Safeguarding and promoting Traditional Sports and Games (TSG) as sports practices and intangible cultural heritage is a key challenge for the future development of sport and societies.
TSG also enhance intercultural dialogue and peace, reinforce youth empowerment, and promote ethical sports practices.
“The celebration of indigenous and traditional forms of sports and games, which derive from the roots of many different communities, is a growing feature of contemporary culture.”
— Kiochiro Matsuura, UNESCO Director-General, 2003 (World Sport Encyclopedia)
“Part of the universal heritage diversity”, TSG are “practices in an individual or collective manner, deriving from regional or local identity, based on accepted rules’’. They “dispose of a popular character (…) and promote global health” (Collective Consultation, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran, 2009).
Safeguarding and promoting TSG build temporal and cultural paths leading to intercultural and intercommunity dialogues. TSG promote the understanding of contemporary cultural, societal, and sports practices and anticipate their future evolutions. TSG give governments, communities, and individuals the chance to express both cultural pride and richness.
“The diversity of physical education, physical activity, and sport is a basic feature of their value and appeal. Traditional and indigenous games, dances, and sports, also in their modern and emerging forms, express the world’s rich cultural heritage and must be protected and promoted.” International Charter of Physical Education, Physical Activity and Sport, Art.1.5
Not subject to globalized economic stakes of classic sports, nor to an equivalent quest for performance and results leading to dangerous and illegal practices that UNESCO International Convention against Doping in Sport notably attempts to regulate, TSG offer governments, sports movement and citizens, the opportunity to build sustainable and ethical sport and cultural practices.
The importance of this intangible cultural heritage notably relies on the intergenerational and intercultural dialogues that maintain these traditional practices living within communities. Building intercultural dialogue and promoting ethical values through TSG fosters a fertile soil for youth empowerment and the development of peace between and within communities and societies.
International Recognition
Draft International Legal Framework
Knowledge Sharing and Research
Project of International Network
Engaged in revitalizing the program on the safeguarding and promotion of Traditional Sports and Games, a third Collective Consultation on Traditional Sports and Games (TSG) was held at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris from 6 to 7 July 2017. The consultation gathered experts from sports federations and associations, academics, representatives of Member States of UNESCO and non-governmental organizations.
Participants adopted an agenda for 2017 and 2018 to formalize the following actions:
As the core of the outcomes of the collective consultation, participants appointed the chairperson of the Ad Hoc Advisory Committee, Mr Khalil Khan (President of the International Association of Traditional Wrestling Sports - IATWS), and established working groups to ensure a follow-up on the above-mentioned actions.
On 8 December 2017, the Secretariat convened a Technical Meeting where chairpersons from the Ad Hoc Advisory Committee and the Ad Hoc Working Groups discussed the strategic development of TSG activities.
The establishment of a Group of Friends of UNESCO Traditional Sports and Games was then decided to create synergies with the Member States and join forces. Over the past months, Member States have shown support and interest in this domain by signing the Letter of Commitment and joining the Group. Members of the Group of Friends are encouraged to take ownership of the TSG initiatives at the national level through policies, consultations, and cultural events. This may lead to Member States’ empowerment with a particular focus on advocating for the safeguarding and promotion of traditional sports and games with the guidance and technical support of UNESCO’s Secretariat in close cooperation with the United Nations system.
Hosted by the World Ethnosport Confederation (WEC), the Fourth Collective Consultation on the Safeguarding and Promotion of TSG took place on 13 and 14 August 2018, in Istanbul, Turkey. Strategic development of the programme was discussed, including the International Council on TSG project or the World Traditional Sports and Games 2021 (WTSG2021) project, elaborated by the Ad Hoc Advisory Committee.
In 2003, the World Sports Encyclopedia was published as a "worldwide list of traditional games and sports" in line with the Declaration of Punta del Este, following collaboration between UNESCO and Prof. Wojciech Liponski.
In the digital era, UNESCO intends to update this work and propose a dynamic and interactive digital version that will sensitize a broad audience, including the youngest, to TSG and foster knowledge sharing between amateurs and experts.
UNESCO has already started this tremendous work, supported by Tencent, with the elaboration of an Open Digital Library on TSG.
More on an Open Digital Library on TSG :
This resolution, in accordance with WHO’s Global Recommendations on Physical Activity for Health, UNESCO’s International Charter of Physical Education and Sport 1978, UNESCO’s Berlin Declaration 2013, UN’s Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities 2006 and Designed To Move – A Physical Activity Action Agenda, confirms and reinforces the importance of Traditional Sports and Games as a vehicle for the world’s unity, integration, cultural diversity, peace and physical activity.
The International Charter of Physical Education, Physical Activity and Sport is a rights-based reference that orients and supports policy- and decision-making in sport.
Adopted in 1978, the original Charter was perceived as innovative at the time - as it was the first rights-based document to state that “the practice of physical education and sport is a fundamental right for all”.
Based on the universal spirit of the original Charter, and integrating the significant evolutions in the field of sport since 1978, the revised Charter introduces universal principles such as gender equality, non-discrimination and social inclusion in and through sport. It also highlights the benefits of physical activity, the sustainability of sport, the inclusion of persons with disabilities and the protection of children.
This unique text is the expression of a common vision by all stakeholders whether they are professional or amateur athletes, referees, public authorities, law enforcement, sports organizations, betting operators, owners of sports-related rights, the media, non-governmental organizations, administrators, educators, families, the medical profession or other stakeholders.
The Charter promotes inclusive access to sport by all without any form of discrimination. It sets ethical and quality standards for all actors designing, implementing and evaluating sport programmes and policies.
- Courtesy - UNESCO