Public Service Pride Week
With a focus on expression and creativity, this theme of authenticity will act as a foundation for discussions, events and advocacy in 2022.
With a focus on expression and creativity, this theme of authenticity will act as a foundation for discussions, events and advocacy in 2022.
COM 2023 will feature 5 plenary and penal discussions. As well as bringing back the “Big Ideas” session.
On the night of 22 to 23 August 1791, in Saint Domingue, today the Republic of Haiti, saw the beginning of the uprising that would play a crucial role in the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.
“Building a better future through technological advances in carbon capture and storage".
Digitalisation and innovation are set to continue to be a top priority for the mining industry globally. Pushed by various factors such as stricter safety requirements, higher production efficiency and cost-saving targets, cybersecurity, supply, and value chain disruptions, decarbonisation targets and much more.
The International Day for People of African Descent will be celebrated for the first time on 31 August 2021. Through this Observance the United Nations aims to promote the extraordinary contributions of the African diaspora around the world and to eliminate all forms of discrimination against people of African descent.
Labour Day, the first Monday in September, has been a statutory holiday in Canada since 1894.
A day to celebrate and promote charitable giving, focusing on how philanthropy can address systemic inequalities globally
Clean air is important for the health and day-to-day lives of people, while air pollution is the single greatest environmental risk to human health and one of the main avoidable causes of death and disease globally.
Making the mine of the Future Tangible
Since 1967, International Literacy Day (ILD) celebrations have taken place annually around the world to remind the public of the importance of literacy as a matter of dignity and human rights, and to advance the literacy agenda towards a more literate and sustainable society.
Education is a fundamental human right. For children and youth caught up in emergency situations, education not only means the continuity of learning, but it also provides a sense of normalcy and the key to a different future, alerts the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).