Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage

The forty-year neglect of Famagusta’s heritage is the result of, among other things, a crevice in the overarching, internationally endorsed system that established, and now maintains, the universal framework for heritage assets. The unresolved political contestation in Cyprus has led not only to the...

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Main Author: Jaramillo, Carlos
Other Authors: Michael John Kirk Walsh
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:Chinese
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62613
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: Chinese
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-626132020-06-16T05:31:27Z Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage Jaramillo, Carlos Michael John Kirk Walsh School of Art, Design and Media DRNTU::Visual arts and music::General The forty-year neglect of Famagusta’s heritage is the result of, among other things, a crevice in the overarching, internationally endorsed system that established, and now maintains, the universal framework for heritage assets. The unresolved political contestation in Cyprus has led not only to the serious decay of Famagusta’s heritage assets, but also to the difficulty in any potential international effort to recognize, develop, conserve, and sustain its heritage. Crucial questions arise: How can Cultural Heritage in politically unstable and contested territories be maintained? More specifically, is there a way to produce a sustainable and efficient management and utilization strategy for Famagusta’s heritage? In this study I identify the gaps and caveats created by the ‘international system’ through an analysis and assessment of the concept of Cultural Heritage. That established, I propose two complementary approaches that offer an alternative way, a third way, for the future feasibility of Famagusta’s heritage sites. This proposal then falls into, and utilizes, two further interacting categories: a legal framework aimed at assessing Famagusta’s current condition within the context of Transitional Justice (to empower stakeholders to initiate proactive schemes to develop its heritage); and secondly a management strategy called Public-Private-Partnership (PPP), founded on an economic model, to meet the legal, echnical and conceptual requirements of the former. At the core of this study, I establish an alternative method, grounded on economic sustainability and Transitional Justice, which can serve as a way for the development of heritage assets in Famagusta as opposed to mere maintenance. This method, I maintain, rests on the hitherto untapped potential of empowering the private entrepreneurial sector in the development and conservation of Cultural Heritage and on the facilitation of the civil society throughout the process via a shift in the fundamental conceptualization of what Cultural Heritage is. Doctor of Philosophy (ADM) 2015-04-24T01:30:35Z 2015-04-24T01:30:35Z 2015 2015 Thesis Jaramillo, C. (2015). FAMAGUSTA, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62613 10.32657/10356/62613 zh 291 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language Chinese
topic DRNTU::Visual arts and music::General
spellingShingle DRNTU::Visual arts and music::General
Jaramillo, Carlos
Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage
description The forty-year neglect of Famagusta’s heritage is the result of, among other things, a crevice in the overarching, internationally endorsed system that established, and now maintains, the universal framework for heritage assets. The unresolved political contestation in Cyprus has led not only to the serious decay of Famagusta’s heritage assets, but also to the difficulty in any potential international effort to recognize, develop, conserve, and sustain its heritage. Crucial questions arise: How can Cultural Heritage in politically unstable and contested territories be maintained? More specifically, is there a way to produce a sustainable and efficient management and utilization strategy for Famagusta’s heritage? In this study I identify the gaps and caveats created by the ‘international system’ through an analysis and assessment of the concept of Cultural Heritage. That established, I propose two complementary approaches that offer an alternative way, a third way, for the future feasibility of Famagusta’s heritage sites. This proposal then falls into, and utilizes, two further interacting categories: a legal framework aimed at assessing Famagusta’s current condition within the context of Transitional Justice (to empower stakeholders to initiate proactive schemes to develop its heritage); and secondly a management strategy called Public-Private-Partnership (PPP), founded on an economic model, to meet the legal, echnical and conceptual requirements of the former. At the core of this study, I establish an alternative method, grounded on economic sustainability and Transitional Justice, which can serve as a way for the development of heritage assets in Famagusta as opposed to mere maintenance. This method, I maintain, rests on the hitherto untapped potential of empowering the private entrepreneurial sector in the development and conservation of Cultural Heritage and on the facilitation of the civil society throughout the process via a shift in the fundamental conceptualization of what Cultural Heritage is.
author2 Michael John Kirk Walsh
author_facet Michael John Kirk Walsh
Jaramillo, Carlos
format Theses and Dissertations
author Jaramillo, Carlos
author_sort Jaramillo, Carlos
title Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage
title_short Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage
title_full Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage
title_fullStr Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage
title_full_unstemmed Famagusta, Cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage
title_sort famagusta, cyprus : a third way in cultural heritage
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62613
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