BEACONS
OF THE INFORMATION SOCIETY
THE
ALEXANDRIA PROCLAMATION ON INFORMATION LITERACY AND LIFELONG LEARNING
Celebrating
this week's confirmation of the site of the Pharos of Alexandria, one of
the ancient wonders of the world, the participants in the High Level Colloquium
on Information Literacy and Lifelong Learning held at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina
on 6-9 November 2005 proclaim that information literacy and lifelong learning
are the beacons of the Information Society, illuminating the courses to
development, prosperity and freedom.
Information
Literacy lies at the core of lifelong learning. It empowers people
in all walks of life to seek, evaluate, use and create information effectively
to achieve their personal, social, occupational and educational goals.
It is a basic human right in a digital world and promotes social inclusion
of all nations.
Lifelong
learning enables individuals, communities and nations to attain their goals
and to take advantage of emerging opportunities in the evolving global environment
for shared benefit. It assists them and their institutions to meet
technological, economic and social challenges, to redress disadvantage and
to advance the well being of all.
Information
literacy
-
provides
the key to effective access, use and creation of content to support
economic development, education, health and human services, and all
other aspects of contemporary societies, and thereby provides the vital
foundation for fulfilling the goals of the Millennium Declaration and
the World Summit on the Information Society; and
Within
the context of the developing Information Society, we urge governments and
intergovernmental organizations to pursue policies and programs to promote
information literacy and lifelong learning. In particular, we ask
them to support
-
professional
development of personnel in education, library, information, archive,
and health and human services in the principles and practices of information
literacy and lifelong learning;
-
inclusion
of information literacy into initial and continuing education for key
economic sectors and government policy making and administration, and
into the practice of advisors to the business, industry and agriculture
sectors;
We
affirm that vigorous investment in information literacy and lifelong learning
strategies creates public value and is essential to the development of the
Information Society.
Adopted
in Alexandria, Egypt at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina on 9 November 2005.