Titre
Changing world, changing views of heritage: heritage and social change. Proceedings of the ICOMOS scientific symposium, Dublin Castle, 30 October 2010
Auteurs
Araoz, Gustavo F. / Barthel-Bouchier, Diane / Bogdanowska, Monika / Burke, Sheridan / Cuffe, Ciarán / de Orellana, Juan / Hawke, Stephanie K. / Hee, Kyoung Yeo / Ireland, Tracy / Jerome, Pamela / McAleese, Mary / Miranda, Rossana / Negussie, Elene / Silberman, Neil / Sung, Mi Han / Taylor, Martin / Martire, Agustina / Caraffe, Marc de
Mots-clés
social changes / conservation of cultural heritage / archaeological heritage / urban fabric / rehabilitation / gentrification / overvisiting / community participation / cultural significance / memorials / colonialism / management of archaeological sites / theory of conservation / history of conservation / philosophy of conservation / sense of place / urban development / immigration / indigenous peoples / agriculture / water management / World Heritage List / religious architecture / social policy / doctrine / management / economic aspects / social aspects / tourism impact / interpretation / ethnography
Monuments et sites
Historic Centre of Kraków, Poland / Docklands, Dublin, Ireland / Jongmyo Shrine, Republic of Korea / Grosse Île, Archipel de l'Île-aux-Grues, Québec, Canada / Boulevard Saint-Laurent, Montréal, Québec, Canada / Rock-Hewn Churches of Lalibela, Ethiopia
Résumé en anglais
This symposium, third in a series of events organized by the ICOMOS Scientific Council, was held on Saturday 30 October 2010 at Dublin Castle, in connection with the annual ICOMOS Advisory Committee Meeting, as part of a multi-year program of interdisciplinary research on Global Climate Change and its effects on cultural heritage. In the same way that Global Climate Change is altering familiar landscapes and environmental relations, and technological change is transforming communication and information networks, the social changes of massively shifting populations, unprecedented industrial development, and dramatically changing lifestyles and landscapes are creating new meanings for the cultural hybrids of ‘local’ and ‘global’ all over the world. The goal of the Dublin symposium was to explore the impacts of social change on heritage policy and practice and to assess their implications for the future of the field. The symposium began with a morning plenary session, open to the general public, during which a series of papers were presented, dealing with the following four major symposium themes. - 1. The heritage of changing/evolving communities - 2.Diasporic, immigrant and indigenous heritage – 3. Religious heritage – 4. The social impacts of global climate change.. Each theme represents a difficult, challenging, or contentious issue for contemporary heritage professionals, who are for the most part trained in documentation and conservation, rather than social change. Yet each of the themes raises a number of questions that directly affect the conduct of heritage practice in evolving societies throughout the world. [Adapted from the introduction by Pamela Jerome and Neil Silberman]