Cultural Heritage. Scenarios 2015-2017
edited by
abstract
The title of the Series «Sapere l’Europa, sapere d’Europa» voices the desire to investigate facets of the process of European integration without disregarding its most weighty, however controversial and bureaucratic, aspects, yet looking beyond them. The main intent is thus to make room for vision, feelings, imagination. In this fourth volume, Cultural Heritage. Scenarios 2015-2017, the different profiles of the CH, tangible and intangible, are undoubtedly presented in an international and interdisciplinary perspective. Yet, as the constant reference to the Faro Convention proves, “practices, knowledge and collective traditions” – be they nested or not in the humus of Venice and the Veneto Region – still distinctively taste of Europe.
Cultural sustainability • Romani People • Subject-object • Heritage Community • Intangible Cultural Heritage • Local communities • Working tools • Cultural rights • Governance • Ruskin • Stakeholders • Study circle • Heritage politics • Guilt • Destruction • Cultural properties • Right to participate in cultural life • Sharing and integration • Communities • Religious heritage • Urban sprawl • Return • Ethnography • Indigenous people • Heritage • Animal Rights Movements • Tintoretto • Heritage practices • Social memory • Hydrography • Europe • Museums • Common good • Representation • Stigmatization • Responsibility to protect • Heritage community • Participation • Intentional destruction • Ecosystems research • Digital • Participative approach • Heritage walk • Scuola dalmata di San Giorgio e Trifone • Bona fide purchaser • Right to take part in cultural life • Intangible • Knowledge • CH • Tourism • NGOs • Digital culture • ICH • Terrorism • Cultural goods • Gondola’s heritagisation • Right to the (I)CH • Life-long learning methods • Gender • Representations • Folklore • Access • Management and governance • Cultural interest • Commons • Mining • Cultural heritage • Endangered heritage • Migrants’ rights • Cultural communities • Legal and Social Anthropology • Local CH • International law • Cultural identity • Cultural • Landscape • Street performances • Contemporary conflicts • Faro Convention • Guardians • Regional law • Ecomuseums • Dialogue • Traditional Knowledge • Mexico • Local collective action • Property • Venice • Human rights • Unesco • Ownership • Dance • Fascism • Certificate of free circulation • Waterscapes • Biocultural paradigm • Chorus • Slovenia • Digital heritage • Digital repatriation • Restitution • Cultural property • Exclusion • Memory • Agreement • Active Citizenship • Dalmatia • Social justice • Mediterranean • Humanitarian law • Italian Colonialism • Sephardic Jews • Vernacular architecture • Appropriation • Politics of place • Venetian craftsmanship • International art market • Adult education
permalink http://doi.org/10.14277/6969-052-5/SE-4