Changing Climate; Changing Life—Climate Change and Indigenous Intangible Cultural Heritage
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Cultural Heritage and Threats from Climate Change
2.1. Intangible Cultural Heritage
2.2. Climate Change and Heritage Loss
2.3. Indigenous Peoples and Loss of Intangible Cultural Heritage
3. Climate Change and UNESCO
3.1. Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage
3.2. Indigenous Expertise
3.3. The Value of Indigenous Knowledge in Combating Climate Change
4. Recent Developments at UNESCO
4.1. Updated Draft Policy Document
4.2. Subsequent Developments
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | See Climate Change and Heritage Working Group of ICOMOS, The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging cultural heritage in climate action, July 2019, p. 19. |
2 | Alessandro Chechi, ‘The Cultural Dimension of Climate Change: Some Remarks on the Interface between Cultural Heritage and Climate Change Law’, in Sabine von Schorlemer and Sylvia Maus (eds.), Climate Change as a Threat to Peace, (Peter Lang AG, 2014), pp. 161–97. Chechi further comments that ‘[t]he international treaties that address the degradation of global climate conditions do not take account of the problem of the impacts of climate change on Cultural Heritage.’ |
3 | Gűl Aktűrk and Martha Lerski, ‘Intangible cultural heritage: a benefit to climate-displaced and host communities’, 11 Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences (2021), 305–315, p. 305. |
4 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), 699–716. |
5 | UNESCO World Heritage Centre (2007) ‘Climate change and world heritage. Report on predicting and managing the impacts of climate change on world heritage and strategy to assist states parties to implement appropriate management responses’, World Heritage Reports No 22, available at: http://whc.unesco.org/documents/publi_wh_papers_22_en.pdf, accessed 18 January 2022. |
6 | Gűl Aktűrk and Martha Lerski, ‘Intangible cultural heritage: a benefit to climate-displaced and host communities’, 11 Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences (2021), 305–315, p. 305. |
7 | Jacqueline P Hand, ‘Global climate change: a serious threat to Native American lands and culture’, 38 Environmental Law Reporter News & Analysis (2008), p. 10329 |
8 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
9 | Draft Policy Document on the impacts of climate change on World Heritage properties, Document WHC-07/16.GA/10, now updated and retitled Draft Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage (2021), WHC/21/44.COM/7C, Annex 1. |
10 | It should be noted that numerous criticisms have been leveled at the current world heritage framework for promoting a Western-centric idea of ‘heritage’, and overlooking or unacknowledging Indigenous conceptions. See Lynn Meskell, ‘UNESCO and the Fate of the World Heritage Indigenous Peoples Council of Experts (WHIPCOE)’, 20(2) International Journal of Cultural Property, 2013, pp. 155–74, p. 160 and C Brumann, ‘Anthropological Utopia, Closet Eurocentrism, and Culture Chaos in the UNESCO World Heritage Arena’, 91(4) Anthropological Quarterly (2018), pp. 1203–33. All 3 of the UN mechanisms specific to Indigenous peoples (UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, UN Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples) have called on the World Heritage Committee, UNESCO and its advisory bodies to take remedial measures and to expand the role of Indigenous peoples in the framework. |
11 | See Janet Blake, International Cultural Heritage Law, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015) and Lynn Meskell, A Future in Ruins (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018). |
12 | Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage 1972, (1037 UNTS 151, UNESCO.) |
13 | For an analysis of this instrument, see Francesco Francioni (ed.), The 1972 World Heritage Convention: A Commentary (Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2008). |
14 | 31 C/Resolution 30 (2001). |
15 | Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage 2003, (2368 UNTS 1, UNESCO). For an analysis of this instrument, see Janet Blake and Lucas Lixinski (eds.), The 2003 UNESCO Intangible Heritage Convention: A Commentary (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020). |
16 | See Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
17 | See Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage, UNESCO, Paris, 2003. See also the Operational Guidelines which broadened out the meaning of tangible heritage to include ‘cultural landscapes’–II(A), Operational Guidelines for the Implementation of the World Heritage Convention, UNESCO, Paris, WHC.21/01, 31 July 2021. |
18 | Federico Lenzerini, ‘Intangible Cultural Heritage: The Living Culture of Peoples’, 22(1) European Journal of International Law (2011), pp. 101–20. |
19 | Federico Lenzerini, ‘Intangible Cultural Heritage: The Living Culture of Peoples’, 22(1) European Journal of International Law (2011), pp. 101–120. |
20 | Article 2(1), Convention for the safeguarding of the intangible cultural heritage, UNESCO, Paris, 2003. (ICH Convention). |
21 | Article 2(2), ICH Convention. |
22 | Preamble, ICH Convention. |
23 | IPCC, Climate Change 2007, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), p. 30. |
24 | See Hee-Eun Kim, ‘Changing Climate, Changing Culture: Adding the Climate Change Dimension to the Protection of Intangible Cultural Heritage’, 18 International Journal of Cultural Property (2011), pp. 259–90. |
25 | Ibid. |
26 | It should be noted that climate-induced migration is just one of many instances of the intersection between climate change, human rights and cultural loss, but given space and time constraints, this is the main focus of the present discussion. Other impacts of climate change on intangible cultural heritage include, for example, a forced change in horticultural practices and subsequent diet change due to a climate-damaged soil; a change in traditional work and cultural practices due to desertification or deforestation; the reduction in reliance on, and use of, Indigenous knowledge in respect of cosmology and navigation due to pollution etc. |
27 | See Hee-Eun Kim, ‘Changing Climate, Changing Culture: Adding the Climate Change Dimension to the Protection of Intangible Cultural Heritage’, 18 International Journal of Cultural Property (2011), pp. 259–90. |
28 | See Noelle Higgins, ‘Indigenous Expertise as cultural expertise in the World Heritage Protective Framework’, 11 Nordic Journal of Law and Social Research (2021), pp. 75–102. |
29 | IUCN, Indigenous and Traditional Peoples and Climate Change, 2008, p. 4. |
30 | Climate Change and Heritage working Group of ICOMOS, The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging cultural heritage in climate action, July 2019, p. 19. |
31 | Gűl Aktűrk and Martha Lerski, ‘Intangible cultural heritage: a benefit to climate-displaced and host communities’, 11 Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences (2021), 305–315, p. 307. See also WN Adger, J Barnett, K Brown, N Marshall, K O’Brien, ‘Cultural dimensions of climate change impacts and adaptation’, 3 Nat Clim Chang (2013), pp. 112–17 and WN Adger J Barnett, FS Chapin Iii, H Ellemor, ‘This must be the place: under representation of identity and meaning in climate change decision-making’, 11 Global Environmental Politics (2011), pp.1–25, available at: https://doi.org/10.1162/GLEP_a_00051, accessed 12 February 2022. |
32 | M Scott and M Lennon, ‘Climate disruption and planning: resistance or retreat?’ 21 Plan Theory Pract (2020), pp. 125–54. https://doi.org/10.1080/14649357.2020.1704130, accessed on 11 May 2022. |
33 | Jasmine Pearson, Guy Jackson and Karen E McNamara, ‘Climate-driven losses to Indigenous and local knowledge and cultural heritage’, 1 The Anthropocene Review (2021), pp. 1–24. |
34 | Pearson et al. comment that ‘’[s]olastalgia’ emerged as a key theme for people who remain in situ but are losing their sense of place due to unrecognisable changes to their homeland, causing distress and sorrow. This change and subsequent loss of a familiar environment deeply affects peoples’ ontological security.’ Jasmine Pearson, Guy Jackson and Karen E McNamara, ‘Climate-driven losses to Indigenous and local knowledge and cultural heritage’, 1 The Anthropocene Review (2021), pp. 1–24. |
35 | E Ferris and J McAdam, (2015), ‘Planned relocations in the context of climate change: unpacking the Legal and conceptual issues’, 4 Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law (2015), pp. 137–66. JM Torres and JA Casey, ‘The centrality of social ties to climate migration and mental health’, 17(10) BMC Public Health (2017), available at: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-017-4508-0, accessed 12 February 2022. See also C Farbotko, E Stratford and H Lazrus, ‘Climate migrants and new identities? The geopolitics of embracing or rejecting mobility’, 17 Soc Cult Geogr (2016), pp. 533–52. https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2015.1089589. See also UNESCO, Living Heritage and Indigenous Peoples, France, 2019, np. In respect of eviction of Indigenous Peoples from world heritage sites, and lack of consultation with Indigenous Peoples in decision-making in the world heritage framework, see the case of the Endorois people and Lake Bogoria See African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Communication 276 / 2003–Centre for Minority Rights Development (Kenya) and Minority Rights Group International on behalf of Endorois Welfare Council v Kenya (2010) and African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Resolution 197: Resolution on the Protection of Indigenous Peoples’ Rights in the Context of the World Heritage Convention and the Designation of Lake Bogoria as a World Heritage—ACHPR/Res.197(L)(2011). The Commission held that the evictions and the failure of the Kenyan government to adequately involve the Endorois in the management and decision-making of the reserve had violated several of their rights protected by the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights. The Commission commented that it was of the view that in ‘any development or investment projects that would have a major impact within the Endorois territory, the state has a duty not only to consult with the community, but also to obtain their free, prior, and informed consent, according to their customs and traditions’ (African Commission on Human and People’s Rights 2010, para. 291). |
36 | See Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 24(7) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
37 | Jasmine Pearson, Guy Jackson and Karen E McNamara, ‘Climate-driven losses to Indigenous and local knowledge and cultural heritage’, 1 The Anthropocene Review (2021), pp. 1–24. |
38 | UNESCO, Living Heritage and Indigenous Peoples, (France, 2019), np. |
39 | IUCN, Indigenous and Traditional Peoples and Climate Change, (2008), p. 9. |
40 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
41 | The petitions concerned the Belize Barrier Reef, Huascaran National Park and Sagarmatha National Park and were filed together with a report on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef; see petitions and press release at: http://www.climatelaw.org, accessed on 1 March 2022. |
42 | UNESCO World Heritage Committee (2005) Decisions of the 29th Session of the World Heritage Committee: Decision 29 COM 7B.a, WHC-05/29.COM/22 of 9 September, para 5. |
43 | UNESCO World Heritage Committee (2005) Decisions of the 29th Session of the World Heritage Committee: Decision 29 COM 7B.a, WHC-05/29.COM/22 of 9 September, para 7 and para 9. |
44 | Predicting and Managing the Effects of Climate Change on World Heritage. A joint report from the World Heritage Centre, its Advisory Bodies, and a broad group of experts to the 30th session of the World Heritage Committee (Vilnius, 2006). |
45 | ‘Strategy to Assist States Parties to Implement Appropriate Management Responses’. Both the Joint Report and the Strategy were included in UNESCO, World Heritage Centre, ‘Climate change and world heritage. Report on predicting and managing the impacts of climate change on world heritage and strategy to assist states parties to implement appropriate management responses’, (2007), World Heritage Reports No 22, http://whc.unesco.org/documents/publi_wh_papers_22_en.pdf, accessed on 18 January 2022. |
46 | UNESCO World Heritage Committee (2006) Decisions of the 30th Session of the World Heritage Committee: Decision 30 COM 7.1, WHC-06/30.COM/19 of 23 August, par 8 and para 13. |
47 | UNESCO World Heritage Committee (2007) Decisions of the 31st Session of the World Heritage Committee: Decision 31 COM 7.1, WHC-07/31.COM/24 of 31 July, para 4. |
48 | UNESCO, WHC-07/16.GA/10, published as UNESCO World Heritage Centre (2008) ‘Policy document on the impacts of climate change on world heritage properties’, http://whc.unesco.org/uploads/activities/documents/activity-393-2.pdf, accessed on 12 February 2022. |
49 | UNESCO World Heritage Committee (2009) Decisions adopted at the 32nd Session of the World Heritage Committee: Decision 32 COM 7A.32, WHC-08/32.COM/24Rev of 31 March. |
50 | While UNESCO and the UN in general ignored the issue of the impact of climate change on intangible cultural heritage until very recently, there has been significant academic commentary on this issue for a number of years. See, for example, Miriiam Macchi, ‘Indigenous and traditional peoples and climate change’, IUCN Issues Paper, March (2008), http://cmsdata.iucn.org/downloads/indigenous_peoples_climate_change.pdf, accessed on 12 February 2022. |
51 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
52 | Article 4, World Heritage Convention 1972. |
53 | Ibid. |
54 | UNESCO World Heritage Centre (2007a) ‘Case studies on climate change and world heritage’, http://whc.unesco.org/uploads/activities/documents/activity-43-9.pdf, accessed on 12 February 2022, paras 27, 69, 73. |
55 | See Erica J Thorson, ‘On thin ice: the failure of the United States and the World Heritage Committee to take climate change mitigation pursuant to the World Heritage Convention seriously’, 38 Environmental Law (2008), pp. 139–76. |
56 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
57 | Article 5, World Heritage Convention 1972. |
58 | Article 5(1), World Heritage Convention 1972. |
59 | Article 5(2), World Heritage Convention 1972. |
60 | Article 5(3), World Heritage Convention 1972. |
61 | Article 5(4), World Heritage Convention 1972. |
62 | Article 5(5), World Heritage Convention 1972. |
63 | See Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
64 | Article 6, World Heritage Convention 1972. |
65 | Article 6(3), World Heritage Convention 1972. |
66 | See Susan Shearing, (2007) ‘Here today, gone tomorrow? Climate change and world heritage’, Macquarie Law Working Paper Series 2007–11 and Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
67 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
68 | See Francesco Francioni, ‘The human dimension of international cultural heritage law: an introduction’, 22(1) European Journal of International Law (2011), pp. 9–16. |
69 | See Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
70 | UNESCO (2007) Background document prepared for the Working Group Meeting to Develop the Policy Paper on Impacts of Climate Change on World Heritage Properties, UNESCO Headquarters, Paris, France, 5–6 February 2007, 40, Contribution from Australia, http://whc.unesco.org/uploads/activities/documents/activity-471-1.doc. |
71 | UNESCO World Heritage Committee (2009) Decisions adopted at the 32nd Session of the World Heritage Committee: Decision 32 COM 7A.32, WHC-08/32.COM/24Rev of 31 March. |
72 | UNESCO World Heritage Centre (2007) ‘Climate change and world heritage. Report on predicting and managing the impacts of climate change on world heritage and strategy to assist states parties to implement appropriate management responses’, World Heritage Reports No 22, 37. http://whc.unesco.org/documents/publi_wh_papers_22_en.pdf. |
73 | See, for example, Everglades National Park, in the United States. See: https://whc.unesco.org/en/soc/3839, accessed 13 February 2022. |
74 | Operational Guidelines for the Implementation of the World Heritage Convention, UNESCO, Paris, WHC.21/01, 31 July 2021. |
75 | See Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 2014, Vol. 27, No. 4, 699–716, p. 705. |
76 | ‘Safeguarding’ also implies the act of preservation for future generations. |
77 | Article 2(3), ICH Convention 2003. |
78 | Article 11, ICH Convention 2003. |
79 | Operational Directives, para.27. |
80 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27(4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716, p. 706. |
81 | Ibid. |
82 | Operational Principles and Modalities for Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage in Emergencies, endorsed by the Intergovernmental Committee at its fourteenth session in Bogota, Colombia, December 2019 (Decision 14.COM 13) and adopted by the General Assembly at its eighth session in September 2020 (Resolution 8.GA 9). |
83 | ‘Indigenous Expertise’ is defined as: ‘Indigenous expertise is the special knowledge and experience of Indigenous peoples which locates and describes relevant facts in light of their particular history, background, and context, and facilitates the explanation of Indigenous concepts to a non-Indigenous audience. Cultural Indigenous expertise illuminates the ‘value’ of Indigenous cultural objects sites and traditions, for the purposes of the world heritage legal framework, and elucidates how they should be treated and managed. See Noelle Higgins, ‘Indigenous Expertise as cultural expertise in the World Heritage Protective Framework’ 11 Nordic Journal of Law and Social Research (2021), pp. 77, 79–106. |
84 | Preamble, Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage, UNESCO, Paris, 2003. |
85 | Based on proposals made by the States Parties, the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage selects and promotes programmes, projects and activities each year that reflect the Convention’s principles and objectives based on the criteria set out in the Operational Directives (I.3). |
86 | Ethical Principles for Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage, UNESCO, Paris, 2015. |
87 | Policy on Engaging with Indigenous Peoples, IPTF/UNESCO-POLICY/FULL_VERSION/2018, UNESCO, Paris, 2018. |
88 | United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: resolution / adopted by the General Assembly, 2 October 2007, A/RES/61/295. |
89 | Preamble, Article 5 and Article 7, Paris Agreement to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Dec. 12, 2015, T.I.A.S. No. 16-1104. See Lisa Rogers, ‘Intangible cultural heritage and international environmental law: ‘the cultural dimension of environmental protection’’, 29(3) Historic Environment (2017), pp. 30–42. |
90 | See Climate Change and Heritage Working Group of ICOMOS, The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging cultural heritage in climate action, July 2019, p. 19. |
91 | See Gűl Aktűrk and Martha Lerski, ‘Intangible cultural heritage: a benefit to climate-displaced and host communities’, 11 Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences (2021), pp. 305–15. See also M Henderson and E Seekamp, ‘Battling the tides of climate change: the power of intangible cultural resource values to bind place meanings in vulnerable historic districts’, 1 Heritage (2018), pp. 220–238. |
92 | With regard to the dearth of inclusion of Indigenous expertise in the world heritage framework to date, see Noelle Higgins, ‘Indigenous Expertise as cultural expertise in the World Heritage Protective Framework’, 11 Nordic Journal of Law and Social Research (2021), pp. 75–102. |
93 | IUCN, Indigenous and Traditional Peoples and Climate Change, 2008, p. 4. |
94 | UNESCO, ‘Local and Indigenous Knowledge Systems (LINKS)’, available at: https://en.unesco.org/links, accessed 12 February 2022. |
95 | Climate Change and Heritage working Group of ICOMOS, The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging cultural heritage in climate action, July 2019, p. 11. The Working Group also states that ‘[t]hrough recognition of Endogenous Ways of Knowing and by embracing past human experience, the direction of solution-making can be rooted in the value of communities, and bring it to the heart of decision and policy-making. Through this, culture and heritage become a powerful asset in developing contemporary adaptation and mitigation strategies.’ - p. 11. |
96 | Climate Change and Heritage working Group of ICOMOS, The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging cultural heritage in climate action, July 2019, p. 14. |
97 | Climate Change and Heritage working Group of ICOMOS, The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging cultural heritage in climate action, July 2019, p. 18. |
98 | Eurekalert, ‘First ever UNESCO-IPCC-ICOMOS meeting to strengthen synergies between culture and climate change science’, Press Release, 6 December 2021, available at: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/936860, accessed on 12 February 2022. |
99 | Document WHC-07/16.GA/10, now updated and retitled Draft Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage (2021), WHC/21/44.COM/7C, Annex 1. |
100 | https://whc.unesco.org/en/news/2074/, accessed on 12 February 2022. |
101 | WHC/21/44.COM/7C, para. 10. |
102 | Circular Letter CL/WHC-20/08. |
103 | The establishment of this Technical Group was foreseen had been indicated to the World Heritage Committee at its 43rd session (Baku, 2019) (Document WHC/19/43.COM/7). |
104 | Draft Policy Document on the impacts of climate change on World Heritage properties, Document WHC-07/16.GA/10, now updated and retitled Draft Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage (2021), WHC/21/44.COM/7C, Annex 1, para. 23. |
105 | Draft Policy Document on the impacts of climate change on World Heritage properties, Document WHC-07/16.GA/10, now updated and retitled Draft Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage (2021), WHC/21/44.COM/7C, Annex 1, para. 54. |
106 | Draft Policy Document on the impacts of climate change on World Heritage properties, Document WHC-07/16.GA/10, now updated and retitled Draft Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage (2021), WHC/21/44.COM/7C, Annex 1, para. 53. |
107 | Draft Policy Document on the impacts of climate change on World Heritage properties, Document WHC-07/16.GA/10, now updated and retitled Draft Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage (2021), WHC/21/44.COM/7C, Annex 1, para. 16. |
108 | A White Paper is usually a information document, presenting the main features of a particular issue. As such, the White Paper would not be binding but would be an information first step in gathering relevant information on the issue of intangible cultural heritage in the context of climate change. |
109 | WHC/21/44.COM/7C, para 43. |
110 | Ibid. |
111 | UNESCO World Heritage Committee (2009) Decisions adopted at the 32nd Session of the World Heritage Committee: Decision 32 COM 7A.32, WHC-08/32.COM/24Rev of 31 March. See also UNESCO World Heritage Centre (2007) ‘Climate change and world heritage. Report on predicting and managing the impacts of climate change on world heritage and strategy to assist states parties to implement appropriate management responses’, World Heritage Reports No 22, 37, http://whc.unesco.org/documents/publi_wh_papers_22_en.pdf, accessed on 18 January 2022. |
112 | Sylvia Maus, ‘Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural heritage’, 27 (4) Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2014), pp. 699–716. |
113 | UNESCO, Living Heritage in the face of Covid-19, France 2021, p. 13. |
114 | William Megarry, International Council for Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) Focal Point for Climate Change and Cultural Heritage, quoted in Eurekalert, ‘First ever UNESCO-IPCC-ICOMOS meeting to strengthen synergies between culture and climate change science’, Press Release, 6 December 2021, available at: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/936860. |
115 | See Lynn Meskell, ‘UNESCO and the Fate of the World Heritage Indigenous Peoples Council of Experts (WHIPCOE)’, 20 International Journal of Cultural Policy (2013), pp. 155–74. |
116 | See Noelle Higgins, ‘Indigenous Expertise as cultural expertise in the World Heritage Protective Framework’, 11 Nordic Journal of Law and Social Research (2021), pp. 75–102. |
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Higgins, N. Changing Climate; Changing Life—Climate Change and Indigenous Intangible Cultural Heritage. Laws 2022, 11, 47. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11030047
Higgins N. Changing Climate; Changing Life—Climate Change and Indigenous Intangible Cultural Heritage. Laws. 2022; 11(3):47. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11030047
Chicago/Turabian StyleHiggins, Noelle. 2022. "Changing Climate; Changing Life—Climate Change and Indigenous Intangible Cultural Heritage" Laws 11, no. 3: 47. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11030047
APA StyleHiggins, N. (2022). Changing Climate; Changing Life—Climate Change and Indigenous Intangible Cultural Heritage. Laws, 11(3), 47. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11030047