European Year of Cultural Heritage
The year of 2018 was designated to be the European Year of Cultural Heritage by the European Commission. [1][2]
Announced in 2017, it was officially launched on January 31, 2018.[3]
To this initiative are participating 28 European countries.
References
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European Years (1983–present)
- SMEs & the Craft Industry (1983)
- People's Europe (1984)
- Music (1985)
- Road Safety (1986)
- Environment (1987)
- Cinema & Television (1988)
- Information on Cancer (1989)
- Tourism (1990)
- Safety, Hygiene & Health Protection at Work (1992)
- Elderly & Solidarity between Generations (1993)
- Nutrition & Health (1994)
- Road Safety (1995)
- Lifelong Learning (1996)
- Racism & Xenophobia (1997)
- Local & Regional Democracy (1998)
- Violence against Women (1999)
- Languages (2001)
- People with Disabilities (2003)
- Education through Sport (2004)
- Citizenship through Education (2005)
- Workers' Mobility (2006)
- Equal Opportunities for All (2007)
- Intercultural Dialogue (2008)
- Creativity & Innovation (2009)
- Poverty & Social Exclusion (2010)
- Volunteering (2011)
- Active Ageing (2012)
- Citizens (2013–2014)
- Development (2015)
- Cultural Heritage (2018)