将遗产和环境实践结合起来

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
H. Ross, S. Canning, R. Sharp, C. Baldwin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

澳大利亚和奥特罗瓦-新西兰身份的一个主要部分是由我们的精神和创造力、我们的遗产和我们独特的生活景观组成的。遗产是我们过去留下的遗产,是我们今天生活中活生生的组成部分,是我们传给后代的故事和地方。这两个国家的环境都是文化景观,由我们的第一民族在非常长的时期内塑造并充满了意义,他们的文化和身份反过来反映了他们对景观的归属和与景观的共存。因此,关于加强遗产与环境之间关系的专刊应运而生。本期关于文物在环境管理中的作用的特刊是由澳大利亚环境研究所和新西兰文物特别利益组(heritage SIS)的成员建议并担任嘉宾编辑的。遗产SIS是在2016年11月2日获得EIANZ董事会批准后成立的。其目的是发展和推广有关遗产的知识,使其成为环境实践的重要组成部分,并通过EIANZ认证环境从业者计划提高遗产从业者的专业地位和认可度。遗产SIS为遗产专业人士提供了一种与研究所接触的方式,并为研究所提供了一种与遗产专业人士接触和互动的方式,这些专业人士通常在非常紧密的角色、企业或机构中工作,有时在同一地点工作。环境专业人员经常被要求在他们的舒适区之外工作,并聘请文物专业人员执行某些任务。因此,SIS提供了一个向EIANZ成员介绍遗产从业者及其工作的机会,这些成员可能会从对遗产的更详细了解以及从业者如何跨多个学科和司法管辖区运作中受益。与此同时,对于遗产从业者来说,SIS提供了一种极好的方式来建立网络,并将自己嵌入到一个相关的专业团体中。作为这个联盟的延伸,通过SIS和EIANZ专家环境咨询委员会的工作,现在有一个遗产从业者的认证环境从业者专业。这为专业人士提供了获得认证的机会,这在协会会员中具有地位,并提高了政府和雇主的意识和信誉。这期杂志的特刊旨在使更多的环境管理协会成员接触到遗产问题,并在环境管理专业中更广泛地提高遗产管理的知名度。它特别反映了遗产是什么,遗产的多种用途,澳大利亚和新西兰的政策和实践是否有效地保护了遗产,以及非物质遗产和遗产景观的政策如何有效。它还提供了将遗产与其他环境实践相结合的成功合作项目的案例研究,并考虑加强土著居民在商业考古中的参与和合作。今年的封面照片由丹·赫顿(Dan Hutton)拍摄,颂扬了遗产与环境的相互作用。这张照片显示了帕特森的诅咒(金雀花),突出了新南威尔士州波拉克泻湖巴拉帕巴拉帕人的土著遗址。这些土堆遗址是数千年来人们每年在同一个地方重复居住的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Aligning heritage and environmental practice
A major part of Australian and Aotearoa-New Zealand identity is made up of our spirit and ingenuity, our heritage places, and our unique living landscapes. Heritage is a legacy from our past, a living, integral part of life today, and the stories and places we pass on to future generations. Both countries’ environments are cultural landscapes, shaped and imbued with meaning over exceptionally long periods by our First Nations peoples, whose cultures and identities in turn reflect their belonging to and co-existence with landscapes. Thus, a special issue on strengthening relationships between heritage and environment is timely. This special issue on the role of heritage in environmental management was suggested and guest-edited by members of the Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand’s Heritage Special Interest Section (Heritage SIS). The Heritage SIS was established following endorsement from the EIANZ Board on the 2nd of November 2016. Its purpose is to develop and promote knowledge about heritage as an essential element of environmental practice, and to advance the professional standing and recognition of heritage practitioners through the EIANZ Certified Environmental Practitioner Scheme. The Heritage SIS provides heritage professionals with a means to engage with the Institute, and for the Institute to have a way of embracing and interacting with heritage professionals who often work in very closely aligned roles, businesses or institutions, and sometimes the same locations. Environmental professionals are often required to work outside their comfort zones and engage heritage professionals to perform certain tasks. The SIS thus provides an opportunity to present heritage practitioners and their work to the EIANZ members who might benefit from more detailed understanding about heritage and how its practitioners operate across multiple disciplines and jurisdictions. Meanwhile for heritage practitioners, the SIS offers an excellent way to network and embed themselves into a cognate professional body. As an extension of this alliance, through the work of the SIS and EIANZ Specialist Environmental Advisory Committees there is now a Certified Environmental Practitioner specialisation for heritage practitioners. This provides an opportunity for professionals to gain certification, which carries status within the institute membership, as well as increasing awareness and credibility with government and employers. This special issue of the journal supports the aims of exposingmore of the EIANZmembership to heritage matters, and raising the profile of heritage management more generally within the environmental management profession. It reflects particularly on what heritage is, the multiple uses for heritage, whether policy and practice in Australia and New Zealand is protecting heritage effectively, and how effective policy for intangible heritage and heritage landscapes could look. It also offers case studies of successful collaborative projects where heritage has been integrated with other environmental practice, and considers strengthening Aboriginal participation and collaboration in commercial archaeology. This year’s cover photo, by Dan Hutton, celebrates the interactions of heritage and environment. The image shows Paterson’s curse (Echium plantagineum) highlighting heritage Aboriginal mound sites of the Barapa Barapa people at Pollack lagoon, New South Wales. These mound sites result from repeated annual residence in the same place for thousands of years.
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