creators_nameBrooks, Allyson
typeconference_item
datestamp2020-01-13 14:16:24
lastmod2020-01-13 14:16:24
metadata_visibilityshow
titleChallenging the Nature and Culture of Ourselves: Managing the English Lake District as a Global Property
ispublishedpub
subjectsCultural_Landscapes
subjectsE07
subjectsE11
subjectsH06
subjectsH18
subjectsL02
full_text_statuspublic
pres_typespeech
keywordsCultural landscapes
keywordsnature culture integration
keywordsnatural landscapes
keywordsconservation of cultural landscapes
keywordsnatural heritage
keywordscultural heritage
keywordscultural significance
keywordsnational listing
keywordscriteria
keywordslocal communities
keywordsindigenous people
keywordsvalues
keywordsevaluation
keywordsmethodology
keywordspresentation
keywordsUSA
abstractPART 1. ADOPTING A LANDSCAPE APPROACH - Taking a Landscape Approach to Integrating Nature and Culture /// The American West is filled with beautiful, vast, environmentally diverse landscapes. While most Americans consider these to be natural landscapes, in reality, for many indigenous tribes, these are also cultural landscapes that hold their sacred places, points of origin, and traditional use and subsistence areas. These places are evaluated for their significance through the criteria established for the National Register of Historic Places, which is a Euro-American lens. However, this evaluation criterion does not mesh well with large indigenous landscapes that may or may not contain archaeological sites and/or features. Washington State has listed natural features on the National Register of Historic Places such as Snoqualmie Falls, Mt. St. Helens and Tamanowas Rock. However, with the current Administration’s emphasis on economic development and resource extraction the concept of landscapes as historic properties has come under intensified scrutiny. The potential listing of Chu’it’nu in Alaska, which is described as a 153 square mile living traditional cultural landscape, has the Administration questioning the validity of traditional cultural places as historic properties. This paper looks at the current state of cultural landscapes in the American West, explores enhanced methods of evaluating the significance of landscape level properties and approaches for protecting these types of resources.
date2019
date_typepublished
pagerange1-12
event_title2018 US/ICOMOS Symposium "Forward Together: A Culture-Nature Journey Towards More Effective Conservation in a Changing World"
event_locationSan Francisco, California
event_datesNovember 13-14, 2018
event_typeconference
refereedTRUE
official_urlhttps://usicomos.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Brooks-2019-US-ICOMOS-Proceedings.pdf
citation Brooks, Allyson (2019) Challenging the Nature and Culture of Ourselves: Managing the English Lake District as a Global Property. In: 2018 US/ICOMOS Symposium "Forward Together: A Culture-Nature Journey Towards More Effective Conservation in a Changing World", November 13-14, 2018, San Francisco, California. [Document issu d'une conférence ou d'un atelier]
document_urlhttps://openarchive.icomos.org/id/eprint/2294/1/Brooks-2019-US-ICOMOS-Proceedings.pdf