

Proceedings of the Australia ICOMOS National Conference 2001, edited by David Jones, pp. In 20th Century Heritage - Our Recent Cultural Legacy. Logan, William S., 2002, Globalizing Heritage: World Heritage as a Manifestation of Modernism and Challenges from the Periphery. Lacoste, Michel Conil, 1994, The Story of a Grand Design: UNESCO 1946-1993. 19.įranck, Thomas M., 2001, Are Human Rights Universal? Foreign Affairs 80(1): 191-204. , 2006b, Nudity Part of Culture, says Feminist. Martinus Nijhoff, Dordrecht.įorbes, Mark, 2006a, Flesh Gets the Flick in Indonesian Porn War. In Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: A Textbook, edited by Asbjørn Eide, Catarina Krause, and Allan Rosas, pp. Martinus Nijhoff, Dordrecht.Įide, Asbjørn, and Allan Rosas, 2001, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: A Universal Challenge. (8 January 2007).Įide, Asbjørn, 1995, Cultural Rights as Individual Human Rights. United Nations Background Note, 49th Commonwealth Parliamentary Association Conference, 4-12 October 2003, Bangladesh. Australian Geographical Studies 42: 152-174.Īyton-Shenker, Diana, 2003, The Challenge of Human Rights and Cultural Diversity.
#Nyc pandoras box series#
Human Rights Dialogue: An International Forum for Debating Human Rights, series 2(12): 2-3.Īplin, Graeme, 2004, Kakadu National Park World Heritage Site: Deconstructing the Debate, 1997-2003. (13 December 2005).Īlbro, Robert, and Joanne, Bauer, 2005, Introduction. (13 December 2005).Īlbro, Robert, 2005, Making Cultural Policy and Confounding Cultural Diversity. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.Īcademy of European Law, 2005, Cultural Rights as Human Rights. These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors.

It is an expansion that many heritage professionals, including some in UNESCO itself, see as opening up a Pandora’s box of difficulties, confusions, and complexities. Article 2 of the Convention describes intangible cultural heritage as “practices, representations, expressions, knowledge, skills” – in other words, heritage that is embodied in people rather than in inanimate objects. The Convention signaled the expansion of the global system of heritage protection from the tangible (that is, heritage places and artifacts) to the intangible.

This meant that the Convention, which had been approved by UNESCO’s General Conference in 2003, entered into force on 20 April 2006 (as it required 30 signatories to become operational). On 20 January 2006, Romania became the 30th State Party to sign UNESCO’s Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Heritage.
