Votre ressource mondiale sur le patrimoine
EN
ES
FR
Réf.
43038
Type
conference item
Titre
Panel 3 Paper 3.1: Participatory planning and monitoring of protected landscapes: a case study of an indigenous rice paddy cultural landscape in Taiwan
Langues
English / French
Auteurs
Lee, Kuang-Chung
Lieu de publication
Charenton-le-Pont
Pays de publication
France
Maison d'édition
ICOMOS
Date
10/2019
Titre de conférence
ICOMOS 2019 Advisory Committee Scientific Symposium - Rural Heritage - Landscapes and Beyond
Lieu de conférence
Marrakesh, Morocco
Date de conférence
17 October 2019
Mots-clés
rice / sustainable development / local level / community participation / case studies / indigenous peoples / management plans / cultural landscapes / agriculture / economic aspects / social aspects / climate change / monitoring / agricultural landscapes / land use plans / culture and nature / management / participation / research projects / rural heritage
Pays mentionnés
Chinese Taipei
Monuments et sites
Indigenous Cihalaay community, Hualien, Taiwan
Résumé en anglais
Landscapes can be regarded as ‘a culture–nature link.’ Many examples of ‘living’ landscapes in the world are rich in natural and cultural values and have proven sustainable over centuries because of their maintenance by local communities. Satoyama, a traditional socio-ecological production landscape, provides a functional linkage between paddy fields and the associated environment with many ecosystem services. The idea of landscape conservation and paddy field revitalization was introduced into Taiwan’s amended Cultural Heritage Preservation Act in 2005 as a new legal instrument entitled ‘Cultural Landscape.’ To help stakeholders from governmental authorities and local communities apply this new instrument, this action research employed a community-based landscape and participatory approach to put relevant international concepts into practice. Learning from culturally grounded indicators of resilience in social–ecological systems, the study adopted a set of indicators of resilience in socio-ecological production landscapes and seascapes to successfully help residents evaluate the management of a designated Cultural Landscape through a series of local workshops. The case study shows that a landscape and participatory approach can be welcomed by rural people and can create a new style for ‘living’ protected landscapes in Taiwan’s nationally protected area system.
Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (BY-NC-ND)