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Heritage and dialogue : using heritage conservation to strengthen the defences of peace

conference contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by William LoganWilliam Logan
The Preamble to UNESCO's 1945 Constitution asserted that wars are created in the minds of men and that it is in the minds of men that the defences of peace must be built. Exploring this proposition was vital in the post World-War II years, but it is equally critical in the 21st century when world efforts towards peace continue to be undermined by intense forms of nationalism and ethnic rivalries that commonly use cultural differences as a justification for conflict.<br><br>However, while strengthening intercultural dialogue underlies the creation of UNESCO, its flagship World Heritage program under the 1972 World Heritage Convention seems to be losing touch with this motivating principle. In this paper I explore the politicization of the program and argue that a re-focus is needed if the program is to serve in improving intercultural dialogue, understanding and tolerance, and ultimately peace.<br><br>To this end it is suggested that ways in which the World Heritage program might provide a stronger focus on dialogue-creation should be prioritized. These include giving priority to new transnational inscriptions and developing new stratagies for interpreting sites in more cross-culturally sensitive ways.

History

Location

Canakkale, Turkey

Language

eng

Publication classification

E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed

Copyright notice

2010, The Conference

Pagination

1440 - 1445

Start date

2010-10-20

End date

2010-10-24

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of World Universities Congress

Event

World Universities Congress (2010 : Canakkale, Turkey)

Publisher

The Conference

Place of publication

[Canakkale, Turkey]

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