Showing posts with label Heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heritage. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

The Role of Cultural Heritage in Poverty Reduction


We economists tend to see well-being, and poverty in particular, as a matter of finances and income. But fortunately, at least in the Bank, we have come a long way from that simplistic view. Reducing poverty is not only about increasing productivity and income. It is about enabling people to have a broad sense of well-being and opportunities to express and make choices about their lives.

As the famous Bank series “Voices of the Poor” and the follow up “Moving Out of Poverty” have shown us, poverty is much more than lacking a steady or sufficient source of income. Being poor is being vulnerable: to crime and violence, to the lack of justice and access to services. Being poor means inability to negotiate, bargain, and get paid. Poverty, in a nutshell, is a kind of decline in social connectedness. So that’s why social solidarity and cultural identity are so relevant to poverty reduction.

One aspect of cultural identity is cultural heritage, an issue that was widely discussed at the 13th Annual International Symposium: Economic Benefits, Social Opportunities, and Challenges of Supporting Cultural Heritage for Sustainable Development, held May 20 – 22 at Word Bank headquarters in Washington DC. The conference, organized jointly with the U.S. National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites, explored fascinating topics –from the contribution of cultural heritage to the development of sustainable communities, to the looting and illicit traffic of cultural treasures.

In my own address at the symposium, I expressed my full support to the Bank’s work on this area. Besides helping developing countries on macroeconomic issues, we should continue to provide technical and financial resources to national and local governments for regenerating historic cities and conserving their cultural heritage assets. They both are the physical setting where the cultural identity of local communities materializes, and the right place to generate economic opportunities relating to traditional and indigenous skills.
Historic cities and cultural heritage assets can provide opportunities for tourism development, one of the biggest industries worldwide, which can generate substantial revenues and employment.

But the value of sites such as Notredame, the Taj Mahal, or Machu Picchu, cannot be measured only in terms of revenues and tourism. So, recognizing this intangible quality of cultural heritage, the UN Convention for Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (2003) defined it as “the practices, representations, expressions, knowledge, skills – as well as the instruments, objects, artifacts and cultural spaces associated therewith – that communities, groups and, in some cases, individuals recognize as part of their cultural heritage. This intangible cultural heritage, transmitted from generation to generation is constantly recreated by communities and groups in response to their environment, their interaction with nature and their history …”
At the end of the day what really matters, in my opinion, is the importance that communities and society itself give to their own cultural heritage, whether it is tangible or intangible, and regardless of what its “real” material value is. For some hard-core, old-school economists, this might sound as a platitude, but unless we take cultural heritage seriously, the fight against the many faces of poverty will remain elusive. 


Ouro Preto in Brazil, one of the author's favorite cultural sites

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Protecting the Cultural and Natural Heritage

in the Western Hemisphere:

Lessons from the Past; Looking to the Future

Harvard University - December 5-7, 2002


Introductory Session

Welcome by Peter Rowe, Dean, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University

Welcome by Thomas M. Menino, Mayor, City of Boston
Opening Address: Mounir Bouchenaki, Deputy Director General, UNESCO Cultural Heritage Division
Visions & Challenges: Francesco Bandarin, Director of the UNESCO World Heritage Center

Introduction of the seminar themes by Francois Vigier, Charles Dyer Norton Professor of Regional Planning; Director, Center for Urban Development Studies, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University.

Conservation and Development
Chair: Eduardo Rojas, Principal Urban Development Specialist, Inter-American Development Bank.
"Access to Information and Local Empowerment as a Paradigm for Conciliating Conservation and Development." Francesco di Castri, Director of Research, National Council of Scientific Research (CNRS)
"Our Heritage: Challenges After Nomination." Claudio C. Maretti, Regional Vice-Chair, IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas
"Mundo Maya: A Model for Regional Sustainable Tourism Development."Belia Contreras, Executive Director, Mundo Maya Organization
"Promoting Growth through the Mobilization of Social and Cultural Assets." María-Valeria Junho Pena, Lead Sociologist, Sustainable Development Department, Latin America and the Caribbean Region, The World Bank
Comments and Questions

Balancing Multiple Interests in Natural and Cultural Sites
Chair: Pamela Hawkes, USICOMOS; Principal, Ann Beha Architects
"Everglades National Park, Florida, USA"
Maureen Finnerty, Superintendent, Everglades and Dry Tortugas National Parks
Colonel James G. May, Commander, Jacksonville District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Bradford H. Sewell, Senior Attorney, Natural Resources Defense Council
"From Cairuçu to Guararu: Socio-Environmental Management Programs in the Atlantica Forest." Roberto L. L. Klabin, President, Fundação SOS Mata Atlântica
"The Renovation of Historic Districts as a Catalyst for Economic Revitalization." William Moss, Archéologue Principal, Service de l'aménagement du territoire, Développement durable, City of Québec, Canada
"Strategies for the Integrated Development of Cartagena de Indias." Silvana Giaimo, Planning Director, Cartagena de Indias; Secretaria de Planeación Distrital (SECPLAN)
"Old Havana and its Fortifications." Orestes del Castillo, Professor, Instituto Superior Politécnico, Jose Antonio Echevarría
Comments and Questions

Challenges in the Use and Preservation of Natural, Cultural, and Archeological Sites
Chair: David Maybury-Lewis, Edward C. Henderson Professor of Anthropology, Harvard University; Founder & President, Cultural Survival
"Language, Culture, and Landscape: Preserving Aboriginal 'Deep Time' for Tomorrow." Bernard Perley, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
"The Struggle for Q'eqchi Community Conservation and Management of Mayan Sacred (Cave) Sites: The Case of Caves of Candelaria and Bombil pek in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala." Anthony Stocks, Professor, Department of Anthropology, Idaho State University
"Life in a World Heritage Site." Vincent J. Lujan, Governor of Taos Pueblo

Comments and Questions. Moderator: Raymond Wanner, Special Advisor, UN Foundation

Public Lecture: Safeguarding the Values and Rights of Indigenous Peple
"The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act: A Museum Perspective." Rubie Watson, William and Muriel Seabury Howells Director of the Peabody Museum, Harvard University
"Archeology and the Modern Maya: Issues in Education, Participation and Preservation." David Stuart, Senior Lecturer in Anthropology; Bartlett Curator of Maya Hieroglyphs, Peabody Museum

Legal and Regulatory Frameworks and Instruments for the Preservation of Cultural and Natural Heritage
Chairs: Pamela Lee Barkin and Carla C. Mattix, Attorney-Advisors, Office of the Solicitor, U.S. Department of the Interior
Annapolis, USA. Ellen O. Moyer, Mayor of Annapolis, Maryland, USA
"Valparaíso's Cultural and Natural Heritage and its Nomination for Inscription in the World Heritage List." Ricardo Jordan, Director, Urban Management Program, Division of Environment and Human Settlement, United Nations, Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)
"Waterton Glacier International Peace Park, Canada/US." Dave A. Mihalic, Superintendent, Yosemite National Park, National Parks Service, USA
Nikita Lopoukhine, Director General, National Parks Directorate, Parks Canada
"The Role of Legislation in the Protection of Cultural Values." Marta de la Torre, Heritage Consultant; Principal Project Specialist, The Getty Conservation Institute, Los Angeles, CA.
Comments and Questions

The Growing Role of Civil Society, Non-governmental Organizations, and the Private Sector
Chair: Bonnie Burnham, President, World Monuments Fund. Introduction of Panelists
"The World Monuments Watch Network." Bonnie Burnham, President, World Monument Fund
"The Inter-American Biodiversity Information Network (IABIN)." Richard M. Huber, Principal Environmental Specialist, Sustainable Development and Environment, Organization of American States
"Earthwatch Institute: Expanding the Role of the Public in Support of World Heritage Sites." Marie M. Studer, Chief Science Officer, Earthwatch Institute; Oscar Alcober, Director, Museo de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, San Juan, Argentina
"The Need for Private Sector Partnerships in Cultural and Natural Preservation." Sarah Wines, Regional Urban Advisor, Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean, US Agency for International Development
Comments and Questions

The Future Roles of Foundations and INGOs in the Protection of Cultural and Natural Heritage
Chair: Ismail Serageldin, Director, Library of Alexandria, Egypt
Melinda Kimble, Senior Vice President for Programs, United Nations Foundation
Tim Whalen, Director, The Getty Conservation Institute
Jeanne Marie Teutonico, Assistant Director, The Getty Conservation Institute
Thomas Lovejoy, President, Heinz Center

Concluding Remarks

Conference Summation: Ismail Serageldin, Director, Library of Alexandria, Egypt