Even before the integration in a multinational entity, culture has been fundamental in the making of Europe, maintaining within itself a remarkable diversity. European peoples' cultural heritages are an essential element in the substantial definition of their identities and their perception of the other's culture and history, within a common "European enterprise". Besides, cultural heritage contributes to the development of the economic system and the creation of new jobs. In the European Union's Framework Programmes for Research and Development, since the 1980s until now, the sector of cultural goods or, with a more modern term, of cultural heritage, has always been present, although in variable contexts, depending on the characterisation of the specific interventions along with the research policy choices also dealing with social and environmental aspects. From 1986 onwards, the Framework Programmes have supported and financed more than 120 projects in the field of cultural heritage, linking about 500 public and private research organisations - universities, research centres, museums, firms - overall the Union and among its Mediterranean partners, aiming at developing and applying state-of-the-art technology and the best know how to our cultural heritage. During the same period, in Italy we can single out two great research areas in this sphere; they had a different origin and different objectives - the first one concerned high level professional training, the second one regarded applied research - but dealt indeed successfully with the same issues. The two were the Cultural Fields Programme (1989-1991) and the Finalised Project Cultural Heritage of the National Research Council (1996-2000), prepared by a Strategic Project with the same name, in the previous three-year period (1992-1995). At the international level, along with the above mentioned public interventions in Europe and Italy, on the 16 November 1972, during its 17th general Conference, the Organisation of United Nations for Education, Science and Culture, adopted the Convention for the Protection of the World Natural and Cultural Heritage, in order to build up a list of sites (historical centres, monuments, landscape areas) on the basis of which it could start protection and development actions for these places. It was a giant step forward for UNESCO in this area, both from a political and a scientific point of view. Also during the 1980s and beyond, while the United Nations promoted the World Decade for Cultural Development (1988-1997) several experts' groups dealt with these problems, originating an in-depth discussion whose results were embodied, in the following decade, in the Convention for the Protection of the Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2003. From then onwards, through important choices and experiences, the importance of intangible cultural heritage protection too has gradually increate for all human societies.

Cultural heritage policies: Framework Programmes in Europe Main interventions in Italy and some international experiences

Lorenzetti E
2012

Abstract

Even before the integration in a multinational entity, culture has been fundamental in the making of Europe, maintaining within itself a remarkable diversity. European peoples' cultural heritages are an essential element in the substantial definition of their identities and their perception of the other's culture and history, within a common "European enterprise". Besides, cultural heritage contributes to the development of the economic system and the creation of new jobs. In the European Union's Framework Programmes for Research and Development, since the 1980s until now, the sector of cultural goods or, with a more modern term, of cultural heritage, has always been present, although in variable contexts, depending on the characterisation of the specific interventions along with the research policy choices also dealing with social and environmental aspects. From 1986 onwards, the Framework Programmes have supported and financed more than 120 projects in the field of cultural heritage, linking about 500 public and private research organisations - universities, research centres, museums, firms - overall the Union and among its Mediterranean partners, aiming at developing and applying state-of-the-art technology and the best know how to our cultural heritage. During the same period, in Italy we can single out two great research areas in this sphere; they had a different origin and different objectives - the first one concerned high level professional training, the second one regarded applied research - but dealt indeed successfully with the same issues. The two were the Cultural Fields Programme (1989-1991) and the Finalised Project Cultural Heritage of the National Research Council (1996-2000), prepared by a Strategic Project with the same name, in the previous three-year period (1992-1995). At the international level, along with the above mentioned public interventions in Europe and Italy, on the 16 November 1972, during its 17th general Conference, the Organisation of United Nations for Education, Science and Culture, adopted the Convention for the Protection of the World Natural and Cultural Heritage, in order to build up a list of sites (historical centres, monuments, landscape areas) on the basis of which it could start protection and development actions for these places. It was a giant step forward for UNESCO in this area, both from a political and a scientific point of view. Also during the 1980s and beyond, while the United Nations promoted the World Decade for Cultural Development (1988-1997) several experts' groups dealt with these problems, originating an in-depth discussion whose results were embodied, in the following decade, in the Convention for the Protection of the Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2003. From then onwards, through important choices and experiences, the importance of intangible cultural heritage protection too has gradually increate for all human societies.
2012
Istituto di Ricerca sulla Crescita Economica Sostenibile - IRCrES
978-88-905639-3-5
Cultural Heritages
Science Policy
European Research Programmes
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/236181
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact