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UN expert launches new study on impact of advertising, marketing on cultural rights

GENEVA, Feb 7 (KUNA) -- The United Nations Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, Farida Shaheed, is launching on Friday a new study on the impact of advertising and marketing practices on cultural rights, with an up-close look at their effect on cultural diversity and human rights.
Shaheed will be looking at the effect of commercial sponsorship on academic and artistic freedoms, as well as on the content of art museum exhibits, among other issues. Her report will be considered by the UN General Assembly in October this year.
"One underlying problem", the human rights expert said in a press release from her office in the UN Geneva, "relates to the impact that advertising and marketing practices may have on cultural diversity and the right of people to choose their way of life".
"The modification of our cultural and symbolic landscapes through billboards or screens, the increasing encroachment of advertising on our public space and the intrusion of advertising in schools and universities are among the concerns I intend to address in this report," she explained.
The Special Rapporteur has already laid the basis for her study through a first series of meetings with experts in New York. She has also reached out to all UN Member States and other interested parties to seek their views, for example on the use of private data for commercial purposes, the use of neuromarketing or behavioural targeting, and possible regulation to differentiate commercial speech from non-commercial speech.
"Many ethical and human rights issues are at stake", Ms. Shaheed stressed. "I am particularly interested in the mechanisms that can ensure a variety of narratives and values in the public space and through mass media, beyond what is often referred to as 'commercial culture.'" The Special Rapporteur's study on the impact of advertising and marketing practices on cultural rights will be made available online in September / October 2014, during the 69th session of the UN General Assembly in New York.
Farida Shaheed (Pakistan) took up her functions as Independent Expert and then Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights in August 2009. She has worked for more than 25 years promoting and protecting cultural rights by fostering policies and projects designed in culturally sensitive ways to support the rights of marginalized sectors, including women, peasants, and religious and ethnic minorities.
Shaheed has been the recipient of several national and international human rights awards, and is an experienced participant in negotiations at international, regional and national levels. (end) ta.mt KUNA 071600 Feb 14NNNN