "Sport for Development", which organisers say "evolved out of the growing evidence that strengthening the right of children to play enhances their healthy physical and psychosocial development and builds stronger communities. Sport* is now recognized by many as an effective tool in the pursuit of development and peace including international experts in the fields of development, education, health, sport, economic and conflict resolution.... * Sport programs must be crafted to uphold the values of development - equity, inclusion and sustainability." Click here to read more about the Sport for Development philosophy, as well as the UN Interagency Task Force on Sport for Development. The report of this Task Force - "Sport for Development and Peace: Towards Achieving the Millennium Development Goals" was released on September 17 2003. Click here to view this report. Socios GlobalesImplementing Partners: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNICEF, UNESCO, World Health Organization, Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization, the Vaccine Fund, the CORE Initiative, CARE International, the American Red Cross, International Labour Organization, the Global Measles Initiative, Lutheran World Federation (Kenya), INSAN Foundation (Pakistan), EMIMA (Tanzania). Funding Partners: Canadian International Development Agency, US Department of State, United States Agency for International Development, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, Laureus Foundation, and a variety of private sector supporters. ContactoRight to Play
International Headquarters 65 Queen Street West Thomson Building, Suite 1900, Box 64 Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2M5 CANADA Tel: (416) 498-1922 Fax: (416) 498-1942 info@righttoplay.com Right to Play website Implementing Partners: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNICEF, UNESCO, World Health Organization, Global Alliance
Implementing Partners: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNICEF, UNESCO, World Health Organization, Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization, the Vaccine Fund, the CORE Initiative, CARE International, the American Red Cross, International Labour Organization, the Global Measles Initiative, Lutheran World Federation (Kenya), INSAN Foundation (Pakistan), EMIMA (Tanzania). Funding Partners: Canadian International Development Agency, US Department of State, United States Agency for International Development, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, Laureus Foundation, and a variety of private sector supporters. Reseñas relacionadasFuenteApril 2004 newsletter, forwarded by Elias M. Banda, Communications Coordinator (Right To Play Zambia Sport Health) on May 16 2004; and RTP website. En La Iniciativa de Comunicación desde el 22 de Septiembre de 2004 Actualizado el 06 de Febrero de 2006 |
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