Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change

Changing weather patterns, increasing frequency and intensity of natural hazards, and rising sea levels associated with global climate change have the potential to threaten cultural heritage sites worldwide. This is especially the case for maritime heritage sites located in the low-lying coastal and...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Daly, Patrick, Feener, R. Michael, Ishikawa, Noboru, Mujah, Ibrahim, Irawani, Maida, Hegyi, Alexandru, Baranyai, Krisztina, Majewski, Jedrzej, Horton, Benjamin
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164844
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-164844
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1648442023-02-25T15:31:08Z Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change Daly, Patrick Feener, R. Michael Ishikawa, Noboru Mujah, Ibrahim Irawani, Maida Hegyi, Alexandru Baranyai, Krisztina Majewski, Jedrzej Horton, Benjamin Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Engineering::Environmental engineering Climate Change Cultural Heritage Changing weather patterns, increasing frequency and intensity of natural hazards, and rising sea levels associated with global climate change have the potential to threaten cultural heritage sites worldwide. This is especially the case for maritime heritage sites located in the low-lying coastal and delta regions of Asia. Maritime heritage can reflect both highly localized cultural products based on the coupling of people and maritime environments and the historic footprints of complex maritime networks that connect people, ideas, and material over vast distances, creating unique cultural spheres. Furthermore, maritime heritage sites potentially serve as or contain records of how past societies have been impacted by and adapted to past environmental stress. Therefore, their degradation threatens local/regional/global cultural patrimony as well as evidence of human resilience and fragility in the face of environmental change. This makes a strong case for urgent preservation. However, the possible damage caused by climate change and the scale of vulnerable maritime heritage pose seemingly insurmountable challenges. In this paper, we present the ways in which maritime heritage sites across Asia are vulnerable to environmental stresses, such as changing sea levels, coastal erosion, flooding, and storm surges. Our objective is to draw upon our experience documenting endangered cultural heritage across South and Southeast Asia to illustrate that there are unique conceptual and practical characteristics of maritime heritage that complicate effective management and conservation efforts on the scale required to prevent massive loss by climate change. We conclude by stressing the need to reconceptualize debates about the custody and stewardship of maritime heritage and the urgency of employing a wide range of innovative preservation solutions to ensure maritime patrimony is not lost to the rising tides. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This Maldives Heritage Survey and the Maritime Asia Heritage Survey were funded by Arcadia Fund, grant number 3984. J. M., and B. H. (Earth Observatory of Singapore staff) funded by the Ministry of Education Academic Research Find MOE2019-T3-1-004, the National Research Foundation Singapore and the Singapore Ministry of Education under the Research Centres of Excellence initiative. 2023-02-20T04:26:21Z 2023-02-20T04:26:21Z 2022 Journal Article Daly, P., Feener, R. M., Ishikawa, N., Mujah, I., Irawani, M., Hegyi, A., Baranyai, K., Majewski, J. & Horton, B. (2022). Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change. Climate, 10(6), 10060079-. https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cli10060079 2225-1154 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164844 10.3390/cli10060079 2-s2.0-85131549483 6 10 10060079 en MOE 2019-T3-1-004 Climate © 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
Climate Change
Cultural Heritage
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Climate Change
Cultural Heritage
Daly, Patrick
Feener, R. Michael
Ishikawa, Noboru
Mujah, Ibrahim
Irawani, Maida
Hegyi, Alexandru
Baranyai, Krisztina
Majewski, Jedrzej
Horton, Benjamin
Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change
description Changing weather patterns, increasing frequency and intensity of natural hazards, and rising sea levels associated with global climate change have the potential to threaten cultural heritage sites worldwide. This is especially the case for maritime heritage sites located in the low-lying coastal and delta regions of Asia. Maritime heritage can reflect both highly localized cultural products based on the coupling of people and maritime environments and the historic footprints of complex maritime networks that connect people, ideas, and material over vast distances, creating unique cultural spheres. Furthermore, maritime heritage sites potentially serve as or contain records of how past societies have been impacted by and adapted to past environmental stress. Therefore, their degradation threatens local/regional/global cultural patrimony as well as evidence of human resilience and fragility in the face of environmental change. This makes a strong case for urgent preservation. However, the possible damage caused by climate change and the scale of vulnerable maritime heritage pose seemingly insurmountable challenges. In this paper, we present the ways in which maritime heritage sites across Asia are vulnerable to environmental stresses, such as changing sea levels, coastal erosion, flooding, and storm surges. Our objective is to draw upon our experience documenting endangered cultural heritage across South and Southeast Asia to illustrate that there are unique conceptual and practical characteristics of maritime heritage that complicate effective management and conservation efforts on the scale required to prevent massive loss by climate change. We conclude by stressing the need to reconceptualize debates about the custody and stewardship of maritime heritage and the urgency of employing a wide range of innovative preservation solutions to ensure maritime patrimony is not lost to the rising tides.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Daly, Patrick
Feener, R. Michael
Ishikawa, Noboru
Mujah, Ibrahim
Irawani, Maida
Hegyi, Alexandru
Baranyai, Krisztina
Majewski, Jedrzej
Horton, Benjamin
format Article
author Daly, Patrick
Feener, R. Michael
Ishikawa, Noboru
Mujah, Ibrahim
Irawani, Maida
Hegyi, Alexandru
Baranyai, Krisztina
Majewski, Jedrzej
Horton, Benjamin
author_sort Daly, Patrick
title Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change
title_short Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change
title_full Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change
title_fullStr Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change
title_full_unstemmed Challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in Asia in the face of climate change
title_sort challenges of managing maritime cultural heritage in asia in the face of climate change
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164844
_version_ 1759058821714542592