CHANGING HERITAGE LANDSCAPES. CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES CONFRONTING CONSERVATION AND TOURISM BEYOND THE NATURE-CULTURE DICHOTOMY

CHANGING HERITAGE LANDSCAPES. CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES CONFRONTING CONSERVATION AND TOURISM BEYOND THE NATURE-CULTURE DICHOTOMY

di Michela Milanato -
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Docenti, ricercatori e studenti sono invitati a partecipare alla Seminar Series "CHANGING HERITAGE LANDSCAPES. CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES CONFRONTING CONSERVATION AND TOURISM BEYOND THE NATURE-CULTURE DICHOTOMY", che vedrà la partecipazione di 4 ospiti internazionali, uno per seminario, con i quali affronteremo da diverse prospettive (conservazione, ecologia politica, landscape e heritage studies) il nesso tra paesaggio-patrimonio-ecoturismo.


Tutti gli incontri si svolgeranno in inglese, in presenza a Padova e saranno trasmessi anche online. In allegato il calendario completo e la locandina del primo incontro (dettagli di seguito).

Seminar Series
CHANGING HERITAGE LANDSCAPES
#1 Erik Aschenbrand | Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development
How protected areas create new narratives for regional development: Nature conservation, landscape stereotypes and contested heritagization processes

April 13 - 16:30 - Sala Africa, Palazzo Wollemborg, DiSSGeA Università di Padova, Via del Santo 26, and online at: bit.ly/3kCDTmJ

Abstract
The expansion of the existing global protected area estate is one of the declared goals of the recently adopted Global Biodiversity Framework. In the future protected areas should be more integrative and promote regional development. However, integrative protected area concepts such as biosphere reserves often receive less attention (and funding) than, for example, national parks. The article discusses different protected area narratives by using practical examples and asks how we use protected areas to shape landscape and position ourselves as a society in a relationship to nature. Conflicts over the designation of protected areas illustrate that there is no singular societal perspective on nature, but rather that there are usually a multitude of different interpretations of landscape. The designation of a protected area often involves the heritagization of a particular interpretation of the landscape, which is given priority over alternatives. 

Erik Aschenbrand is Professor of International Nature Conservation and Social Ecological Sustainability Processes at Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development in Germany. Before joining the university, he worked in various protected areas:  Bavarian Forest National Park, Middle Elbe Biosphere Reserve and Reinhardswald Nature Park.