Seminario «One World Seminar» Mayo 2021
19 abril 2021
Seminario «One World Seminar» Mayo 2021
{slider Natural and social Disasters in World Heritage Sites}
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Moderadores: Adriana Scaletti y Paulo Dam, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
Fecha: 3 de Mayo / Hora: 13:00 UTC
Abstract
The session, «Natural and social Disasters in World Heritage Sites» is the first of the Globinar and therefore of particular importance to introduce some relevant issues: World Heritage sites are the center of the discussion, but their complexity requires an analysis from broad perspectives that go beyond the spatial and also consider multiple components. In this sense, heritage is the reflection and response of a varied, immense society; at the same time in danger of disappearing and a cornerstone for the construction of new, even more complex expressions and identities. But natural and social disasters -notably among them the current COVID-19 pandemic- are also part of that identitarian construction: society responds to them in different and as such they condition our present and future experience- again, in mostly positive developments, but always with the threat of failure or repeated defeat. In this, too, World Heritage Sites reflect the human experience.
Speakers:
OCEANIA John Day & Scott Heron, James Cook University, case study: Australia, Great Coral Reef Barrier
AFRICA Walter Rossa, Universidad de Coimbra, case study: Portuguese ex-colonies in Africa
EUROPE Alfonso Muñoz Cosme, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Theme: El terremoto de Lorca y sus consecuencias en el patrimonio local, Spain.
SOUTH AMERICA María Lucía Santamaría , Qapac Ñan, Peru.
{slider Local community and international community in World Heritage Sites}
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Moderador: Giovanni Fontana Antonelli
Speakers
OCEANIA Dr. Dima Maurice, University of Queensland, case study: Australia, TBA
AFRICA George Abungu, Emeritus Director of National Museums of Kenya, Sudan
EUROPE Dr. Andrea Mariotto, IUAV Venezia, case study: Italy
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA, Dr. Claudia Cancellotti, COO of Archi.Media Trust, case study: Dominica, The Kalinago Community
SOUTH AMERICA, Dr. Olimpia Niglio, Hokkaido University, case study: Colombia
{slider Tourism and Pandemics in World Heritage Sites}
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Moderadora: Cynthia Pérez, UPC Universidad Politécnica de Catalunya
Fecha: 5 de Mayo / Hora: 13:00 UTC
COVID-19 has had diverse global implications that have forced the entire society to stop and rethink its way of life, interactions and customs. It has demonstrated the vulnerability of tourist destinations, making it imperative to find new paths. Furthermore, COVID-19 has required adaptive government management to cope with uncertainty. The absence of a roadmap has left a natural park or a remote town at the same starting point as a tourist city, especially since the sanitary recommendations suggest avoiding crowded areas—one of the main characteristics of urban tourism. To understand the impacts that COVID has had on tourist cities, especially World Heritage sites, we will analyze six cases, each one of them with its own challenges. This will allow us to see how cities are facing the pandemic.
Speakers
ASIA Meng Qu, Hiroshima University, Theme: Rural art tourism revitalization and creative social resilience under COVID impact, Japan.
OCEANIA Karine Dupre, Griffith University, Theme:Surviving or thriving? A matter of perspective, Australia.
AFRICA Isber Sabrine, Heritage For Peace, Theme:Heritage and covid 19 in conflicts: the Cyrene case , Libya.
EUROPE Alessia Allegri, Researcher Ciaud | URBinLAB, Theme:
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Dr. Carlos Hiriart, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo /Consejo de ICOMOS, Theme: Tourism and Pandemic in Morelia (Mexico): Challenges and strategies in the management of a world heritage city, Mexico.
{slider Pandemics and Historic Centers}
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Moderadores: Elvira Pérez y Carlos Silva, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Fecha: 6 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
Abstract
Historic centers are fundamental heritage places in cities, bringing together central functions and historicity, making them spaces of exchange and encounter, of permanence and change, of density and massiveness. The Covid-19 pandemic and the various measures to prevent its spread, such as quarantines and social distancing, have caused historic centers and their inhabitants to be particularly affected, closing most of the public and private activities that gave life to their daily lives and emptying the public spaces where people circulated, met and stayed. Markets and informal commerce is another element to be analyzed in historic centers, both in terms of use and vitality as well as sanitary hygiene. In this context, the present session seeks to inquire into the situation of historic centers faced with pandemics, how these phenomena have affected them and in what way they have faced them throughout their history.
AFRICA Muhammad Juma, Tanzania, Zanzibar
EUROPE Giorgia Amoruso, Universitat Politècnica de València, Theme:Pandemias y Centros históricos: transformar la crisis en la oportunidad de un nuevo equilibrio , Italy
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Stephen J. Kelley, ISCARSAH, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, Theme: New Orleans: Wind, Water and Global Climate Change
SOUTH AMERICA Fernando Carrión, FLASCSO, Theme: La centralidad histórica: epicentro la pandemia, Quito
SOUTH AMERICA Nivaldo Andrade, Programa de Pós-graduação em Arquitetura e Urbanismo (PPG-AU) / Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA), Theme: La pandemia del Covid-19 en el Centro Histórico de Salvador de Bahia: oportunismo y oportunidad, Brazil
{slider Nature-culture approaches to disasters prevention and post-disaster recovery}
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Moderadora:
Fecha: 7 de Mayo / Hora: 11h00 UTC
Abstract
In the last few years, cultural heritage and nature-based solutions are increasingly being integrated into disaster risk managment strategies and climate change mitigation and adaptation planning. However, the interconnections between natural and cultural heritage are not sufficiently explored and used for disaster risk prevention and post-disaster recovery strategies. In light of the increasing hazards threatening World Heritage, this session explores the opportunities that nature-culture approaches could bring for analyzing heritage places and increase their resilience by planning disasters prevention and recovery in cultural landscapes, urban areas and natural protected areas.
Speakers
OCEANIA Xavier Forde, Heritage New Zealand, Theme: Strengthening Communities of Knowledge: building the infrastructure of Indigenous heritage in Aotearoa
AFRICA Alula Tesfay, University of Tsukuba, Theme: Ethiopia, Resilient building traditions of Gunda Gundo community
EUROPE Barbara Minguez-García, Theme: Challenges and opportunities of natural and cultural heritage in disaster risk management strategies: an international cooperation perspective
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Paloma Guzmán, Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research (NIKU), Theme: How is conservation with a landscape approach advancing the assessment of climate change of World Heritage properties?
SOUTH AMERICA Pilar Matute, Theme: El moai de Minami-Sanriku: un regalo protector (The Minami-Sanriku Moai: a protective gift)
{slider Preparing for emergency to ensure resilience of cultural and natural heritage systems under threat: a matter of good territorial Governance!}
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Moderador: Claudio Cimino, World Association for the protection of Tangible and Intangible Cultural Heritage in times of armed conflicts (WATCH)
Fecha: 10 de Mayo / Hora: UTC
Abstract
Cultural and Natural Heritage are among the highest expressions of humanity. However, we assist to a sharp increase of disasters causing severe damage or loss of heritage worldwide. Countries affected by catastrophic events are usually caught unprepared, incapable to deploy mitigation and/or response measures.
-What does it take to be ready to protect heritage at risk?
-Which DRR policies currently in place are considered a good practice?
-Which Private Public Partnerships can responsible state agencies establish to ensure CNH protection?
Speakers
{slider Preventing earthquake destruction in world heritage sites: learning from empiricism to regulations}
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Moderador: Marco Barrientos, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Fecha: 11 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
Abstract
The cultural heritage may be exposed to different kinds of hazards and disasters, some of them -as earthquakes- such destructive as sudden. A specific particularity of this problem is crossed by the unpredictability factor that usually has an impact over heritage. Therefore, regulations seem to provide not only restrictions but mainly preventing rules in order to protect the cultural heritage. Thus, this session raises some questions such as, how do earthquakes affect different cultural heritage expressions around the world?; how do local, national and international regulations and conventions protect the cultural heritage considering quakes?; or which role carry out the empiric dimension among the relationship between earthquake destruction and cultural heritage protection rules? An international and multicultural discussion leads to a better understanding of this crucial issue.
ASIA Prof. Enrico Spacone and Prof. Giuseppe Brando, University “G. d’Annunzio of Chieti-Pescara, Italy, case study: Nepal, Gorkha palace (Tentative list), Damages from the Gorkha earthquake in Nepal
EUROPE Giulia Misseri, University of Florence, case study: Italy
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Fernando Peña Mondragón, National Autonomous University of Mexico, case study: Mexico
SOUTH AMERICA Marco Barrientos, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, case study: Chile, Valparaiso
{slider Prevention and conservation in World Heritage Sites}
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Moderadora: Marcela Hurtado, Technical University Federico Santa María, Chile – ICOMOS Chile
Fecha: 12 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
Abstract
OCEANIA Peter Phillips, Conservation management in troubled times: the Sydney Opera House, Australia.
AFRICA Khalid El Harrouni, VP ICOMOS Maroc, VP ISCARSAH et ISCES, Ecole Nationale d’Architecture (ENA). Rabat Instituts, Maroc, case study: Morocco, Earthquake – technical approach
EUROPE Elena Mamani, case study: Albania
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Steve Kelly, FAIA, SE, FUS, ICOMOS – ISCARSAH, case study: Haiti: the 2010 Earthquake and the measures to conserve the Citadel WHS
SOUTH AMERICA Claudia González Muzzio, Ambito Consultores – ICOMOS Chile, case study: Qhapaq Ñan, Andean Road System. Effect of climate change – local community
{slider Culture, Heritage and Resilience : Local Creative Responses to Natural Disasters, COVID-19 and Climate Change}
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Moderadora: Isidora Larraín, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Fecha: 13 de Mayo / Hora: 12h00 UTC
AFRICA Polly Alakija, Five Cowries Arts Education Initiative, case study: Nigeria, Five Cowries Arts Education Initiative uses culture and the arts to develop educator capacity.
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA, Eve Mosher, Artist, case study: USA, New York city: Statue of Liberty // Philadelphia: Independence hall, HighWaterLine NYC and Heat Capture South Philly
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Amy Schwartzman & Ted S. Berger, Emergency Management and the Arts & Executive Director at New York Creates, case study: USA, TBC
EUROPE Paul Heritage & Mariana Steffen, People’s palace projects, case study: UK – Peru, Argentina, Brazil and Colombia, Europe – Latin America arts and youth mental health collaborative research during COVID-19
SOUTH AMERICA Paul Heritage & Tiago Jesus, People´s palace projects, case study: Brazil, Minas Gerais’s Quadrilátero Ferrífero (Iron Quadrangle) – home to two UNESCO World Heritage towns (Ouro Preto; Diamantina; Congonhas). Roots of Resilience in Minas Gerais
{slider Informal knowledge, participation and heritage during Pandemics}
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Moderadora: Cristina Dreifuss, Universidad de Lima
Fecha: 14 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
Abstract
Speakers
OCEANIA TBA
AFRICA Tarek Teba
EUROPE Doriana Musaj & Artan Kacani
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Clare Cardinal-Pett, case study: USA
SOUTH AMERICA José Cepero, case study: Peru
{/sliders}
{slider Identity and Resilience in World Heritage Sites}
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Moderadores: Bruno Coutinho y Leonardo Freitas
Fecha: 17 de Mayo / Hora: UTC
{slider The value of culture during Pandemics}
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Moderador: Jae Lee, Pai Chai University / Lee Jae Architects
Fecha: 18 de Mayo / Hora: 12:00-14:00 UTC
OCEANIA Dave Beynon, University of Tasmania, Theme: Pandemic distractions, Australia.
AFRICA Boutheïna Hannachi and Rim Rachdi, Theme: Promoting culture and heritage through social media, Tunisia
EUROPE Carles Pastor Foz, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya /Pastor associates, Theme: Digital design as a tool to restore and recover the memory of our architectural heritage, Spain.
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Benjamin Saulsberry, Museum Director at the Emmett Till Interpretive Center, case study: USA
SOUTH AMERICA Karen Golle and José Ojeda, Centro del Patrimonio Cultural. Universidad Católica de Chile / Bailes Chinos member and Sociolgist , Universidad Arturo Prat, Theme: The cultural and spiritual value of «Bailes Chinos» during pandemic and how it has affected ´»Bailes Chinos of Tarapacá», Chile
{slider Interdisciplinary research in disaster risk reduction: an uncomfortable understanding}
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Modeadora: Karla Palma, CIGIDEN
Fecha: 19 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
The protection of heritage sites against disasters is a complex problem that requires a broad vision. In this sense, it is not possible to address that complexity only from one discipline. Disaster studies have been traditionally dominated by natural sciences and engineering studies, leaving social sciences in a relatively marginal position. Today, this situation is changing, but interdisciplinary research remains restricted. Interdisciplinary research implies a horizontal dialogue and allows enrichment of understanding, but also forces an uncomfortable re-examination of each discipline propositions. With these considerations, this event will gather researchers from different disciplines dedicated to disaster studies to a dialogue around the protection of world heritage sites against disasters.
OCEANIA Shannon Abeling , University of Auckland, New Zeland.
AFRICA Sara Stefanini , University of Florence, case study: Medina of Fes, Morocco. «The architectural heritage at risk of disappearing due to loss of knowledge and environmental aggression in Maghreb cultures. Vulnerabilities and seismic risk assessment of the medina of Fes in Morocco»
EUROPE TBA
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Margarita Teutli, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla (BUAP), case study: Mexico, Puebla
SOUTH AMERICA Maureen Fordham, UCL Inst for Risk & Disaster Reduction, case study: Peru
{slider World heritage, COVID-19 and Tourism}
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Moderadora: Maria Gravari-Barbas, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Fecha: 20 de Mayo / Hora: UTC
Abstract
Speakers
{slider Intangible Heritage and Disasters}
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Moderadora: Alejandra Albuerne, University College London
Fecha: 21 de Mayo / Hora: UTC
The session on Intangible Heritage and Disasters has two objectives:
-To highlight the specific vulnerabilities that intangible heritage can present in contexts of disaster and crisis, as well as strategies to manage them.
{slider Sustainability and future after disaster and Pandemics}
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Moderadora: Karen Fried, ICOMOS Chile
Fecha: 24 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
AFRICA Djako Romaric, case study: Côte d’Ivoire, Grand-Bassam
EUROPE Paolo Motta, SDGWG- CIVVIH- ICTC- ICOMOS Committees, case study: Italy, Mount Peglia Biosphere reserve- Orvieto
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Dominique Chang, Instituto Tecnológico de Costa Rica, case study: Antigua Guatemala, Guatemala. «Antigua Guatemala, a resilience city»
SOUTH AMERICA Florencio Compte, case study: Ecuador
{slider Information Technologies for preparedness and mitigation: prior or after Disasters and Pandemics}
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Moderador: Mario Santana, Carleton Immersive Media Studio (CIMS), Carleton University, Secretary General at ICOMOS/ Transformational Information Technologies
Fecha: 25 de Mayo / Hora: 17h00 UTC
{slider Heritage and Social Reconstruction}
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Moderadora: Magdalena Pereira, Centro de Estudios del Patrimonio. Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez
Fecha: 26 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
EUROPE Marta Lorenzon. University of Helsinki. Building Identities: archaeology, interactions, and conservation during the pandemic.
NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA Guillermo Wilde. Univ. Nacional de San Martin, CONICET/Maximiliano Von Thûngen. Universitat zu Koln. Reconceptualizando el patrimonio jesuítico de América del Sur (a distancia).
SOUTH AMERICA Elvira Espejo. Museo de Etnografía y Folclore, La Paz. Re tejiendo nuestra comunidad en pandemia.
{slider Capacity building for disaster risk preparedness}
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Moderador: Rohit Jigyasu, ICCROM
Fecha: 27 de Mayo / Hora: UTC
{slider Conservation emergency!}
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Moderador: Cristian Heinsen, Fundación Altiplano, Chile
Fecha: 28 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
AFRICA Kagosi Mwamulowe, Association of Critical Heritage Studies Regional Director of the East Central Region of the National Heritage Conservation Commission in Zambia, case study: Zambia
OCEANIA Jane Lennon, Brisbane, Australia.
SOUTH AMERICA Marcelo Vargas, Plan Misiones de Chiquitos Architect, executive, case study: Bolivia, Misiones Jesuíticas de Chiquitos
SOUTH AMERICA Adelaida Marka, Andean farmer and entrepreneur from Community of Socoroma, Arica y Parinacota, Chile, case study: Chile, Andean Temples of Arica y Parinacota, the native sense of conservation
{/sliders}
{slider Physical Reconstruction in World Heritage Sites}
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Moderador: Xiaoning Hua, Associate Professor, Subdean of Department of Architecture, Dean Assistant of School of Architecture & Urban Planning, Nanjing University
Fecha: 29 de Mayo / Hora: 13h00 UTC
{slider Closing session}
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Moderador: Fernando Pérez Oyarzun, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes
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