
Last modified: 2023-06-03 by  zachary harden
 zachary harden
Keywords: instituto centroamericano de administración pública | icap | international organization | 
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![[Instituto Centroamericano de Administración Pública]](../images/i/int-icap.jpg) 
 
image located by Ivan Sache, 9 February 2008
Source:
http://www.icap.ac.cr/Qu%E9eselICAP/S%EDmbolosdelICAP/tabid/227/Default.aspx
See also:
The Instituto Centroamericano de Administración Pública (ICAP), based at San José, Costa Rica, is an international, governmental organism, self-styled "an institution in the service of public administration and integration in Central America". Created in 1954 by the governments of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica as the Escuela Superior de Administración Pública en América Central (ESAPAC, High School of Public Administration in Central America), the ICAP took its current name in 1967 (convention signed on 17 February 1967 in San José, Costa Rica, http://www.oas.org/juridico/spanish/firmas/f-79.html). Panamá joined the ICAP in 1961. The ICAP is ruled by a General Board made of the Ministers of Economy of the participating countries.
The aim of the ICAP are:
![[Instituto Centroamericano de Administración Pública]](../images/i/int)icap.jpg) image located 
by Ivan Sache, 9 February 2008
 
image located 
by Ivan Sache, 9 February 2008
  
  The emblem of the ICAP symbolizes the principle of integrationist
  aspiration of the region, emphasized by the set up of republics in the
  XIXth century. It alludes to the principles of equality, fraternity,
  liberty, republicanism, progress and peace. It includes elements from
  the emblem of each country of the region.
  The equilateral triangle represents with its three equal sides the
  equality in rights and duties of the countries to decide of their
  future.
  The group of five volcanoes surrounded by a sea and an ocean represents
  not only the morphologic and geographic characteristics of the isthmus
  but recalls also the historic process of evolution of the territory.
  The sun represents the strength of light and the hope of the new
  dawn.
  The Phrygian cap symbolized the struggle for liberty and republicanism.
  Emblem of the formation of the French Republic, it represents the
  recognition of the Central American countries as free and sovereign
  republics.
  The representation of the world as a "wheel" evokes the integration
  into the concert of the nations.
  Two branches of olive symbolize knowledge, growth and respect of the
  right to peace, shared by the peoples and the states.
  The knot in the ribbon represents fraternity and solidarity among the
  Central American countries.
  The sky represents truth, serenity, sincerity and responsibility in the
  everyday's life.
  
  Source: Description of the symbols,
ICAP website
  
  Regarding the above statement about the inclusion of symbols of each
  member country in the ICAP emblem, the five volcanoes, the sea, the
  triangle, the sun and the Phrygian cap already appeared in the emblem
  of the United Provinces of Central America and on the emblems of the
  subsequent Central American federations. Some of these elements were
  retained in the emblems of the countries after the disbanding of the
  federations: