Materials
12
ICH Materials 10,028
Publications(Book)
(215)-
Intangible Cultural Heritage of Timor-Leste
This brochure introduces 14 intangible cultural heritage elements of Timor-Leste. \n\nThe publication is a result of a cooperative project between the Timor-Leste National Commission for UNESCO and ICHCAP.
Timor 2022 -
ICH Courier Vol.54 ICH, Healing the Community
Resilience makes communities stronger and more sustainable. This volume’s cover stories are about how ICH safeguarding activities in Nepal, India, and Thailand can restore communities. Each story demonstrates the potential power of ICH.
South Korea 2023 -
Bringing Living Heritage to the Classroom in Asia-Pacific
Promote Transformative Education Through Integrating Living Heritage in Schools\n\nIntegrating living heritage in school teaching and learning can enhance education quality, enliven the experiences of students and teachers, and contribute to keeping this heritage alive for current and future generations. In addition, as the ongoing pandemic Covid-19 has also demonstrated, living heritage can play an important role in ensuring the well-being and resilience of the communities.\nUNESCO encourages countries to safeguard living heritage through formal and non-formal education. From the end of 2019 to early 2022, UNESCO has been working with partners to implement a pilot project “Teaching and Learning with Living Heritage in Schools” in six countries in Asia and the Pacific - including Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, Republic of Korea and Thailand. Over 1900 students from 21 schools had the opportunity to participate in these innovative classes. Throughout the process, 86 teachers, with more than two thirds being women, have developed and tested 101 lesson plans and activities.\nThis Resource Kit provides step-by-step guidance and key resources on why and how to integrate living heritage in lessons and extracurricular activities in schools. \nWhoever you are – policy-maker, school director, teacher, student, parent, heritage practitioner – you have a vital role to play in this process.
Kyrgyzstan,Cambodia,South Korea,Kazakhstan,Nepal,Thailand 2023 -
Bringing Living Heritage to the Classroom in Asia-Pacific (Khmer)
Promote Transformative Education Through Integrating Living Heritage in Schools\n\nIntegrating living heritage in school teaching and learning can enhance education quality, enliven the experiences of students and teachers, and contribute to keeping this heritage alive for current and future generations. In addition, as the ongoing pandemic Covid-19 has also demonstrated, living heritage can play an important role in ensuring the well-being and resilience of the communities.\nUNESCO encourages countries to safeguard living heritage through formal and non-formal education. From the end of 2019 to early 2022, UNESCO has been working with partners to implement a pilot project “Teaching and Learning with Living Heritage in Schools” in six countries in Asia and the Pacific - including Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, Republic of Korea and Thailand. Over 1900 students from 21 schools had the opportunity to participate in these innovative classes. Throughout the process, 86 teachers, with more than two thirds being women, have developed and tested 101 lesson plans and activities.\nThis Resource Kit provides step-by-step guidance and key resources on why and how to integrate living heritage in lessons and extracurricular activities in schools.\nWhoever you are – policy-maker, school director, teacher, student, parent, heritage practitioner – you have a vital role to play in this process.
Kyrgyzstan,Cambodia,South Korea,Kazakhstan,Nepal,Thailand 2023 -
Good Practices on Sustainable Development through Traditional Crafts
This book contains ten good practices from five Asia-Pacific countries (Nepal, Vietnam, Uzbekistan, India, and Kyrgyzstan) selected through an international contest in 2022. Through this publication, the authors highlight the status of traditional crafts in their respective countries and showcase how traditional crafts contribute to sustainable development within communities, focusing on policies, programs, and activities such as marketing, consulting, and capacity development.\n\nPreviously overshadowed by mass-produced crafts in the market, traditional crafts have gained new importance today in the context of sustainable development, including ecosystem conservation, climate change, job creation, and economic growth. They are now acknowledged as a promising foundation, forming the basis of a new economic model based on well-being and contentment, extending beyond the realms of community sustenance and economic expansion.\n\nICHCAP aims to raise awareness of the significance of traditional crafts in this context and strengthen the network of craft experts and institutions. Moreover, the publication seeks to explore ways in which traditional crafts can be passed down in a modernized manner. Furthermore, the good practices featured in this publication can be linked to various programs of domestic and international craft-related institutions, aiming to enhance awareness of traditional crafts.
Indonesia,Kyrgyzstan,Nepal,Uzbekistan,Viet Nam 2023 -
ICH Courier Vol.57 ICH, and science and technology
In a changing era, protecting and recording ICH from natural and human influences has become a significant task. Digital recording of ICH has made it possible to preserve records for a long time, and access to records for the general population has also been greatly improved by making such records and information available online. In this issue, we’ll look at ICH in the Asia-Pacific region that utilizes science and technology to help ensure its continued viability.
South Korea 2023 -
ICH Courier Vol.56 From ICH to Creative Industries
The creative industries can assist in the economic development of a country while expanding opportunities to enjoy culture and arts for everyone. ICH helps these creative industries to grow, because it adds novelty and imagination. Let us take a look at various examples of how ICH and creative industries work in tandem in the Asia-Pacific region.
South Korea 2023 -
Bringing Living Heritage to the Classroom in Asia-Pacific (Thai)
Promote Transformative Education Through Integrating Living Heritage in Schools\n\nIntegrating living heritage in school teaching and learning can enhance education quality, enliven the experiences of students and teachers, and contribute to keeping this heritage alive for current and future generations. In addition, as the ongoing pandemic Covid-19 has also demonstrated, living heritage can play an important role in ensuring the well-being and resilience of the communities.\nUNESCO encourages countries to safeguard living heritage through formal and non-formal education. From the end of 2019 to early 2022, UNESCO has been working with partners to implement a pilot project “Teaching and Learning with Living Heritage in Schools” in six countries in Asia and the Pacific - including Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, Republic of Korea and Thailand. Over 1900 students from 21 schools had the opportunity to participate in these innovative classes. Throughout the process, 86 teachers, with more than two thirds being women, have developed and tested 101 lesson plans and activities.\nThis Resource Kit provides step-by-step guidance and key resources on why and how to integrate living heritage in lessons and extracurricular activities in schools.\nWhoever you are – policy-maker, school director, teacher, student, parent, heritage practitioner – you have a vital role to play in this process.
Kyrgyzstan,Cambodia,South Korea,Kazakhstan,Nepal,Thailand 2023 -
2023 Living Heritage Series: STORYTELLING
ICHCAP published the book Living Heritage Series, STORYTELLING: Sharing Experiences from the Field in collaboration with the ICHNGO Forum’s #HeritageAlive.\n\nThe main purpose of the publication is to reflect NGOs’ and experts’ experiences in the field while working on projects related to storytelling. The articles reflected the achievements in safeguarding ICH through specific projects or activities.
South Korea 2023 -
키르기즈 사람들
유네스코아태무형유산센터는 국립아시아문화전당과 협력하여 키르기스스탄의 문화와 역사를 소개하는 도서 <키르기즈 사람들>을 발간했다. 키르기즈 민족의 다채로운 문화를 총망라한 최초의 국문 단행본인 이 도서는 키르기스스탄의 전 교육과학부 장관인 카니벡 이마날리예프(Kanybek Imanaliev)가 저술한 를 한국어로 번역한 책이다.\n\n오늘날 중앙아시아의 산악지역에 살고 있는 키르기즈 민족은 말과 유목 그리고 서사시와 관련된 문화유산을 중요시한다. 이 책을 통해 키르기즈 사람들의 삶과 예술 속에 문화유산이 어떤 의미를 갖는지 살펴볼 수 있다.\n
Kyrgyzstan 2023 -
ICH Courier Vol.55 ICH in Education: Key to the Future
When I think about what education is, I think of a student from Bhutan in the film Lunana: A Yak in The Classroom, who said, “Teacher touches the future.” This volume will introduce education with and through ICH, which can be the cornerstone of a sustainable future. Let’s take a look at stories from the Asia-Pacific region.
South Korea 2023 -
Bringing Living Heritage to the Classroom in Asia-Pacific (Nepali)
Promote Transformative Education Through Integrating Living Heritage in Schools\n\nIntegrating living heritage in school teaching and learning can enhance education quality, enliven the experiences of students and teachers, and contribute to keeping this heritage alive for current and future generations. In addition, as the ongoing pandemic Covid-19 has also demonstrated, living heritage can play an important role in ensuring the well-being and resilience of the communities.\nUNESCO encourages countries to safeguard living heritage through formal and non-formal education. From the end of 2019 to early 2022, UNESCO has been working with partners to implement a pilot project “Teaching and Learning with Living Heritage in Schools” in six countries in Asia and the Pacific - including Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, Republic of Korea and Thailand. Over 1900 students from 21 schools had the opportunity to participate in these innovative classes. Throughout the process, 86 teachers, with more than two thirds being women, have developed and tested 101 lesson plans and activities.\nThis Resource Kit provides step-by-step guidance and key resources on why and how to integrate living heritage in lessons and extracurricular activities in schools. \nWhoever you are – policy-maker, school director, teacher, student, parent, heritage practitioner – you have a vital role to play in this process.
Kyrgyzstan,Cambodia,South Korea,Kazakhstan,Nepal,Thailand 2023