Conceptualizing coastal and maritime cultural heritage through communities of meaning and participation

Kristen Ounanian *, Jan van Tatenhove, Carsten Jahn Hansen, Alyne E. Delaney, Hanne Bohnstedt (Member of author collaboration), Elaine Azzopardi (Member of author collaboration), Wesley Flannery (Member of author collaboration), Hilde Toonen (Member of author collaboration), Jasper O. Kenter (Member of author collaboration), Laura Ferguson (Member of author collaboration), Marloes Kraan (Member of author collaboration), Jordi Vegas Macias (Member of author collaboration), Machiel Lamers (Member of author collaboration), Cristina Pita (Member of author collaboration), Ana Margarida Ferreira da Silva (Member of author collaboration), Helena Albuquerque (Member of author collaboration), Fátima L. Alves, Dimitra Mylona (Member of author collaboration), Katia Frangoudes (Member of author collaboration)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

56 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Coastal zones are historically rich with unique land/seascapes, tangible artifacts, and intangible cultural heritage. Coastal and maritime cultural heritage (CMCH) contends with various constraining conditions of the sea and shore—both geophysical and socially constructed—which we delineate to identify risks and threats to its sustainable management. In response to calls for the greater incorporation of CMCH in the name of regional development and blue growth, we propose a conceptual framework as a means to identify risks and sustainably manage CMCH. We develop the concepts of communities of meaning and communities of participation to address how CMCH is created and contested and identify key considerations for its management. Building on theories of space, place, and identity, the paper constructs communities of meaning in order to elaborate the various opportunities but also tensions in preserving CH and cultivating reliant enterprises as a part of wider regional development strategies. Working from this understanding of place and identity in degrees of inclusivity/exclusivity, the paper draws upon literature on deliberative and participatory governance, framed as communities of participation. These two concepts provide a vocabulary for managers to address calls for the promotion of CMCH and determine appropriate management strategies and governance based on policy objectives and the will of potentially multiple communities of meaning.
Original languageEnglish
Article number105806
JournalOcean & Coastal Management
Volume212
ISSN1873-524X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Oct 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cultural heritage
  • Deliberative governance
  • Sense of place
  • Risk
  • Resilience
  • Coastal communities
  • PERICLES - Preserving and sustainably governing cultural heritage and landscapes in European coastal and maritime regions

    Lammers, M. (Project participant), Vegas Macias, J. (Project participant), Toonen, H. (Project participant), Kraan, M. (Project participant), Witteveen, L. (Project participant), van Tatenhove, J. (Project participant), Pita, C. (Project participant), Costa, C. (Project participant), Ferreira da Silva , A. M. (Project participant), P. Sousa, L. (Project participant), Martins, F. (Project participant), Tuyll van Serooskerken, P. (Project participant), Kenter, J. O. (Project participant), Taylor, S. (Project participant), Azzopardi, E. (Project participant), Knight, S. (Project participant), Fergusson, L. (Project participant), Flannery, W. (Project participant), Martino, S. (Project participant), Bodum, L. (Project participant), Ounanian , K. (Project participant), Jahn Hansen, C. (Project participant), Delaney, A. (Project participant), Mylona, D. (Project participant), Frangoudes, K. (Project participant), Roio, M. (Project participant), Saimre, T. (Project participant) & Karro, K. (Project participant)

    European Commission

    01/05/201831/10/2021

    Project: Research

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