Rural Community Engagement for Heritage Conservation and Adaptive Renewal

G. Sutter, L. O'Malley, Tobias Sperlich
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Abstract

Systems thinking can shed light on important relationships and conditions that affect community engagement activities. While robust tools like the community capitals framework and the sustainable livelihoods approach provide valuable context for engagement projects, additional insights can stem from models that describe the ebb and flow of different types of capital. This paper uses a well-studied ecosystem model called adaptive renewal (AR) to contextualize heritage-related challenges and opportunities in four rural communities on the Canadian prairies. Based on a reflective case-study analysis, we applied the AR model to focus group and semistructured interview data collected as part of a Museums Association of Saskatchewan (MAS) project aimed at using local heritage assets to build sociocultural and environmental capacity and attract investment. The MAS project identified four themes that could be addressed through training and policy changes, including concerns about funding, limited human resources, a lack of public services, and a desire to preserve and build on memories. By mapping each community onto the AR model, we uncovered additional insights about community resilience and other heritage-related challenges and opportunities. The AR model is likely to be a valuable tool for planning or assessing community engagement projects because it reflects the dynamic nature of socioeconomic and cultural relationships that affect community dynamics and local well-being.
乡村社区参与文物保育及适应性更新
系统思维可以揭示影响社区参与活动的重要关系和条件。虽然社区资本框架和可持续生计方法等强有力的工具为参与项目提供了宝贵的背景,但描述不同类型资本兴衰的模型可以提供更多的见解。本文使用一个经过充分研究的生态系统模型,称为适应性更新(AR),将加拿大大草原上四个农村社区与遗产相关的挑战和机遇置于背景中。基于反思性案例分析,我们将AR模型应用于焦点小组和半结构访谈数据,这些数据是萨斯喀彻温省博物馆协会(MAS)项目的一部分,该项目旨在利用当地遗产资产建立社会文化和环境能力并吸引投资。MAS项目确定了四个可以通过培训和政策变化来解决的主题,包括对资金的担忧、人力资源有限、缺乏公共服务以及保存和建立记忆的愿望。通过将每个社区映射到AR模型中,我们发现了关于社区复原力和其他与遗产相关的挑战和机遇的更多见解。AR模型可能是规划或评估社区参与项目的宝贵工具,因为它反映了影响社区动态和当地福祉的社会经济和文化关系的动态性质。
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