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Manage No VC00000013 Country Republic of Korea Year 2020 Copyright ICHCAP
Description | ICHCAP, in collaboration with UNESCO Bangkok Office, held the Intangible Cultural Heritage Webinar Series from June to August 2020 with a total of four sessions. The 23 speakers from 18 countries met with the public to grapple with alternative practices and emergent modes of delivery in various areas such as heritage education in the universities, networking amongst educational institutions for ICH safeguarding, development of ICH curricula in times of crisis, as well as inter-regional cooperation for cross-cultural instruction and learning. While the entire world is struggling with the impacts of the COVID-19, the ICH sector also has been hit hard by numerous public health measures such as the cancellation of major festivals and events, temporary shutdown of museums, and places of cultural activities, as well as the indefinite halting of formal and informal heritage transmission activities. How can ICH safeguarding and transmission thrive in the midst of an unprecedented pandemic, and what role can higher education institutions play to ensure the viability of living heritage in our times? ICHCAP organized this webinar series to answer these urgent questions that we all face today. In the first session of the ICH Webinar Series on 18 June 2020, we looked into the state of ICH safeguarding in the region, attending to how it has been conditioned by the pandemic and how various activities have been reshaped in order for them to maintain their purpose while also considering the protocols observed to curb coronavirus transmission. [Presentation1] UNESCO Online Survey Results on Living Heritage Experience and the COVID-19 Pandemic by Juliette Hopkins, Living Heritage Entity, UNESCO [Presentation2] Reviving the Living Landscape System of Lai Chi Wo for Urban Sustainability by Anna Yau, Project Manager, The University of Hong Kong [Presentation3] Living Heritage Experiences in the Context of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore by Yeo Kirk Siang, Director, Heritage Research and Assessment, National Heritage Board of Singapore [Presentation4] Disaster as Opportunity by Christopher Ballard, Professor, The Australian National University, Australia [Presentation5] Te-er/Tengao: The Significance of the Compulsory ‘Rest’ Day of the Bontoks in Mt. Province in the Context of COVID-19 Pandemic by Eric Zerrudo, Professor, University of Santo Tomas University, Philippines |
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VI00000230
Living Heritage Experiences in the Context of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore
In Singapore, there had been strict restrictions on social, cultural, business activites during the "Circuit Breaker" period from April to June 2020. Yeo Kirk Siang shares the ICH activies during "Circuit Breaker" period and showed the role of ICH in COVID 19 pandemic. YEO KIRK SIANG is currently the Director of the Heritage Research and Assessment Division (HRA) at the National Heritage Board (NHB) of Singapore. The division focuses on the research, documentation, and commemoration of Singapore’s tangible heritage and the safeguarding of intangible cultural heritage, in partnership with non-government organisations and public agencies. He is also the coordinator for the “Our SG Heritage Plan”, which outlines the broad strategies for Singapore’s heritage sector from 2018 to 2022.
16:38
Republic of Korea 2020 -
VI00000228
UNESCO Online Survey Results on Living Heritage Experience and the COVID 19 Pandemic
Juliette Hopkins introduces results of a survey that launched to share living heritage experience. It was an online survey how their living heritage has been affected by the pandemic, what role their living heritage has been playing and what safeguarding initiatives have been put in place. Its aim was to create accessible platform to share information, exchange experiences, learn from each other and also to draw inspiration. JULIETTE HOPKINS is an Associate Programme Specialist in the Secretariat for UNESCO’s 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage. She currently works in the Capacity Building and Heritage Policy Unit, where she is the focal point for issues relating to intangible cultural heritage and emergencies. Before joining UNESCO in 2016, she worked as an anthropologist with indigenous communities in Australia on heritage management and community development projects. She also has professional experience as a journalist in Cambodia and France. Her academic background is in social and medical anthropology with degrees from The University of Sydney and University of Oxford.
17:09
Republic of Korea 2020 -
VI00000229
Reviving the Living Landscape System of Lai Chi Wo for Urban Sustainability
Anna Yau talks about the roles of sustainability program for reviving landscape and community. This project is initiated by a local community named Lai Chi Wo which has been depopulated in the 1970s. It facilitated Lai Chi Wo to revitalize its living Socio-Economical and Associative Landscape with living heritage approach. ANNA W Y YAU is a Project Manager for HSBC Rural Sustainability Programme at the university of Hong Kong. He has BA (Japanese Studies), MA (Cultural Management) from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and PgDip in Cultural Heritage Management from the University of Hong Kong. She is an accredited heritage conservationist (HKICON), Project Management Professional (PMI), as well as a member of the Documentation and Conservation of Buildings, Sites and Neighbourhoods of the Modern Movement (Docomomo) Hong Kong Chapter.
14:14
Republic of Korea 2020 -
VI00000231
Disaster as Opportunity
While acknowledging the terrible impacts of disasters and epidemics on lives, livelihoods, property and landscapes, they are also important moments or watersheds in the transmission of living heritage. Modelling how transmission operates, and understanding the importance of the three-way relationship between communities, materials and knowledge, or “people, place and story”, allows us to appreciate how living heritage can mediate and mitigate the effects of disasters and epidemics. Christopher Ballard, Professor of The Australian National University reflects on the connection between ICH and Disasters. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR CHRISTOPHER BALLARD is a historian but trained as an archaeologist and anthropologist. He has thirty years of experience as a researcher in Melanesia (PNG, Vanuatu, West Papua and New Caledonia). His research interests revolve around indigenous Melanesian historicities - their transformation through crosscultural encounters; their representation through various media, including film and fiction; and their articulation with contemporary challenges such as land reform, large natural resource projects, and cultural heritage management planning. Currently, he is a Senior Fellow at the School of Culture, History & Language of The Australian National University.
14:30
Republic of Korea 2020