000002443 001__ 2443
000002443 005__ 20141118153432.0
000002443 04107 $$acze
000002443 046__ $$k2014-07-22
000002443 100__ $$aFernández, F. J. García.
000002443 24500 $$aCultural heritage and ordinary landscapes. Keys for their valorization and protection

000002443 24630 $$n4.$$pProceedings of the 4th International Conference on Heritage and Sustainable Development
000002443 260__ $$bGreen Lines Institute for Sustainable Development, Barcelos, Portugal
000002443 506__ $$arestricted
000002443 520__ $$2eng$$aLandscape is the place where cultural heritage is projected and developed par excellence. Furthermore, landscape is where interaction between the human being and the environment happens, in an economical, social and cultural sense. Landscape is a substantial part of human culture and its best reflection at the same time, both in a spatial and temporal scale, taking into account its cumulative nature. Until a few years ago, academic interests ranged from landscapes with high heritage values to environmental reserves, laying aside the major part of the territory in which human culture actually is performed. These landscapes, commonly known as intermediate, or ordinary, have started being relevant recently, as evidenced by the European Spatial Development Perspective (Potsdam, 1999) and the European Landscape Convention (Florence, 2000), where first guidelines for their valorization and protection were established. Ordinary landscapes, beyond containing elements than can be defined as heritage objectively (both material and intangible) and constituting themselves a synthesis of the relationships between local communities and their land (economical utilization, territorial organization, settlement patterns, mobility), are the really experienced landscapes, in other words, they are the places where people feel indentified and which contribute to maintain that identity. Their connection with culture exceeds formal and functional links, reaching symbolic and emotional spheres and taking part of the image that communities make of themselves and of their traditions projected in folklore, literature, art and other cultural expressions. The role of intermediate landscapes is especially evident in medium-sized Mediterranean cities, where connection between the historic core and the country is widely more visible, in a literal and figurative sense. Their valorization and future management is a challenge that must be faced both by politics spheres and research, conservation and diffusion actors of cultural heritage. To face this goal we will focus on Spain and, more precisely, in Andalusia as a case study.

000002443 540__ $$aText je chráněný podle autorského zákona č. 121/2000 Sb.
000002443 653__ $$a

000002443 7112_ $$a4th International Conference on Heritage and Sustainable Development$$cGuimarães (Pt)$$d2014-07-22 / 2014-07-25$$gHERITAGE 2014
000002443 720__ $$aFernández, F. J. García.$$iHidalgo, B. Del Espino
000002443 8560_ $$ffischerc@itam.cas.cz
000002443 8564_ $$s518695$$uhttps://invenio.itam.cas.cz/record/2443/files/v1page541.pdf$$y
             Original version of the author's contribution as presented on CD, , page 541.
            
000002443 962__ $$r2390
000002443 980__ $$aPAPER