New Heritage Approaches
Unsustainable urban change and expansion processes, climate changes, predatory tourism, protected areas downgrading, transnational exodus and the widespread consequential depletion of relations between society and nature, as well as socio-environmental and armed conflicts, bring new challenges to our collective heritage in the 21st century. New heritage approaches should inquire why and for whom the heritage sites are designated, providing meaningful narratives for the users to ensure their preservation. Gender, ethnicity, race and income are key aspects of diversity and inequality in the current geopolitical context to be considered. New heritage approaches should create living and integrated sites in a territorial and urban landscape perspective, articulating nature and culture, considering the tangible and intangible dimensions of heritage, fostering strategies to decolonize the notion of heritage, (re)interpretating its values and attributes through proactive strategies of conservation. Sustainable strategies should congregate the development of heritage education and social participation as instruments to enhance emancipation, citizenship and democratization of decision-making processes. The integration of heritage conservation in territorial planning politics and tools with a broad participatory perspective is also crucial to ensure an appropriate and inclusive heritage management. Join us in seminars, courses, exhibitions and public debates, and help building an integrated heritage conservation approach!
This session will reflect on innovative practices in heritage economics.
Preparing metropolises for pandemics: introducing sanitary challenges, coping with the New Urban Agenda and reconciling Nature, Culture.
Stories on people that are marginalized from official heritage narratives, and that have struggled and striven for recognition and acknowledgement of their heritage.
Heritage values and narratives that were marginalized by current approaches to the past and present, and how they can be identified and give deeper and universally relevant heritage narrative to World Heritage Sites.
Living cultural and natural heritage linkages and the uncertainty of the permanence of these areas as World Heritage designation.
Deepening the debate on the cultural landscape concept.
Questioning the “authorized heritage discourses” through defining meaning and authenticity of modern heritage or contemporary heritage.
Discuss the concepts of authenticity and integrity to better frame their use in the definition and implementation of conservation strategies.
New urban planning approaches where heritage is not a simple sectoral component but permeates the whole urban development strategy in a perspective of sustainability and equity.
Institutional design, financial business models and human resource management affecting conservation/development processes.
Contribution of heritage economics on values and processes of heritage conservation.
Approaches, experiences and tools for including diverse social perspectives and to stimulate strategies that include knowledge, feelings and affections involved in the conservation of World Heritage in the existing geopolitical context.
Debating strategies, methods and guidelines that overcome the distinction between tangible and intangible assets.
Debating the integrative approaches for managing landscape change and conservation - examining natural, cultural, tangible and intangible heritage dimensions.
Reviewing heritage strategies for urban development and management in order to solve urban heritage challenges and incorporatning them as a resource for sustainable development.
Improving processes through policies, learning lessons from communities and mediating between groups with conflicting interests.
The goal of the session is to test the feasibility of endorsing a multi-convention strategy for World Heritage.
The New Heritage Approaches team in conversation with Francesco Bandarin, Michael Turner, and George Abungu.
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