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1

Zhang, Xiao, Aiwu Zhang, Jiaqi Xu, and Rongqing Ma. "Documentation and Inheritance of Ancient Opera Stage Based on Multidisciplinary Approach and Digital Technology." Buildings 12, no. 7 (July 9, 2022): 977. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/buildings12070977.

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The survival and longevity of architectural heritage, especially structures in isolated locations such as ancient opera stages, have been gradually threatened by natural and sociocultural changes over the past few decades. Furthermore, the future of these heritage sites remains uncertain. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to develop a research method, using multidisciplinary knowledge and digital technology, to digitally protect and inherit the endangered heritage of ancient stages. Hence, in this study, we applied a qualitative longitudinal method for digital protection, digital culture inheritance, and data intelligence management. Particularly, digital culture inheritance established the knowledge visualization model, which was used to excavate cultural connotations and was displayed with virtual reality, augmented reality, etc. Furthermore, a GIS digital platform was developed to provide data management and a virtual experience in a 3D-interactive way for culture presentation, cognition, and heritage. Then, the developed method was validated over four years by using the ancient opera stages in Shanxi, China, as case studies. The results demonstrate that this method is feasible in and applicable to the heritages of ancient stages and can be applied to other architectural heritages and even cultural heritages. This method also helps to promote the public’s awareness of the protection of cultural heritage, especially the heritages of ancient stages.
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Lee, Hyuk-Jin. "Phenomenological approach on the role of sonic heritage as an intangible heritage." Europub Journal of Social Sciences Research 3, no. 1 (December 12, 2022): 111–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.54746/ejssrv3n1-008.

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It is important for us to understand how our cognition is composed of different types of experiences of an object as it is closely related to our recognition of cultural heritage. In addition to visual information, with the emergence of the soundscape field, it would be necessary to understand our cognition on auditory information including sonic heritage. Therefore, in this study, the philosophical importance of auditory information as an intangible heritage is discussed from the phenomenological point of view. In addition, phenomenological classification for sonic heritage is developed, which would help our analytic understanding of the relationship between our cognition and different types of sonic heritages. Finally, Virtual Reality (VR) may provide different experiences from those of the real world. Understanding the experience of VR has been discussed including the possibility of synergic effect of utilizing both visual and auditory information.
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Condell, Joan, Niall McShane, Jorge Avlarez, and Alan Miller. "Virtual Community Heritage – An Immersive Approach to Community Heritage." Journal of Media Innovations 7, no. 1 (May 11, 2021): 4–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5617/jomi.8791.

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Our relationship with cultural heritage has been transformed by digital technologies. Opportunities have emerged to preserve and access cultural heritage material while engaging an audience at both regional and global level. Accessibility of technology has enabled audiences to participate in digital heritage curation process. Participatory practices and co-production methodologies have created new relationships between museums and communities, as they are engaged to become active participants in the co-design and co-creation of heritage material. Audiences are more interested in experiences vs services nowadays and museums and heritage organisations have potential to entertain while providing engaging experiences beyond their physical walls. Mixed reality is an emerging method of engagement that has allowed enhanced interaction beyond traditional 3D visualisation models into fully immersive worlds. There is potential to transport audiences to past worlds that enhance their experience and understanding of cultural heritage.
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Zou, Changman, Sang-Yong Rhee, Lin He, Dayang Chen, and Xiaofei Yang. "Sounds of History: A Digital Twin Approach to Musical Heritage Preservation in Virtual Museums." Electronics 13, no. 12 (June 18, 2024): 2388. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/electronics13122388.

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Musical cultural heritage, as an important component of cultural heritage, possesses significant cultural value and inheritance significance. With the development of society and the passage of time, these precious traditional musical cultural heritages inevitably face the dilemma of gradual depletion or even disappearance. In the digital age, effectively protecting and inheriting these musical cultural heritages has become an urgent problem to be addressed. Therefore, this paper proposes an application method based on digital twin technology, exploring how to protect and inherit musical cultural heritages through digital twin technology. By leveraging digital twin technology, a virtual museum dedicated to showcasing the richness and historical connotations of music cultures is created, preserving and simulating the soundscapes of historical music eras. Through the integration of audio archives, 3D modeling, and interactive displays, users can immerse themselves in the experience of historical music in the digital space. This paper evaluates the feasibility and cultural preservation value of this digital music history museum through the creation of music digital twin technology instances and user survey feedback and discusses the prospects of digital twins in the field of musical cultural heritage.
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Walter, Nigel. "Narrative Approach To Living Heritage." Protection of Cultural Heritage, no. 10 (February 22, 2021): 126–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.35784/odk.2443.

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This paper attempts to sketch out a theoretical framework that addresses the particular needs of living heritage. ICCROM has been at the forefront of developing a conservation practice which addresses the concerns of living heritage such as religious and pilgrimage sites (e.g. Wijesuriya 2015; Wijesuriya, Thompson, and Court 2017), and others have considered the implications for the conservation process (e.g. Poulios 2014). However, to date there has been no attempt to develop a theoretical foundation for these practices. In place of the still-dominant understanding (at least as encountered in much Western practice) of historic buildings as primarily art-historical, this paper proposes a narrative approach that allows the site or building to remain within its cultural/religious context, including an acceptance of ongoing change. While the argument proceeds from Western sources, it invites dialogue with complementary understandings of the working of tradition from other regions of the world. Any theoretical model for living heritage must address the central question of how living buildings endure between generations, that is, their continuity between past, present and future. Since modernity entails a commitment to a radical discontinuity with the past, such an approach must engage with the resources of premodernity to develop (or perhaps return to) a non-modern understanding of tradition as developmental and creative (Author, 2017). The principal sources used in the investigation of this proposed narrative approach include Alasdair MacIntyre’s rehabilitation of tradition, Hans-Georg Gadamer’s development of philosophical hermeneutics and Paul Ricoeur’s work on narrative and time.
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Huq, Ferdous Farhana, Rabeya Akter, Roxana Hafiz, Abdullah Al Mamun, and Mashrekur Rahman. "Conservation planning of built heritages of Old Dhaka, Bangladesh." Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development 7, no. 3 (August 21, 2017): 244–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jchmsd-08-2014-0030.

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Purpose Built heritage is a unique resource, an irreplaceable expression of the richness and diversity of our past and of the generations who have gone before us. Old Dhaka has an outstanding built heritage that is of significance not only in the local, but also in a national and regional context. But senseless urbanization and ignorance of such an important issue in the existing detailed area plan is destroying the built heritages of Dhaka. As a result, many heritage buildings of Dhaka have been destroyed and the destruction is going on unabated. Therefore, there is a need to re-examine how such destruction can be prevented. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach This research aims at the identification of heritages, their assessment and classification which is utterly significant for preserving the invaluable heritages. Heritages are classified according to their present condition which will show which type of heritage needs which type of attention. Findings The research indicates the way how a conservation planning for heritages can be done in a systematic and logical way. It reveals the present condition of the heritage buildings which will point out the way of preservation. There is no such document available which will tell general people about the most important or rare or significant heritages, the location of these heritages, or their background information. This research addresses these all issues. Originality/value To date, no conservation plans were implemented for Dhaka and there are no attempts to improve Old Dhaka through an urban design. The methodological approach in this research is new and effective for conserving heritages.
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7

Poria, Yaniv, David Airey, and Richard Butler. "Challenging the present approach to heritage tourism: Is tourism to heritage places heritage tourism?" Tourism Review 56, no. 1/2 (January 2001): 51–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb058358.

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8

Jiang, Jun, Tongguang Zang, Jianglong Xing, and Konomi Ikebe. "Spatial Distribution of Urban Heritage and Landscape Approach to Urban Contextual Continuity: The Case of Suzhou." Land 12, no. 1 (January 2, 2023): 150. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land12010150.

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Suzhou, one of the most famous historical cities in China, has undergone significant urbanization over recent decades. These changes have caused a gradual separation of Suzhou’s urban heritage from its urban development and hindered the further growth of the city. This study analyzes the distribution of tangible and intangible heritages that constitute the context of Suzhou combined with the historic urban landscape approach to obtain the following conclusions: (1) The current distribution of Suzhou’s urban heritage does not completely overlap with the built-up area of the city, and the non-overlapping areas reveal the imbalance of the current urban development and the fracture of the context of Suzhou; this imbalance is still a blind spot in the planning process. (2) The use of intangible cultural heritage will help to establish the possibility of contextual continuation in areas that lack urban heritage. (3) Multi-use community spaces that carry the intangible cultural heritage are particularly important for new urban areas, as they can help urban residents understand the traditional way of life in the region. (4) An approach to heritage management that goes beyond elitism, in conjunction with residents and communities, will help the ancient city to find a better balance between contextual continuity and economic development.
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9

Dey, Shuvra. "A Comprehensive Approach of Transitional Justice to Address the Deliberate Destruction of Cultural Heritage." Groningen Journal of International Law 9, no. 2 (May 18, 2022): 212–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.21827/grojil.9.2.212-238.

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Given the fact that cultural heritage has been the subject of multi-dimensional crimes during or in the aftermath of armed conflicts, this article attempts to analyze why and how such crimes can be brought under transitional justice (hereinafter TJ) mechanisms. It starts with the challenge to ascertain the inbuilt relationship, importantly, how cultural heritage enters into the domain of TJ. To this end, it fragmentises the rights of heritage and laws associated with these rights and examines how multiple discourses (i.e. human rights, humanitarian law, and criminal law) come together to form the notion of heritage rights and how their recognition contributes to cultural heritage’s entrance into TJ project. Thereafter, it assesses the resonance of potential TJ mechanisms and elucidates how they can help reveal the truth concerning crimes against heritage, bring the perpetrators to justice, rehabilitate the destructed sites, redress the victims, and prevent future attacks. It reiterates the value of four measures widely accepted in the TJ discourse, namely, truth-seeking, prosecution, reparations, and the measures of guarantees of non-recurrence. Finally, it explains why a comprehensive approach in terms of implementing these measures is essential and how such approach facilitates taking into account all the factors associated with the crimes against heritage.
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Widarti, Erni, Suyoto Suyoto, and Andi Wahju Rahardjo Emanuel. "Mobile Application Design for Heritage Tourism Uses Gamification Approach in Indonesia." International Journal of Engineering Pedagogy (iJEP) 10, no. 5 (October 15, 2020): 89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3991/ijep.v10i5.13205.

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Heritage tourism is a trip traveling in certain areas that have historical value and ancestral heritage, such as temples, museums, palaces, etc. Indonesia is a country that has diverse historical heritages that have the potential to be developed be-cause there are historical sites and are considered as tourism potential. Technolo-gy plays a vital role in the development of heritage tourism to facilitate the deliv-ery of information to tourists, one of which is a mobile application. The proposed application design is a mobile application design with a gamification approach to facilitate tourists to obtain information and travel experiences to explore exciting tourist attractions. The gamification approach is used as a unique attraction where tourists are wrongly venturing for the concept of the game in conveying infor-mation using element games. This research was conducted in 3 temples, namely Gedongsongo temple, Prambanan temple, and Borobudur temple. The prototype design test was conducted on 100 tourists who visited 3 of the temple's tourist at-tractions. The results showed 86% of users agreed with the proposed prototype design. Based on the 95% confidence scale, shows that this research was suc-cessful in designing a prototype of a heritage tourism mobile application to ex-plore temple tourism. This application design is suitable for users based on four variables: Usefulness, Ease of Use, Ease of Learning, and Satisfaction.
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Jhearmaneechotechai, Prin. "Selection Criteria of Ordinary Urban Heritages Through the Case of Bangrak, a Multi-Cultural & Old Commercial District of Bangkok." Nakhara : Journal of Environmental Design and Planning 21, no. 2 (July 18, 2022): 209. http://dx.doi.org/10.54028/nj202221209.

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This paper examines preservation of an old and multicultural commercial district of Bangrak, Bangkok through application of ordinary urban heritage, which is an alternative approach, but one which can fill a gap in the heritage conservation process. The dual objectives of this paper are 1. Introducing an alternative lens for considering the heritages of ordinary people in an urban context through the case of Bangrak in Bangkok, Thailand; and 2. Identifying selection criteria of ordinary urban heritages. Bangrak, the study area, is an old commercial district of inner Bangkok that is characterized by diversity in the different groups who live and work there, their cultures, and their heritages. This paper studied four areas comprising groups whose members originated from China, India-South Asia, Western countries, and Thailand. The ordinary urban heritages discussed in this paper are outcomes of identifying selection criteria based on the methodology of three processes: (1) theoretical reviews of vernacular heritage, ordinary heritage, and urban heritage, making use of AHD (Authorised Heritage Discourse) to distinguish “official” heritages identified by Thai government agencies, and the ordinary urban heritages of Bangrak. (2) analysis of historical maps, and (3) non-participant observational surveys to verify locations and appearances of ordinary urban heritages identified by the analysis of historical maps. The selection criteria of ordinary urban heritages of Bangrak are outcomes of five factors: (1) The amount of time the heritage has been present in the area, (2) Heritages of ordinary people, (3) Repetitive appearance or cluster of heritages, (4) Ability to adapt to urbanization, and (5) Present-day existence of heritages in four areas of different cultures. The ordinary urban heritages identified as the result of selection criteria comprise shophouses, urban patterns of “Trok” (small alleys), and sacred places in the communities. As buildings, shophouses are, per se, ordinary urban heritage from a physical aspect, and they are the centers of the commercial activities of everyday life. “Trok”, or small alleys, have been built by ordinary people, and they help form the particular urban pattern of Bangrak. Small sacred places represent a legacy of the beliefs of different cultures represented through their physical spaces and appearances.
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Ng, Wai-Kit, Fu-Tien Hsu, Cheng-Fu Chao, and Chun-Liang Chen. "Sustainable Competitive Advantage of Cultural Heritage Sites: Three Destinations in East Asia." Sustainability 15, no. 11 (May 25, 2023): 8593. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su15118593.

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Cultural heritage plays an important role in the creation of creative cities, giving them a new lease of life and generating employment opportunities and local economies in the process. The revitalisation and development of cultural heritage and intangible cultural heritage have become a major part of national development policies worldwide. This study adopts a multiple case analysis approach. Four cultural heritages of three destinations in East Asia (Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) were selected as case studies because they have all adopted a public–private partnership approach to the conservation and reuse of historic buildings. In this study, semi-structured interviews were conducted and secondary data collected from a variety of sources to bring the findings of this study closer to the practical development of cultural heritage. Base on Five Forces analysis, we propose an “Extended Five Forces” model of cultural heritage. The new component, i.e., historical landscapes and cultural sustainability, is proposed to expand the theoretical foundations of the sustainable management of cultural heritage. The findings show how they can collaborate with communities to create value and gain a sustainable competitive advantage on a global scale and contribute to the sustainable management of cultural heritage in Asia.
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Sang, Kun, and Silvia E. Piovan. "The application of GIS in railway heritage management: the case of Yunnan-Vietnam Railway." Proceedings of the ICA 2 (July 10, 2019): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-proc-2-110-2019.

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<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Railways were a key mode of transporting goods and people for industrial and urban development in the late modern age. Their special part in economic growth comes with their role in the development of cultural heritage along their pathways. However, because of competing urban construction, many railway heritages are in danger, such as the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway (YVR) in China, an important international narrow-gauge railway built in 1901, acknowledged as a railway heritage in 2018. As a typical linear heritage, the railway integrates both the natural and cultural landscapes, related to the large spatial extent and complex composition of single heritage elements. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) offer a great support in the investigation, assessment, and management of railway heritage. In this research, the huge cultural heritage related to the YVR was studied using a combined geo-historical and GIS approach. This paper aims to 1) give a brief review of the current status of the application of GIS on linear railway heritages studies, including heritage resources surveys, spatial analysis, thematic mapping and public service, 2) introduce the case study of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway, and 3) present a geodatabase design for the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway heritage management.</p>
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Liboriussen, Bjarke, and Paul Martin. "Honour of Kings as Chinese popular heritage: Contesting authorized history in a mobile game." China Information 34, no. 3 (March 19, 2020): 319–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0920203x20908120.

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This article examines how users on social media responded to state criticism of the representation of Chinese historical characters in the popular Tencent mobile game Honour of Kings. The game’s usage of historical characters and the ensuing debate and criticism are analysed as ‘popular heritage’. A qualitative content analysis identifies several categories in the discussion of this game on the Q & A website Zhihu (知乎). The article discusses these categories in relation to existing literature on popular heritage. The analysis contributes to this literature by identifying a new feature of popular heritage, whereby the dissonance associated with popular heritage becomes in itself an enjoyable object of popular pleasure, deepening popular heritage’s capacity to generate critique of authorized heritage and exposing divisions within the power bloc. In light of these findings, we call for an approach to popular heritage that escapes a dichotomous people–elite schema in favour of a multi-actor approach.
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Paoloni, S., F. Mercuri, N. Orazi, G. Caruso, and U. Zammit. "Photothermal approach for cultural heritage research." Journal of Applied Physics 128, no. 18 (November 14, 2020): 180904. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0023432.

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Kim, Dongil. "The Theoretical Approach of Cultural Heritage." Institute of Korean Cultural Studies Yeungnam University 75 (August 31, 2020): 41–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.15186/ikc.2020.08.31.2.

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Nagy, Naomi. "Heritage languages: a language contact approach." Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 41, no. 10 (April 11, 2020): 900–902. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01434632.2020.1749774.

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Biancardo, Salvatore Antonio. "Heritage BIM Approach for roman pavements." European Transport/Trasporti Europei, no. 91 (February 2023): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.48295/et.2023.91.8.

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The growing necessity to design and digitally representation of historical pavements has led the specialists to use different Building Information Modelling (BIM) tools to control the road design and construction phases. In this research paper, a Heritage BIM (H-BIM) approach was developed to recreate an archaeological road to accomplish the disruption analysis of stone pavements. In detail, within Autodesk Infraworks the conceptual model of the road and the digital terrain model (DTM) was generated; then the road corridor design process was performed within Autodesk Civil 3D using a parametric road section which was created by means of Subassembly composer, a Civil 3D extension. Subsequently, a visual programming application, Dynamo, based on Python language, was adopted to extract and update corridor information. In detail, a workflow was developed to implement a disruption analysis of road stone pavements and the output of the calculation were inserted in the model. As preliminary results, a tool is proposed to support the authorities and experts during the managing processes.
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Jackson, C., L. Mofutsanyana, and N. Mlungwana. "A RISK BASED APPROACH TO HERITAGE MANAGEMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLII-2/W15 (August 22, 2019): 591–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xlii-2-w15-591-2019.

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<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> The management of heritage resources within the South African context is governed by the National Heritage Resources Act, act 25 of 1999 (NHRA). This legislation calls for an integrated system of heritage management that allows for the good governance of heritage across the three tiers of government. The South African Heritage Resources Agency (SAHRA), as the national body responsible for heritage management, is mandated to compile and maintain an inventory of the national estate. The South African Heritage Resources Information System (SAHRIS) was designed to facilitate this mandate as well as provide a management platform through which the three-tiers of governance can be integrated. This vision of integrated management is however predicated on the implementation of the three-tier system of heritage management, a system which to date has not been fully implemented, with financial and human resource constraints being present at all levels. In the absence of the full implementation of this system and the limited resources available to heritage authorities, we argue that a risk based approach to heritage management will allow under resourced heritage authorities in South Africa to prioritise management actions and ensure mitigations are in place for at risk heritage resources. The aim of this paper is to position the inventory of the national estate as the key driver in the production of risk analysis models for an informed approach to heritage management.</p>
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I Made Lanang Sudarmayana, Dewa Gede Sudika Mangku, Ni Putu Rai Yuliartini, and Komang Febrinayanti Dantes. "PERLINDUNGAN HUKUM TERHADAP WARISAN BUDAYA INDONESIA GUNA MENANGGULANGI KLAIM DARI NEGARA ASING DITINJAU DARI HUKUM INTERNASIONAL." Jurnal Komunikasi Hukum (JKH) 8, no. 2 (August 1, 2022): 719–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.23887/jkh.v8i2.52020.

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This research aims to (1) find out and understand the legal protection of Indonesian cultural heritage, the protection made by the Indonesian state itself as a form of effort to protect its national wealth, then the protection of Indonesian cultural heritage in terms of international law, and (2) know and understand the claims on Indonesian cultural heritage made by foreign countries. The type of research used is normative juridical research. The approach used in this research is the statutory approach, and the conceptual approach, and the case approach. The legal material analysis techniques used in this study are description, analysis, and argumentation techniques. The legal material studied is the 1998 Rome Statute. The results show that (1) legal protection of Indonesian cultural heritage has been carried out with various efforts by the Indonesian government as the regulator to ensure the preservation of Indonesian cultural heritage by issuing Law no. 28 of 2014 concerning Copyright then with Law no. 5 of 2017 concerning the Advancement of Culture. In terms of international law, there are 2 types of protection that can be associated with cultural heritage, namely soft law, which is a voluntary law, and hard law, which is law that has binding force and has sanctions if violated. (2) Efforts to claim Indonesian cultural heritage by other countries have not occurred only once. The claims made even involve the United Nations International Agency which is specifically engaged in the field of culture, namely UNESCO. Cultural heritages that have been claimed include Batik, the song "Rasa Sayange", Wayang Kulit, Angklung.
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Craith, Máiréad Nic. "Intangible Cultural Heritages." Anthropological Journal of European Cultures 17, no. 1 (March 1, 2008): 54–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/ajec.2008.01701004.

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Heritage has traditionally been associated with material objects, but recent conventions have emphasized the significance of intangible culture heritage. This article advocates a holistic approach towards the concept and considers key challenges for Europe's heritage at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Reflecting on the notion of 'European', it considers the question of how one defines European heritage and which European heritage is to be protected. It explores links between national and European conceptions of identity and heritage and queries issues of ownership, language and representation. A number of ethical issues are raised - such as the role of women in the transmission of heritage and the implications of information technology for copywriting traditional practices. The author also asks how one ensures that the process of globalisation facilitates rather than eliminates local cultural heritages? How does one enhance the local so that it becomes glocal and not obsolete?
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Heras, Veronica Cristina, María Soledad Moscoso Cordero, Anja Wijffels, Alicia Tenze, and Diego Esteban Jaramillo Paredes. "Heritage values: towards a holistic and participatory management approach." Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development 9, no. 2 (May 20, 2019): 199–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jchmsd-10-2017-0070.

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Purpose In other fields, like natural resources, a wide range of participatory methods have been applied, criticized and adapted trough practice. Areas such as anthropology, history or architecture have contributed to the identification of heritage values. Semi-structured interviews and cultural mapping are examples of qualitative and participative methods that have been applied already in the conservation field. Nevertheless, no framework exists to assess the effectiveness of such methods and little experience has been built up in actor’s integration within the heritage value identification process. The purpose of this paper is to develop a framework to recognize heritage values incorporating multidisciplinary and multi-actor perspectives. Design/methodology/approach The socio-praxis approach, which is the outcome of an articulation of diverse methodologies that aim to support social processes from a bottom-up approach as a tool for decision making and community planning, was implemented in the present research. In this context, it supported the identification of heritage values incorporating multidisciplinary and multi-actor perspectives of two traditional neighborhoods of the city of Cuenca in Ecuador. Findings The results show that the identification of heritage values from multidisciplinary and multi-actor perspectives allows a more comprehensive vision of the existing values and the process reveals a greater involvement of the neighbors in heritage issues. The importance of structuring organized group of neighbors and positioning them as living experts has showed the complexity of cultural heritage conservation process but at the same time the significance for heritage management has been demonstrated. Therefore, this experience can be considered as an invaluable tool for heritage sites managers. Originality/value Stakeholder involvement in heritage conservation management has been widely discussed on international forums in the ultimate decades. While the importance of actor perceptions and priorities for sustainable heritage conservation is recognized, little has been said about the ways to reveal – non-expert – heritage values in such a way that people get involved in the heritage value assessment. In this perspective, the present research represents an invaluable tool for heritage sites that aim to implement a long-term management plans.
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Vu Hoang, Khoa. "The benefits of preserving and promoting cultural heritage values for the sustainable development of the country." E3S Web of Conferences 234 (2021): 00076. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202123400076.

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Cultural and natural heritages are considered invaluable resources, creating a unique tourist attraction for each country. However, knowing how to use this heritage for sustainable tourism development, while preserving and promoting the heritage value for future generations is not a simple task. This article focuses on the values of cultural heritage and the importance of maintaining and promoting it while integrating with the environment for the development of society. It discusses the current state of cultural heritage preservation and promotion in Vietnam, showing examples of development with disregard to the heritage and the environment, why it is necessary to have sustainable development in active culture conservation, as well as the relationship between the preservation, promotion of the cultural heritage and the socio-economic development and the environment. A perspective on the cultural heritage value in sustainable development is also given. Through the reading of supporting materials and the comparison of survey data, it is clear that the preservation of cultural values not only contribute directly to the socio-economic development of a country similar to Vietnam, but also to help create new values in later generations. Therefore, it is concluded that a sustainable approach to the conservation of cultural heritages is very important for the future handling of such irreplaceable resources.
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Iankova, Katia, and Sonia Mileva. "Societal Approach Towards the Socialist Heritage in Bulgaria." Cultural and Historical Heritage: Preservation, Representation, Digitalization 7, no. 1 (2021): 193–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.26615/issn.2367-8038.2021_1_014.

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The paper propose a conceptual framework of societal attitudes towards the socialist heritage in Bulgaria as a country with controversial socialist legacies in the field of tourism. The analysis aims to investigate the different expressions of sociatel approach to the heritage of the communist period of Bulgaria and what is the attitude, feelings, actions of the society towards this heritage in the post-communist times. Keywords: Socialist Heritage, Tourism, Societal Approach, Concept
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Poulios, Ioannis. "Discussing strategy in heritage conservation." Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development 4, no. 1 (May 13, 2014): 16–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jchmsd-10-2012-0048.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to discuss the concept of strategy in the field of heritage conservation, with a focus on a new conservation approach that promotes the empowerment of local communities and sustainable development: a living heritage approach. Design/methodology/approach – The approaches to heritage conservation are outlined: a material-based approach defines the principles of western-based conservation, a values-based approach expands these principles, while a living heritage approach clearly challenges the established principles. These approaches are, then, analysed from the perspective of strategy, and a living heritage approach is seen as an example of strategic innovation. The process by which ICCROM develops a living heritage approach at an international level is also examined. Findings – Choosing the “appropriate” conservation approach depends on the specific conditions of each heritage place. Yet, for the cases of living heritage in particular (with communities with an original connection with heritage) a living heritage approach would be more preferable. Living heritage approach can be seen as an example of a strategic innovation in the field of heritage conservation: it proposes a different concept of heritage and conservation (a new WHAT), points at a different community group as responsible for the definition and protection of heritage (a new WHO), and proposes a different way of heritage protection (a new HOW). Practical implications – A living heritage approach (presented in the paper) may potentially influence the theory as well as the practice of heritage conservation in a variety of parts and heritage places in the world, especially in terms of the attitude towards local and indigenous communities. Originality/value – Developing a new approach is, in a sense, developing a new strategy. In this context, the paper aims at bringing the insight of business strategy into the field of heritage conservation.
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Kayan, Brit Anak. "Sustainable built heritage: maintenance management appraisal approach." Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development 9, no. 3 (August 5, 2019): 266–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jchmsd-10-2018-0074.

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PurposeSustainability encapsulated economic, environmental and societal parameters. Without exception, these parameters also conforms the efficiency and increasingly importance of sustainable maintenance management for built heritage. However, there is less attention to the appraisal approach for maintenance management of built heritage, twinned with inconsistent and impractical assessment upon their maintenance strategies. With the aim to support sustainability, the purpose of this paper is to give an insight to the question on how the maintenance management appraisal approach practically determines and ultimately substantiates the decision-making process that promotes sustainable built heritage, based on current scenarios and practices in Malaysia.Design/methodology/approachMaintenance management appraisal for sampling of built heritage enables assessment of efficiency of maintenance and repair during maintenance phase based on survey (questionnaires) and statistical analysis.FindingsIt recognises the importance of maintenance management appraisal in achieving efficiency and underpinning rationale decision making for maintenance strategies and service quality (SERVQUAL).Practical implicationsIt must be emphasised that maintenance management appraisal is not confined to built heritage, and can be applied to any types and forms of property. The decision made as a result of its utilisation is practically support sustainable repair.Social implicationsThe implementation of this appraisal highlights the efficacy of maintenance strategies and SERVQUAL that may be adopted.Originality/valueThe paper is a rigorous appraisal of maintenance management of built heritage. This appraisal relays the “true” sustainable built heritage, contextualised within maintenance strategies and SERVQUAL that consequently allows rationale in achieving sustainable development.
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Fouseki, Kalliopi, and Mariana Nicolau. "Urban Heritage Dynamics in ‘Heritage-Led Regeneration’: Towards a Sustainable Lifestyles Approach." Historic Environment: Policy & Practice 9, no. 3-4 (October 2, 2018): 229–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17567505.2018.1539554.

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Qi, Liu, Nor Arbina Zainal Abidin, Nor Zarifah Maliki, and Liu Sha. "Exploring landscape character assessment opportunities as a main approach for strengthening sustainability landscape conservation strategy for industrial heritage landscape settings." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 1394, no. 1 (September 1, 2024): 012011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1394/1/012011.

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Abstract Post-WWII industrial shifts led to urban development and the endangerment of many industrial sites, vital for their historical, cultural, and technical value to urban identity. As integral components of urban identity, industrial heritage sites embody substantial historical, cultural, and technological significance. Thus, UNESCO, ICOMOS, and TICCIH strongly advocate for the protection of these invaluable industrial heritages. However, traditional industrial heritage conservation often focuses on the protection of physical objects, overlooking their intrinsic values. This tendency poses certain challenges to the sustainable preservation of heritage. This paper investigates methods for evaluating the value of local industrial sites with the aim of enhancing community identity and belonging as well as strengthening the sustainable conservation of industrial landscapes. This paper employs landscape character assessment as a fundamental approach to analyzing an area’s features, significance, and uniqueness by considering both social and natural factors and attributing true value to the site. This paper conducted an in-depth review and analysis of the relevant fields through a systematic literature review, ensuring the quality of the literature with the PRISMA framework and MMAT tool, and then explored the feasibility and specific procedures of implementing landscape character assessment in industrial heritage conservation. The findings highlight that the protocols for identifying and valuing landscape character assessment significantly impact its effectiveness and feasibility in sustainability conservation efforts. In conclusion, this research broadens conservation strategies for industrial heritage landscapes, offering insights for future studies and significantly aiding in protecting local industrial heritage and its value.
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Chapagain, Neel Kamal. "Contextual Approach to the Question of Authenticity in Heritage Management and Tourism." Journal of Heritage Management 1, no. 2 (December 2016): 160–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2455929616687898.

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Moving beyond the objectives of conservation, today’s heritage profession aims for heritage management. The management approach reminds professionals and host communities to consider sustainability of heritage in economic, environmental and socio-cultural frameworks. Integration of tourism within heritage management frameworks can provide economic incentives for managing heritage sites and activities, whereas well managed and interpreted heritage resources can be popular destinations for tourism. However, there might be other unwanted and unforeseen consequences of these practices. While providing an economic support for heritage management, the economic attraction may entice exploitation of heritage resources, including over-use, theft and vandalism. Over-marketing of heritage resources may trigger promotion of cheap mimicries of heritage manifestations and values. Such consequences and discussion often revolve around the notion of authenticity—one of the much-talked about and widely used terminologies in both heritage management and tourism. The notion of authenticity may have different meanings for different contexts, resulting in a mismatch of perceptions of what and how to be conserved, preserved, managed and presented. This article explores some of the complications associated with the notion of authenticity in heritage management and tourism, and suggests a contextual approach to authenticity.
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Alamri, Yahya Abdullah, Betül EKİMCİ, and Mehmet İNCEOĞLU. "AN APPROACH FOR PRESERVING OTTOMAN CULTURAL HERITAGE UNDER THREAT IN YEMEN: A CASE STUDY " THE OLD CITY OF SANA'A"." Journal of Islamic Architecture 7, no. 1 (June 28, 2022): 73–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.18860/jia.v7i1.13048.

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Cultural heritage is one of the human development aspects throughout the historical ages. Yemen is one of the wealthiest regions with cultural heritages in the Middle East, due to its important geographical location linking India, China, Africa, and the Mediterranean countries. Sana'a developed through successive Islamic eras, one of the most important of them was during Ottoman period. During their presence in Yemen, Ottomans were interested in constructing different types of buildings and bringing about a great civilizational and architectural renaissance in various regions of Yemen, especially in the city of Sana'a. However, cultural heritage in Sana'a was badly damaged during the Yemeni conflict, including Ottoman heritage. This study proposes an approach for preserving the building's cultural heritage under threat. This approach was based on the European Standard (EN 16096:2012 (E)), Conservation of cultural property - Condition survey and report of building’s cultural heritage. The methodology used will help preserve the cultural heritage in Sana'a by assessing the damage caused by the war in Sana'a, and appropriate proposals were made. This study considered a group of Ottoman structures in the old city of Sana'a as a case study. It shows the war-affected historical sites in all Yemeni cities. During the period of Ottoman rule in Yemen, various facilities were built in most regions of Yemen, most of which were concentrated in the old city of Sana'a. Ottoman establishments were counted in the old city of Sana'a, where there were twenty-eight of them, twenty-one installations still in existence, and seven destroyed and no longer existing.
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Draganic, Anica. "Conservation approach to the industrial heritage of Vojvodina." Facta universitatis - series: Architecture and Civil Engineering 17, no. 4 (2019): 377–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/fuace190612022d.

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This article presents new research, which has the objective of defining theoretical and methodological approaches to valorisation and conservation of the industrial heritage. It studies the present condition of industrial heritage in Vojvodina and the evolution of the conservation approach during the period under study (1945- today) through legislation and the documentation of the Institutes for Cultural Heritage Preservation. It indicates the previous inadequate partial evaluation, which has resulted in a loss of many important evidences of the industrial past. A mental schema, based on the Nara document of authenticity, is set as a tool for an interdisciplinary research and evaluation of industrial heritage authenticity. The proposed evaluation method, tested on the example of the brewery in Zrenjanin, results in a conservation project that offers a potential framework for future conservation approach to the industrial heritage of Vojvodina.
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Obad Šćitaroci, Mladen, and Bojana Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci. "Heritage Urbanism." Sustainability 11, no. 9 (May 10, 2019): 2669. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su11092669.

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Heritage urbanism considers the revitalization and enhancement of cultural heritage in spatial, urban, and landscape contexts, and it explores models for its inclusion in contemporary life. The main research question is whether it is possible, based on a number of case studies, to recognize models of the future use of heritage and interpret them as general models that may be applied to numerous specific cases. In doing so, the experience of the past becomes relevant and applicable to contemporary heritage revitalization and enhancement projects. The goal of the paper is to present Heritage Urbanism approach as an integral view of heritage in line with the ideas of sustainable development. Heritage is not viewed as isolated objects but rather as part of the immediate and wider environment. The context/environment affects heritage and its revival, while finding new uses and repurposing heritage has a stimulating effect on the environment and its development. The effects of this interaction can make heritage recognisable and can stimulate its sustainability. The survival and future of heritage are linked to urban and spatial planning, which takes into account the integrity of space and the cultural heritage in it. Urban and spatial planning methods are used. When these methods are enriched by the heritage urbanism approach, the result is the creation of specific methods that supplement well-known methods. In this context, cultural heritage can be used for place branding, infrastructure development, as a crucial element of urban design, or in other ways that aim to achieve an integral view of cultural heritage. The integral view requires the concerted action of different fields, such as regional development, the economy, tourism, transportation, and infrastructure. A fragmented and selective approach does not yield results.
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Frey, Bruno S. "Evaluating Cultural Property: The Economic Approach." International Journal of Cultural Property 6, no. 2 (July 1997): 231–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0940739197000313.

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AbstractThe preservation of cultural heritage is costly and one has to decide if and which items of cultural heritage are worth preserving. A method for determining the value of cultural heritage is therefore needed. In economics, several evaluation procedures are applied. This article briefly comments on impact studies and willingness- to-pay studies (hedonic market approach and the travel cost approach) and then focuses on contingent valuation surveys. The application of contingent valuation on the arts and related problems are discussed. Finally, the article combines the evaluation methods with democratic decisions by referenda. Switzerland presents an example of referenda held on art policy.
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Samadi, Zalina, Aidatul Fadzlin Bakri, Embong Mohamed, Mohamad Salman, and Laila Haidar. "Third Millennium Approach for Revitalizing Heritage Outdoor Space." Environment-Behaviour Proceedings Journal 7, no. 22 (November 30, 2022): 183–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.21834/ebpj.v7i22.4176.

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A recent study indicated a significant approach towards heritage urbanization is by integrating heritage with revitalization strategy on the function of heritage assets. Based on the current trend, the new designers in the third millennium have shown great interest in supporting the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG). This paper aims to explore the new approach to develop Jalan Doraisamy into a lovable outdoor. The first objective is to observe the heritage outdoor space using on-street observation method. The second objective was to evaluate its revitalization quality using the Revitalization Assessment. Thirdly, to unveil the underlying design principle using on-line interview methods. Keywords: Third Millennium; Heritage Revitalization; Heritage Urbanism; Outdoor Public Space eISSN: 2398-4287 © 2022. The Authors. Published for AMER ABRA cE-Bs by e-International Publishing House, Ltd., UK. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). Peer–review under responsibility of AMER (Association of Malaysian Environment-Behaviour Researchers), ABRA (Association of Behavioural Researchers on Asians/Africans/Arabians) and cE-Bs (Centre for Environment-Behaviour Studies), Faculty of Architecture, Planning & Surveying, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia. DOI: https://doi.org/10.21834/ebpj.v7i22.4176
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Sabrie, Hilda Yunita. "URGENCY OF INSURANCE FOR CULTURAL HERITAGE BUILDING IN SURABAYA." Yuridika 33, no. 2 (May 1, 2018): 232. http://dx.doi.org/10.20473/ydk.v33i2.7547.

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The cultural heritage of a region is the identity and richness of history for the region. Given the importance of the existence of cultural heritage in an area, the local government should pay special attention to the continuity of its existence. Through inventory, listing the cultural heritages, maintenance until its restoration must be done properly and continuously. This is not only the responsibility of the local government, but it is the responsibility of all parties including the local community. But in practice, local government or society are less concerned about the existence of cultural heritage in the area. This research focuses on cultural heritage buildings in Surabaya because this city is one of the cities in Indonesia which has many buildings of cultural heritage with various conditions. Local governments need to act quickly and effectively to solve the problem, so the solution can be done by including third parties such as insurance companies engaged in the insurance of losses, which can help to cover some form of damage that occurred in the building of the reserve culture in Surabaya. From the problems mentioned above, the research method used is statute approach and conceptual approach.
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Alghamdi, Naif, Mohammed Mashary Alnaim, Fahad Alotaibi, Abdulaziz Alzahrani, Faisal Alosaimi, Ali Ajlan, Yazeed A. Alkhudhayri, and Abdullah Alshathri. "Documenting Riyadh City’s Significant Modern Heritage: A Methodological Approach." Buildings 13, no. 11 (November 10, 2023): 2818. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/buildings13112818.

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This paper’s primary goal is to propose a methodological strategy to document and protect modern heritage buildings in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. This is essential because these structures are part of the cultural heritage and identity of Saudi Arabia, considering the rapid urbanization and development taking place. Protecting modern heritage buildings is also essential to increase public appreciation and understanding of modernist architecture and valuable resources of the city’s culture and identity. This study’s objectives fall into two categories: it aims to provide a review of the relevant literature to develop a theoretical framework to examine and document Riyadh City’s significant modern heritage buildings, and it aims to provide an examination and documentation of these structures. To ensure systematic and structured project documentation, quantitative and qualitative methodologies, inductive and deductive approaches, a chronological approach, data management techniques, workshops, and fieldwork methods are utilized. Over 1300 potential modern heritage buildings were identified and categorized into typological groups and building types that historians, architects, planners, designers, and policymakers can use to document and present Saudi Arabia’s rich modern heritage effectively. Of the 1300 buildings, this study was able to identify more than 170 buildings, which were later recognized as the primary modern heritage buildings for Riyadh City in the study timeline (1950–2000).
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Ayeni, D. A., A. D. Dada, and T. A. Ale. "Harnessing Heritage Resources for Social, Economic and Cultural Benefits in Nigeria." British Journal of Multidisciplinary and Advanced Studies 5, no. 5 (September 10, 2024): 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.37745/bjmas.2022.04171.

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Heritages are nonexistent and existent asset of a community that are important for historical, economic educational, recreational, social, and cultural significance, conserved and handed over from one generation to another. The utilization of heritage sites’ resources for social, economic and cultural benefits in some countries have been extensively studied. This paper presents the overview of heritage sites benefits on social, economic and cultural benefits in Nigeria. A qualitative approach through a synthesis of literature was adopted in the study. This review provides details to further develop deeper understanding of heritage resources for social, economic and cultural advancement in Nigeria. Empirical studies are cited to elaborate on the importance of heritage resources to sustainable development. Findings of the research revealed moderate contributions of heritage sites resources to sustainable development in Nigeria. The need to encourage communities’ participations and development of domestic tourism for heritage sites was maintained in the paper. The study concluded that for there to be development of heritage resources that will drive socio-economic and cultural growth, the protection of the resources is of utmost important.
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Porsanger, Jelena, and Pirjo Kristiina Virtanen. "Introduction—a holistic approach to Indigenous peoples’ rights to cultural heritage." AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples 15, no. 4 (December 2019): 289–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1177180119890133.

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This introductory article examines key issues related to Indigenous conceptualisations of cultural heritage, especially intergenerational aspects, Indigenous concepts of time, Indigenous knowledge, heritage language, and relationships with the environment. It urges to reflect on how these aspects are integrated when legal mechanisms protecting and promoting Indigenous cultural heritage have been designed and developed. The article also discusses the ability to form resistance through Indigenous cultural heritage. Our examples, which primarily come from the Sámi and also from global Indigenous perspectives, all point to the importance of a holistic approach to guarantee Indigenous peoples’ rights to their cultural heritage. Finally, we discuss the crucial role of research and appropriate research methodologies in contributing to better protection of Indigenous cultural heritage.
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Boujdad Mkadem, Abdelhamid, Abderrahman Zakriti, and Paul Nieuwenhuysen. "Pay or preserve: a new approach to valuing cultural heritage." Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development 8, no. 1 (February 6, 2018): 2–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jchmsd-11-2014-0040.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to initiate a new approach to cultural heritage value through the highly revealing example of Chefchaouen city, Morocco. This study relates to approaching the valuation of cultural heritage per se. It does not evaluate or assess the economic value or the economic impacts of the cultural heritage. It tries to assess and measure the “culturality” of heritage based on local population opinion about urban heritage of the medina. This paper aims at obtaining information about their feeling and perceptions in respect of this heritage which may be useful for people democratic participation in decision making about heritage. Design/methodology/approach A survey using direct interviews with a sample of lower middle-class citizens coupled with direct administration of a questionnaire is carried out. The medina (but not the city) of Chefchaouen is the basis of the surveys conducted recently. The interviews are centered on the idea of preservation and participation instead of any monetized valuation. Findings The study has shown that there is a strong commitment of social category to participate in any type of activity leading to preserve the medina because it is their source of living and a source of profound affection. Therefore, this “willingness to preserve” may be seen as a key to define a new variable or attribute to measure the intrinsic value of heritage assets and justify the introduction in the national and international heritage list. Research limitations/implications This study should have been achieved with much larger target population and preferably through a funded project destined to preserve work and training. Funding for better experiences is severely lacking. Practical implications Local authorities may use this research and be inspired by it new and open dimensions. Serious collaboration between authorities and people should have the most promising results. Social implications Local authorities are more sensitive to population; therefore, they may include them in preservation planning and create employment by using the available funding. Originality/value This paper tries to enhance heritage study field at methodological level. It suggests a parameter shift to a more simple approach based on the local population opinion toward their heritage. Decision making about heritage should include people opinions and not people’s wishes.
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Rindell, Anne, and Fernando Pinto Santos. "What makes a corporate heritage brand authentic for consumers? A semiotic approach." Journal of Brand Management 28, no. 5 (June 19, 2021): 545–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41262-021-00243-9.

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AbstractIn this article, the purpose is to develop a consumer-focused understanding of authenticity within corporate heritage research. Our research question is as follows: “What makes a corporate heritage brand authentic for consumers?” We employ Peirce’s semiotic concepts of icon, index and symbol to analyse consumers’ perceptions of the Finnish corporate heritage brand Fazer, founded in 1891. Our study shows that childhood memories, consumer experiences and expectations as well as shared social conventions make the corporate heritage brand authentic for consumers. Thus, our research empirically advances the understanding of authenticity as socially constructed. Importantly, our study highlights the temporal dimension of this construction and advances the current knowledge on corporate heritage brands by showing that uniqueness, credibility and consistency over time are key dimensions of corporate heritage brand authenticity assessments. This understanding is fundamental for corporate heritage management practice, especially for developing the strategic positioning of corporate heritage brands in the markets by harnessing the assessments of authenticity.
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He, J., J. Liu, S. Xu, C. Wu, and J. Zhang. "A GIS-Based Cultural Heritage Study Framework on Continuous Scales: A Case Study on 19th Century Military Industrial Heritage." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XL-5/W7 (August 12, 2015): 215–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprsarchives-xl-5-w7-215-2015.

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This paper presents a framework of introducing GIS technology to record and analyse cultural heritages in continuous spatial scales. The research team is developing a systematic approach to support heritage conservation research and practice on historical buildings, courtyards, historical towns, and archaeological sites ad landscapes. These studies are conducted not only from the property or site scales, but also investigated from their contexts in setting as well as regional scales. From these continues scales, authenticity and integrity of a heritage can be interpreted from a broader spatial and temporal context, in which GIS would contribute through database, spatial analysis, and visualization. The case study is the construction of a information indexing framework of Dagu Dock industrial heritage to integrate physical buildings, courtyards, natural settings as well as their intangible characteristics which are affiliated to the physical heritage properties and presented through historical, social and culture semantics. The paper illustrates methodology and content of recording physical and social/cultural semantics of culture heritages on different scales as well as connection between different levels of database.
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Mohd, Z. H., U. Ujang, and T. Liat Choon. "HERITAGE HOUSE MAINTENANCE USING 3D CITY MODEL APPLICATION DOMAIN EXTENSION APPROACH." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLII-4/W6 (November 13, 2017): 73–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xlii-4-w6-73-2017.

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Heritage house is part of the architectural heritage of Malaysia that highly valued. Many efforts by the Department of Heritage to preserve this heritage house such as monitoring the damage problems of heritage house. The damage problems of heritage house might be caused by wooden decay, roof leakage and exfoliation of wall. One of the initiatives for maintaining and documenting this heritage house is through Three-dimensional (3D) of technology. 3D city models are widely used now and much used by researchers for management and analysis. CityGML is a standard tool that usually used by researchers to exchange, storing and managing virtual 3D city models either geometric and semantic information. Moreover, it also represent multi-scale of 3D model in five level of details (LoDs) whereby each of level give a distinctive functions. The extension of CityGML was recently introduced and can be used for problems monitoring and the number of habitants of a house.
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Wang, Benshuo, Gamze Dane, Bauke de Vries, and Theo Arentze. "Design and Test of a Multi-Media Web Platform Prototype Based on People’s Preferences to Increase Cultural Heritage Awareness." Sustainability 16, no. 22 (November 19, 2024): 10065. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su162210065.

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Cultural heritage significantly influences the transmission of history from the past to the present and future. The core of protecting cultural heritage is inheritance, making sure the heritages can be sustainable forever. Various ICT methods facilitate the dissemination and preservation of cultural heritage information. However, traditional ICT platforms often focus on official authority perspectives, neglecting users’ preferences for retrieving cultural heritage information. To address this, a hypothetical media platform was developed to collect people’s preferences for cultural heritage content and media types through a questionnaire, leading to the creation of a new multi-media platform. For demonstration purposes, Strijp-S, an industrial cultural heritage site in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, was used as a case study. A questionnaire was administered to test the prototype’s effectiveness and compare it with a comprehensive search engine like Google. Independent and paired-samples t-tests were conducted to analyze the results, demonstrating that the dedicated multi-media platform prototype was more effective than Google in raising awareness of Strijp-S. These findings indicate that a platform designed based on users’ preferences can enhance public awareness of cultural heritage. This approach can assist policymakers in developing platforms to promote local cultural heritage effectively.
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Yang, S., M. Hou, P. Huo, A. Li, and L. Jiang. "A CLOUD COMPUTING PLATFORM TO SUPPORT DIGITAL HERITAGE APPLICATION USING A SERVICE-ORIENTED APPROACH." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLIII-B2-2020 (August 14, 2020): 1497–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xliii-b2-2020-1497-2020.

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Abstract. Since the digital technologies emerge, digital heritage has become an integral part of the world's cultural heritage under the leadership of UNESCO. With the development of digitization and accumulation of data, the digital information processing system for cultural heritage keeps updating. However, there still exist the problems of low information integration degree and weak information sharing ability, severely restricting the promotion and integration of cultural heritage and society. This paper proposes a digital cultural heritage cloud platform, where basic data service, knowledge service, engineering application, visual exhibition were realized through HTTP request. This platform completely encapsulated a large number of cultural heritage data processing algorithms. Accordingly, a cultural heritage data management system, a cultural heritage knowledge construction and application system, a cultural heritage display, analysis and evaluation system, and a cultural heritage microenvironment index monitoring system were embedded in this platform. In addition, the platform provided API for professional customized development to provide effective support. This platform can be flexibly adapted and extended, laying solid foundation for digital information sharing of cultural heritage.
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Mortensen, Christian Hviid. "A Museological Approach: Radio as Immaterial Heritage." SoundEffects - An Interdisciplinary Journal of Sound and Sound Experience 2, no. 2 (December 31, 2012): 21–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/se.v2i2.6258.

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Radio is a major part of our media heritage, but it is seldom featured in exhibitions or as part of museum collections. Museums traditionally operate with a material concept of artefacts, but with the advent of electronic and digital media the need for a broader concept to accommodate intangible forms of heritage, such as radio, has become apparent. This article outlines the challenges of conceptualising the sounds of radio as artefacts of cultural heritage to be exhibited in a museological context. These challenges range from the purely theoreti- cal matter of delineating intangible artefacts to more practical and methodological concerns about presenting these kinds of artefacts in exhibitions. An appreciative understanding of radio heritage calls for didactic strategies for bridging the knowledge gap that exists between the majority of modern audiences and the historic radio material. This article proposes possible responses to this challenge based on insights from learning and design theories.
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Sekerina, Irina. "A Psychometric Approach to Heritage Language Studies." Heritage Language Journal 10, no. 2 (September 30, 2013): 203–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.46538/hlj.10.2.4.

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The central goal of the heritage language (HL) curriculum is to facilitate ultimate attainment of the language by advanced speakers. However, the field of HL studies faces a problem in how to accurately and efficiently identify and measure weaknesses and strengths of advanced HL speakers on their way to ultimate attainment. So far, only the age of arrival to the country where the dominant language is spoken has been formally investigated as the most critical factor that influences full professional proficiency and ultimate attainment of the HL. The field of HL studies needs to embrace a formal psychometric approach that will allow us to go beyond the effect of age of arrival to uncover contributions of other naturally occurring factors, i.e., genetic, physiological, cognitive, developmental and environmental. At the core of this approach lies a comprehensive standardized assessment of (a) proficiency in HL and (b) general cognitive abilities.
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Kutut, Vladislavas, Natalija Lepkova, and Sabina Zrobek. "Immovable Cultural Heritage Usage Modes: Theoretical Approach." EUROPEAN RESEARCH STUDIES JOURNAL XXIV, Special Issue 1 (March 1, 2021): 1136–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.35808/ersj/2092.

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خضر, محمد. "Treasure Hunting An Underwater Cultural Heritage Approach." مجلة کلية الآداب . جامعة الإسکندرية 91, no. 91 (January 1, 2018): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/bfalex.2018.154691.

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Riviezzo, Angelo, Antonella Garofano, and Maria Rosaria Napolitano. "A STAKEHOLDER APPROACH TO HERITAGE MARKETING STRATEGY." Global Fashion Management Conference 2018 (July 30, 2018): 1348. http://dx.doi.org/10.15444/gmc2018.11.05.01.

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Colace, Francesco, and Francesco Colace. "CACHE: Contextual Approach for Cultural Heritage Enhancing." Journal of Visual Language and Computing 2020, no. 2 (December 10, 2020): 23–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.18293/jvlc2020-n2-009.

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