Year | City | Country |
---|---|---|
2011 | São Luís | Brazil |
Quito | Ecuador | |
2010 | Santo Domingo | Dominican Republic |
2009 | Asunción | Paraguay |
2008 | Brasilia | Brazil |
2007 | Cuzco | Peru |
2006 | Cordoba | Argentina |
2005 | Guadalajara | Mexico |
2004 | Santiago | Chile |
2003 | Panama City | Panama |
Curitiba | Brazil | |
2002 | Maceió | Brazil |
2001 | Iquique | Chile |
2000 | Mérida | Mexico |
The non-governmental organization American Capital of Culture Organization selects one city in the Americas annually to serve as the American Capital of Culture for a period of one year. The organization claims the initiative is based closely on the European Capital of Culture program; it enjoys the backing of the hemisphere-wide Organization of American States, but the OAS is not involved in the selection process.
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The American Capital of Culture initiative was born in 1997 and is aimed at all the countries of the Americas.
It has three major objectives:
The initiative was devised and is promoted by the American Capital of Culture Organization, a body set up in 1997, with the objective of promoting the American Capital of Culture and other, complementary cultural initiatives, which help to use culture as a key element in the development of the countries of the Americas.
Any territory of the countries of the American continent that wish to develop the objectives of the American Capital of Culture may apply to be chosen as American Capital of Culture.
“Territory” is deemed to be any physical area that has a political, geographical, administrative or historic unity. By way of example, territories could be cities, regions, provinces, states, nations, etc.
For the official presentation of the application, it is mandatory to complete all the sections of the Application Form, in any of the following four languages: English, Spanish, Portuguese or French.