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Research Article

The UNESCO imprimatur: creating global (in)significance

Pages 845-856 | Received 09 Mar 2020, Accepted 21 Mar 2020, Published online: 07 Apr 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Developed over more than half a century to respond to specific international situations, UNESCO’s cultural heritage conventions share a common purpose, namely to identify and protect cultural heritage. This paper examines how five of these conventions define heritage value and thereby establish the threshold for international recognition. Included in the analysis are the UNESCO conventions on protecting cultural property during armed conflict, illicit trafficking of cultural property, world heritage, underwater cultural heritage and intangible cultural heritage. Reflecting the preoccupations and theoretical perspectives of its era, each convention proposes a different kind of heritage value, ranging from outstanding universal value to representative value to no specific value. Implementation of these cultural conventions bestows UNESCO’s imprimatur and international approval for what to remember and what to forget. The paper demonstrates that inadvertently the UNESCO cultural heritage conventions create insignificance by leaving out aspects and dimensions. It asks whether harmonising the various instruments, at least in their implementation, would create synergies for a more holistic range of values.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Christina Cameron

Christina Cameron was responsible for the Canada Research Chair on Built Heritage from 2005 to 2019 where she led a research programme on heritage conservation in the School of Architecture at the Université de Montréal. Before that, for more than 35 years she held leadership positions in the heritage field at Parks Canada. As Director General of National Historic Sites, she provided national direction for Canada’s historic places, focusing on heritage conservation and education programmes. She has written extensively since the 1970s on Canadian architecture, heritage management and World Heritage issues. She has been actively involved in UNESCO’s World Heritage as Head of the Canadian delegation (1990–2008) and as Chairperson (1990, 2008).

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