Votre ressource mondiale sur le patrimoine
EN
ES
FR
Réf.
43094
Type
conference item
Titre
Special Opportunities for Conserving Cultural and Biological Diversity: The Co-occurrence of Indigenous Languages and UNESCO Natural World Heritage Sites
Langues
English
Auteurs
Romaine, Suzanne / Gorenflo, L.J.
Date
2019
Pages
17 p.
Titre de conférence
2018 US/ICOMOS Symposium "Forward Together: A Culture-Nature Journey Towards More Effective Conservation in a Changing World"
Lieu de conférence
San Francisco, United States
Date de conférence
November 13-14, 2018
Mots-clés
cultural diversity / languages / protected areas / intangible heritage / social aspects / community-based management / case studies / indigenous peoples / World Heritage Sites / management / sustainable development / World Heritage / ethnology / oral tradition / culture and nature / integrated conservation
Pays mentionnés
Australia / United States
Monuments et sites
UNESCO
Résumé en anglais
PART 2. RECOGNIZING INTANGIBLE HERITAGE AND DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES - Intangible Heritage as a Driver of Cultural Landscape Management and Holistic Conservation /// Recent research indicates that speakers of indigenous languages often live in or near United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Natural World Heritage Sites (WHSs). Because language is a key index of cultural diversity, examining global patterns of co-occurrence between languages and these sites provides a means of identifying opportunities to conserve both culture and nature, especially where languages, WHSs, or both are recognized as endangered. This paper summarizes instances when indigenous languages share at least part of their geographic extent with Natural WHSs. We consider how this co-occurrence introduces the potential to coordinate conservation of nature and sociocultural systems at these localities, particularly with respect to the recently issued UNESCO policy on engaging indigenous people and the forthcoming International Year of Indigenous Languages. The paper concludes by discussing how the presence of indigenous people at UNESCO Natural WHSs introduces important opportunities for co-management that enable resident indigenous people to help conserve their language and culture along with the natural settings where they occur. We discuss briefly the example of Australia as a nation exploring opportunities for employing and strengthening such coordinated conservation efforts.
Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (BY-NC-ND)