Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to analyse the key Faro notions of “heritage community” and “democratic participation” as defined in the Faro Convention, and how they challenge core notions of authority and expertise in the discipline and professional practice of cultural heritage.Design/methodology/approachThis paper examines notions of “heritage community” and “democratic participation” as they are framed in the Faro Convention, and it briefly introduces two cases (Finland and Marseille) to explore their application. It then focusses on the implications of these two notions for heritage administration (expertise) in terms of citizen agency, co-creation of knowledge and forms of decision-making processes.FindingsThe Faro Convention favours an innovative approach to social, politic and economic problems using cultural heritage. To accomplish this, it empowers citizens as actors in developing heritage-based approaches. This model transforms heritage into a means for achieving socioeconomic goals and attributes to the public the ability to undertake heritage initiatives, leaving the administration and expert bodies as mediators in this process. To bring about this shift, Faro institutes the notion of “heritage communities” and fosters participative governance. However, how heritage communities practise participation may follow different paths and result in different experiences due to local and national political circumstances.Originality/valueThe Faro Convention opens up a window by framing cultural heritage within the realm of social and democratic instrumentality, above and beyond the heritage per se. But it also poses some questions regarding the rationale of heritage management (authority in governability), at least as understood traditionally under official heritage management discourses.

Highlights

  • Two decades ago, the Council of Europe launched the Framework Convention on the Value of Cultural eri Heritage for Society (2005; hereinafter, the Faro Convention, or Faro)

  • How we could include in heritage management processes informal groups of citizens that would like to operate on occasion as a heritage community, or should we limit participation, for the sake of efficiency, to heritage voluntary associations that have long established links with local heritage, or to cooperatives with well-established interests on the eri sustainable development of a territory

  • The Faro Convention is an important statement within the realm of European heritage policy-making in that it approaches cultural heritage from a people-centred perspective

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Summary

Laia COLOMER

Published in: Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development. “Exploring participatory heritage governance after the EU Faro. Convention”, Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development.

Terms of use
Introduction
Introducing Faro
Participation and heritage governance nt
Finland tai
Insights and limitations of the Faro way an
Conclusions e tag

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