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Resilience of Heritage in Resilient Cities

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Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

The two and half days international workshop was conceived as multidisciplinary event. It developed one of the key concepts "resilience" of our project which observes adaptation processes in historical perspective in the context of accelerating urbanisation; focuses on the new important phenomenon of cultural heritage; analyses the role of experts in managing our society in various regions.

All these research strands are reflected, to a varying extent and in different ways, in the context of changing but at the same time stable and resilient city, by means of a creative implementation of innovations and a strategic use of tangible and intangible cultural heritage. In approach to cultural heritage we are inspired by Graham and Howard (2008), understanding it as a result of negotiation through which some past is selected for protection and representation for the present and to leave message for the future.

We focus mainly, though not exclusively, on European towns and cities for which the self-identification, historicity, stability of form, and a set of urban functions are more important criteria of urbanity than the number of inhabitants. Resilience is a broad term (e.g.

Bollig 2014) pointing to the capacity of the system to adapt to various external pressures and disturbances. In relation to cities it is most often used when the capacity of cities to resist or recover from natural and man-made catastrophes is explored - floods, earthquakes, war destructions.

How can we explore adaptation of cities through resilience? How is it linked to sustainability? To resistance? How is resilience related to cultural heritage and cities? Is resilience limited to this perspective, or is there more? Who can influence the process of making the city's heritage resilient? We have invited colleagues with expertise in various fields - urban anthropology, architecture and urban planning, history of literature, heritage studies and social history, and archaeology, from Banská Bystrica, Warsaw, Kraków, Ferrara,Tampere and Newcastle. The multidisciplinary discussion helped to develop substantially the topic from various perspectives.