New IUCN-ICCROM nature-culture project for sustainable development in World Heritage

The signing of a six-year project – World Heritage Leadership – at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Hawai‘i marks new steps to improve nature-culture conservation practice carried out through the World Heritage Convention. Funded by Norway as a partnership project between the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and the Restoration of Cultural Property (ICCROM), it aims to support the contribution of World Heritage sites to sustainable development.

Signing of World Heritage Leadership project

The World Heritage Leadership aims to build the skills of practitioners working through the World Heritage Convention, taking into account the totality of conservation practice so World Heritage can provide leadership to achieve innovation and excellence within the sector of conservation. This focus beyond World Heritage marks a new approach to the long-standing partnership between IUCN and ICCROM, two advisory bodies on natural and cultural World Heritage respectively.

The World Heritage Leadership programme will integrate nature and culture from the outset, centring on areas where World Heritage has the most compelling potential to address pressing challenges, such as climate change and impacts from development.

Five modules make up the programme, including Effective Management: Nature, Culture, and Communities; Resilience; Impact Assessment; Learning Sites; and Leadership Networks. The World Heritage Leadership project is addressed to States Parties, local government, communities and civil society involved in World Heritage conservation and will focus on:

  • Setting and testing leading standards for conserving World Heritage sites, and ensuring their contribution to communities and sustainable development;
  • Providing high-profile advice, in several languages, on conservation policies and practices, notably by compiling ICCROM and IUCN management manuals into a single new publication;
  • Establishing a network of internationally recognised leadership sites, which will include World Heritage sites demonstrating leading practice, which can provide platforms for learning and skills development;
  • Building international networks between nature and culture practitioners and institutions that link practice on the ground with leadership at international, regional, national and local levels;
  • Providing diverse training events, exchanges and other activities to support the work of both site managers and stakeholders, and the heritage services of states parties.

The programme has been developed through a process of discussion between ICCROM and IUCN, and draws on the results of a 2015 consultative workshop including ICOMOS, UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre and representatives of World Heritage stakeholders. From 2016 IUCN and ICCROM aim to adopt a common objective, and a series of shared results and coordinated actions in each of their World Heritage related programmes to achieve this initiative.

The project will be delivered by IUCN and ICCROM in collaboration with ICOMOS and UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre, with the support of Norway.

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