HERITAGE SENSITIVE CONSERVATION POLICIES
Just Added

HERITAGE SENSITIVE CONSERVATION POLICIES

By Alessandra Manzini

The symposium offers a space to discuss a state-of-the-art overview of heritage-sensitive conservation policies in Southern Asia

Date and time

Location

Online

Lineup

Agenda

12:00 PM - 1:20 PM

Welcome


12.00-13.00 Guidance for the Delphi survey / Registration and welcome lunch. 13.00-13.2...

1:20 PM - 1:40 PM

KEYNOTE SPEECH

Shonil Bhagwat

1:40 PM - 3:30 AM (+1 day)

PANEL 1


13.40-14.00 Panel 1 M.K.S. Pasha: Bridging Heritage and Biodiversity: Protected, Conserved, and Heritage Areas in Asia’s Sacred Landscapes 14.00-14.20 Prasert Trakansuphakorn (title TBC) 14.20-14.4...

3:30 AM - 4:45 PM

PANEL 2


15.30-15.50 Panel 2 Nining Liswanti: Integrating Local Knowledge and Sacred Forests for Effective Forest Conservation: Lessons from Maluku Island 15.50-16.10 Sandy Leo: The Indigenous Peoples and Na...

5:00 PM

PANEL 3


17.00-17.20 Ashley Massey Marks: Shinto shrine forests and happiness in Japan 17.20-17.40 Pao Vue: In Search of Forest Spirits in Lao PDR 17.40-18.00 David Hecht: Relational Environmental ...

6:30 PM - 7:30 PM

Lessons learned and prospects for co-authored position paper

Good to know

Highlights

  • 6 hours
  • Online

About this event

Community • Heritage

The symposium offers a space to discuss a state-of-the-art overview of heritage-sensitive policies related to sacred forests and spiritual landscapes, with a focus on forest conservation practices based on Indigenous ecological ways of knowing and relating to forests. The seminar will explore the concept of indigeneity as a decolonial relational approach to forest dwellers that overcomes the rigid, top-down definition of who are Indigenous People and Local Communities (IPLCs). The seminar highlights recent advancements in interdisciplinary research, decolonial methodologies, political ecology analysis and ethical approaches to the conservation of sacred natural sites and spiritual landscapes. By gathering scholars working across the Indo-Burma and South Asia regions, open to different disciplines, the seminar will analyze the policy frameworks as they relate to forest conservation in this region. This will set the stage for reflection on the current mainstream practices towards IPLCs through a political ecology lens. The seminar aims to foster dialogue, share best practice, and lay the groundwork for future collaborative research.

Organiser: Dr Alessandra Manzini, PLACES Lab, CY Cergy Paris University

Keynote speaker: Prof. Shonil Bhagwat
Host: Chiang Mai University – Dr Marco J Haenssgen


In collaboration with: PLACES Lab, CY Cergy Paris University directed by Anne Hertzog

In the context of: SPIRAL project, funded by the EUTOPIA SIF alliance, ideated and curated by Alessandra Manzini (CY Cergy Paris Université) and the BA Heritage project coordinated by Dr. Marco Haenssgen funded by the British Academy (ref. IOCRG\101013). Promoted by Planetary Well Being directed by Carla Lancelotti




Organized by

Alessandra Manzini

Followers

--

Events

--

Hosting

--

Free
Nov 4 · 10:00 PM PST