The SNF Partners with Special Olympics to Build Global Social Inclusion with a Vision to Play Unified. Learn Unified
As part of a three-year, US$10 million grant, the SNF and Special Olympics have created a partnership model that will amplify the global impact that Special Olympics is making through its programmatic work in inclusive sports and youth and school engagement. This model aims to increase access and opportunity to school-based inclusive sports and education programming, representing a community that comprises of approximately 3-4% of the global population.
The announcement happens on the occasion of the 7th Annual International Stavros Niarchos Foundation International Conference on Philanthropy at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center in Athens, Greece. Special Olympics Chairman Dr. Timothy Shriver is slated to provide the keynote speech at the conference on June 23rd. Later today, the SNF Co-President Andreas Dracopoulos and Dr. Shriver will be meeting with the President of the Hellenic Republic, Prokopios Pavlopoulos, in order to announce this significant grant which aims to support increased inclusive development for youth with and without intellectual disabilities as part of a shared commitment to creating a “Unified Generation.”
“The support of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation is coming at a critical time as we witness and experience a world that is a divided place. Attitudes of mass destruction are tearing communities apart. But we know first-hand how the Special Olympics experience -- and our athletes -- bring people together in ways that erase the lines of division. When we Play Unified and Learn Unified, we see dramatic transformation of school climates into academic settings of welcome and integration, something the world desperately needs right now,” said Special Olympics Chairman Timothy Shriver. “The Special Olympics movement is incredibly grateful to the Stavros Niarchos Foundation for recognizing the power of our athletes’ message, and the vision of a generation truly Unified.”
SNF’s Co-President Andreas Dracopoulos stated, “We are very happy to be collaborating with Special Olympics for this critical program and work jointly to promote global social inclusion on all levels. Whenever we evaluate a proposal, the first thing we ask ourselves is whether it adds value to society and whether the people involved are ethical, efficient and effective. We are confident that our partnership with this exceptional organization, under the leadership of Dr. Timothy Shriver, will wield tangible and immediate positive effects for society-at-large. We are honored to be doing our part, to the best of our abilities, to support Special Olympics in its effort to empower individuals and their families and promote all that unites us rather than what sets us apart.”
In alignment with the SNF and Special Olympics vision of global inclusion, the partnership will create a scalable model to bring Special Olympics Unified Sports and Unified Schools programming to more communities worldwide and to create new and lasting inclusive policies around sports and education. Focus countries for the partnership include Brazil, Chile, China, Egypt, Greece, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mexico, Morocco, Russia, Serbia, Chinese Taipei and Tanzania.
Throughout the world, the partnership will aim to expand the reach and impact of in-school and inclusive sports programming, resulting in approximately 2,000 new Unified Schools for the movement -- schools that have active inclusive sports and advocacy programs for students of all ability levels. In addition, the partnership will train over 20,000 coaches to further develop the Special Olympics Unified Sports model. The partnership will engage over 750,000 athletes over the three-year project.
The Special Olympics Unified Sports and Unified Schools platforms are rooted heavily in the tenets of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN-CRPD), namely Articles 24 and 30. The UN-CRPD provides the global community with a viable and internationally recognized policy framework from which to expand programming that puts the CRPD into practice.