The independent European journal of post classical archaeologies PCA recently published an article facing the theme of the participation on cultural landscape.
The contribution was given by Dott. L. Delgado Anés and Prof. J.M. Martín Civantos from the University of Granada, both engaged for years in projects promoting forms of participation for the protection and recovery of the heritage of landscapes. Indeed, as explained by the authors in the introduction of the article, “the choice of this subject stems from the accumulation of experiences
gathered during the development of two research projects: MEMOLA (www.memolaproject.eu) and more recently REACH (www.reach-culture.eu).
Intention of the article is to ascertain how the management and participation in cultural landscapes are conducted and to identify in which conceptual and normative contexts archaeologists should act in their approach to putting into practice a participatory model. The paper advances that this cannot be initiated uniquely from archaeological, or even heritage or cultural, practices. Environmental factors and natural values are essential and have often prevailed over more integrated conceptions of coevolutionary processes between humans and the environment.
Read the entire article:
PCA 9_Delgado-Civantos
-
Join the
Digital Meets Culture
Newsletter! -
Join the
Digital Meets Culture
Open Newsroom!If you have interesting news and events to point out in the field of digital cultural heritage, we are waiting for your contribution.
-
Free text
-
-
Upcoming events
-
- extended deadline 11/3/2025
Europeana 2025 – Preserve, Protect, Reuse Conference will be held on 11-12 June 2025 during the Polish Presidency of the Council of the EU. Some of the main themes are: Technical innovations to support and enrich the cultural heritage data in … Continue reading →
- This policy for persistent identifiers in the data space can guide cultural heritage institutions to ensure that resources are reliably identified and remain accessible online now and in the future.
In the digital transformation of the cultural heritage sector, the concept of Persistent Identifiers (PIDs) is becoming more known and used by heritage institutions to enrich their online collections and improving their discoverability, accessibility, interoperability and reusability over time and … Continue reading →