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Rooting empowering reactivating. Rehabilitation of traditional heritage and local development
Can the rehabilitation of traditional heritage through the conservation, transmission, and adaptation of traditional construction techniques, represents an opportunity for the local development of marginal places? Rooting empowering reactivating focuses on the intersection of heritage and local development, delving into the interactions between NGOs, communities, minor heritage recovery and possibilities for inclusive local development and reactivation. The intersection was analysed by adopting a multidisciplinary and multicriterial analysis of the the unconventional practices of community-rooted rehabilitation of some international NGOs invited to the contributed to the series of seminars on the Rehabilitation of traditional heritage and local development (RTHLD, 2019-2022). The NGOs involved in this series of seminars operate mainly in the restoration of minor, diffuse, and non-monumental heritage, that is functional and aimed at satisfying basic needs. The rehabilitated heritage is often located in marginal places, that have experienced strong migratory phenomena in recent decades. Depopulation was often coupled with a radical change in lifestyles, which have altered the rhythms of living, the bonds, and the reciprocity links between villagers that used to allow survival in such contexts. Local society has dissolved, and consequently the collective care and maintenance of heritage and places has faded. Next to this, inhabitants often show a lack of interest in taking care of a heritage, both because it is linked to imaginaries of poverty and backwardness, and as a consequence of a decrease in manual skills and traditional knowledge. Communities are often no longer considered autonomous regarding the technical management of their own heritage and in many instances the intervention by outsiders has been instrumental, if not necessary, to conserve, protect, rehabilitate, and transmit a heritage that would otherwise probably no longer exist today. NGOs however have set themselves the objective of not only ...
Rooting empowering reactivating. Rehabilitation of traditional heritage and local development
Can the rehabilitation of traditional heritage through the conservation, transmission, and adaptation of traditional construction techniques, represents an opportunity for the local development of marginal places? Rooting empowering reactivating focuses on the intersection of heritage and local development, delving into the interactions between NGOs, communities, minor heritage recovery and possibilities for inclusive local development and reactivation. The intersection was analysed by adopting a multidisciplinary and multicriterial analysis of the the unconventional practices of community-rooted rehabilitation of some international NGOs invited to the contributed to the series of seminars on the Rehabilitation of traditional heritage and local development (RTHLD, 2019-2022). The NGOs involved in this series of seminars operate mainly in the restoration of minor, diffuse, and non-monumental heritage, that is functional and aimed at satisfying basic needs. The rehabilitated heritage is often located in marginal places, that have experienced strong migratory phenomena in recent decades. Depopulation was often coupled with a radical change in lifestyles, which have altered the rhythms of living, the bonds, and the reciprocity links between villagers that used to allow survival in such contexts. Local society has dissolved, and consequently the collective care and maintenance of heritage and places has faded. Next to this, inhabitants often show a lack of interest in taking care of a heritage, both because it is linked to imaginaries of poverty and backwardness, and as a consequence of a decrease in manual skills and traditional knowledge. Communities are often no longer considered autonomous regarding the technical management of their own heritage and in many instances the intervention by outsiders has been instrumental, if not necessary, to conserve, protect, rehabilitate, and transmit a heritage that would otherwise probably no longer exist today. NGOs however have set themselves the objective of not only ...
Rooting empowering reactivating. Rehabilitation of traditional heritage and local development
Martina Bocci, Andrea Bocco (Autor:in) / Bocci, Martina (Autor:in) / Bocco, Andrea (Autor:in) / martina bocci / andrea bocco
01.01.2024
Sonstige
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Preface. Rehabilitation of Traditional Heritage and Local Development (RTHLD) seminars
BASE | 2024
|British Library Online Contents | 2001
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