Community-Based Processes for Revitalizing Heritage: Questioning Justice in the Experimental Practice of Ecomuseums
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Heritage as a Global Concern and a Local Opportunity
1.2. Linking the Discourse upon Heritage with the One upon Justice: Defining Just Heritage
Increasingly, scholars and practitioners acknowledge that cultural heritage is about power and politics, legitimacy and identity, property and ownership, dissonance and contestation, and economics and development. This reconceptualisation puts people, rather than materials, at the centre of cultural heritage practice and makes efforts to protect heritage more likely to face questions about how associated benefits and burdens are distributed, who makes decisions, and what the appropriate responses are to violations of law or ethical standards. In other words, heritage scholars and practitioners began exploring the relationship of heritage and social justice. (p. 6)
1.3. The Experimental Practice of Ecomuseums
linking people, their heritage expressions and places; in the shift of the museums’ focus from collection to community, by moving their subject matter based on academic disciplines to an interdisciplinary view of material and immaterial assets; in the experimentation and enhancement of participation practices, reinforcing the involvement of the population at different levels of the museums’ work; finally, in the generation of a wide variety of community-based initiatives through the interaction with different physical, social and cultural contexts and/or the coalescence with other models (p. 370)
1.4. Are there Intersections between the Practices of Ecomuseums and the Concept of Just Heritage?
2. Methods, Context and Materials
2.1. Methodological Approach
2.2. The Sicilian Scenario
the Ecomuseum is a participatory practice aimed at enhancing the material and immaterial cultural heritage, developed by an organized subject, expression of a local community, in the perspective of sustainable development. The precondition is participation, intended as a democratic, community-based decision-making process. In the light of the experience gained, the figure of a coordinator (or a coordination group) is considered strategic, in order to stimulate participation in decision-making processes and in the planning of ecomuseum activities. The coordinator or the coordination group would be responsible for planning and organizing the activities of the ecomuseum, operating as link between the local areas and the framework of guidelines defined by each Italian Region.
- In 2014, the aforementioned Regional Law L.R. 16/14, named Institutions of Ecomuseums of Sicily;
- In 2017, the guidelines issued with DD 241/2017 (Regional Department of Cultural Heritage and Sicilian Identity), named Guidelines for the identification of the criteria and minimum requirements for the recognition of the status of ecomuseum as well as for the assignment of the contributions, with reference to the Regional Law L.R. 16/14 and subsequent amendments;
- In 2020, the administrative order DA n.04/GAB/2020 (Regional Department of Cultural Heritage and Sicilian Identity); it recognizes 11 ecomuseums in Sicily, while other 6 ecomuseums remain under evaluation.
2.3. The Simeto Area
3. Results
3.1. The Journey toward the Ecomuseum of the Simeto River
- 2010–2013: The university–community partnership continued the mapping process, organized several participatory workshops (at least one meeting per month), engaged in some community-based projects [72,73] and prepared a first Memorandum of Understandings for engaging local institutions into the bottom-up process.
- 2013–2015: based on the first Memorandum of Understandings, the university–community partnership—plus a group of elected officials of the Municipalities along the Simeto River—applied for the National Strategy for Inner Areas (SNAI), a Ministerial program under the framework of the EU Italian Territorial Cohesion Policy. The valley was selected as an experimental area of national significance for the participatory process put in place. The strategy—which was approved in 2018 and is now moving into the implementation phase—will provide about EUR 32 million for strengthening services such as education, health care and mobility, and sustaining some projects for local development. According with the SNAI criteria, three municipalities of the valley (Adrano, Biancavilla and Centuripe) will be the direct beneficiaries of economic resources, but other seven municipalities (Belpasso, Motta S. Anastasia, Paternò, Ragalna, Regalbuto, S. M. di Licodia and Troina) are part of the strategic area [74,75,76,77].
- 2015–today: in February, 2015, the Participatory Presidium was born as an umbrella organization grouping about 60 community-based organizations. In May 2015, ten municipalities, the University of Catania and the Participatory Presidium signed the Simeto River Agreement [66,67]. The agreement experimented with a first triennium of shared governance and beyond the SNAI, several other projects were funded thanks to the synergies that the Agreement created. Among them, there was an EU Life project on adaptation to climate change, focused on processes of community learning for resilience (the municipalities of Paternò, S. M. di Licodia and Ragalna were the main beneficiaries).
- 2015–today: each year, the Community Planning and Ecological Design Summer School (CoPED) takes place in the valley, with students and scholars from the University of Memphis and University of Massachusetts, Boston, together with the University of Catania, generating new ideas, projects and enthusiasm [78,79]. In 2020, CoPED was aimed at framing the Simeto process under the concept of an Ecomuseum of the Simeto River Valley. COVID-19 disrupted 2020 CoPED, but the Presidium and the University of Catania have kept working toward the ecomuseum idea.
- 2016–today: In addition, in the framework of the Simeto River Agreement, a biodistrict was established. The biodistrict is an organizational structure aimed at enhancing the local food system with a focus on agro-ecology. The objective was to foster the idea of food citizenship [80] pushing for the consumption of local, quality food, networking local farms, restaurants, lodging, schools and hospitals’ cafeterias, municipalities, ethical purchasing groups, families, etc.
3.2. Focus on the Project “Inclusive Landscapes”
- To map, identify and involve the fragile people living in the Simeto area, with a focus on the various specific needs;
- To map, identify and involve associations that, in various forms, are already committed to address social inclusion;
- To design specific activities in order to involve fragile people with an active role, such as: The collection of memories, pictures, drawings and stories in order to organize a “diverse exposition” of the valley; “diverse guided tours” of the valley (having unconventional guides aside with formal touristic guides); training courses for rediscovering and transmitting the peculiar arts and crafts of the valley linking children and the elderly, etc.
3.3. Census of Other Sicilian Ecomuseums
- Not all the listed ecomuseums have already started activities on the ground; some of them are just projects on paper;
- Not all the listed ecomuseums have put in place community-based processes aimed at a wide participation of the residents; only some of them have started such a process;
- Not all the listed ecomuseums benefit from a wide involvement of a variety of local actors;
- The issue of spatial justice is not the primary concern of the listed ecomusuems: only some of them have implemented actions aimed at social inclusion.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Questions for Investigating the Characteristics |
---|---|
Residents’ identification/benefits | Does the ecomuseum encompass a “geographical” territory that is determined by shared characteristics, identified by residents? Does the local community manage the ecomuseum? Does the ecomuseum bring benefits to local communities—e.g., a sense of pride, regeneration, or economic income? |
Community participation | Does the ecomuseum allow for public participation in a democratic manner? How? Is there an emphasis on process rather than on product? |
Local organization operations | Does the ecomuseum encourage collaboration with local craftspeople, artists, writers, actors and musicians? Is there joint ownership and management between local people and “experts”? Is it a fragmented “museum” with a hub and “antennae” of buildings and sites? |
ID, Name and Location | Coordinator |
---|---|
1. Mare Memoria Viva (PA) | Association |
2. I luoghi del lavoro contadino—Iblei (SR) | Association |
3. Sistema Rete Museale Iblei (SR) | Association |
4. Parco Cava Grotta del Drago (CT) | Association |
5. Cielo e Terra—Acireale (CT) | Foundation |
6. Madonie—Castellana Sicula (PA) | Municipalities’ union |
7. Cinque sensi—Sciacca (AG) | Association |
8. Riviera Dei Ciclopi—Acicastello (CT) | Municipality |
9. Valle del Loddiero—Militello Val di Catania (CT) | Association |
10. Rocca di Cerere Geopark (EN) | Consortium |
11. I sentieri della memoria—Campobello di Licata (AG) | Association |
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Pappalardo, G. Community-Based Processes for Revitalizing Heritage: Questioning Justice in the Experimental Practice of Ecomuseums. Sustainability 2020, 12, 9270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219270
Pappalardo G. Community-Based Processes for Revitalizing Heritage: Questioning Justice in the Experimental Practice of Ecomuseums. Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):9270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219270
Chicago/Turabian StylePappalardo, Giusy. 2020. "Community-Based Processes for Revitalizing Heritage: Questioning Justice in the Experimental Practice of Ecomuseums" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 9270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219270
APA StylePappalardo, G. (2020). Community-Based Processes for Revitalizing Heritage: Questioning Justice in the Experimental Practice of Ecomuseums. Sustainability, 12(21), 9270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219270