12 avril 2017
https://www.openedition.org/12554 , info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Di Giovine Michael, « UNESCO’s World Heritage Program: The Challenges and Ethics of Community Participation », Göttingen University Press, ID : 10670/1.jce2hl
1 Introduction In the nearly fifty years since the 1972 World Heritage Convention was ratified, UNESCO’s flagship preservation program has transformed itself from an initiative valorizing primarily national parks and Western-style monuments to the keystone of a robust World Heritage Program that seeks to engage different communities with a common ethical narrative of “unity in diversity.” Yet UNESCO has been critiqued for its politicized and elitist nature; its inability to protect its World ...