Session 3: Underwater Cultural Heritage, Museums, and Sustainable Development

Dublin Core

Title

Session 3: Underwater Cultural Heritage, Museums, and Sustainable Development

Subject

Video Interview with Dr. Bill Jeffery on Sessions 3 and 11 with links to the papers presented in Session 3.

Description

Underwater cultural heritage holds a vast potential for sustainable development. It is a very interesting and attractive form of heritage, appreciated by the public. Underwater cultural heritage opens tourism opportunities. Worldwide, national authorities create dive trails to foster diving tourism economies. This is of special importance for States bordering the ocean, in particular Small Island Developing States (SIDS), which can greatly enhance their tourist attractiveness through the valorization of submerged archaeological sites.
The investment in museums on underwater archaeology, dive trails and other forms of access for the public promise a beneficial and lasting return. Studies show that every USD invested in heritage increases the economic activity around the site by a factor between 1.2 to 8, depending on the significance of the site and the form of its valorization by museums and individual access. This is in particular to be noted as raise in employment and gain (hotels, food sales, transport benefit, guides), raise of cultural and educational levels in a region and improved consideration of heritage and local pride. Concerned forms of tourism in the case of underwater cultural heritage are cultural, dive and cruise tourism.
New approaches and valid alternatives to commercial exploitation of sites are under consideration in order to finance underwater archaeological research and sustainable management of underwater cultural heritage sites, which include; i) dive club guardianship sites, ii) paid and controlled public visits of archaeological work, iii) evaluation of cultural development needs, iv) tour and exhibition opportunities, v) film and book rights in planning archaeological excavations.
The objectives of the session are to:

• Enhance understanding of the contribution of underwater cultural heritage to sustainable development;
• Identify and promote good practice;
• Foster partnership for regional and international cooperation.

Collection Items

Video Interview with Dr. Bill Jeffery on Sessions 3 and 11. <br /><br /><br />
Underwater cultural heritage holds a vast potential for sustainable development. It is a very interesting and attractive form of heritage, appreciated by the public. Underwater cultural heritage opens tourism opportunities. Worldwide, national…

The Fiji Museum’s efforts towards the Preservation of<br /><br />
Underwater Cultural Heritage Sites in Fiji
Fiji’s 300 isles are enclosed within a total sea area of about 1,260,000km2 of its Exclusive Economic Zone and to date very little work has been carried out on underwater and maritime archaeology. Resource materials documented by the Archaeology…

Intangible Heritage Approach of Safeguarding Underwater Heritage: A Trans-disciplinary Perspective
This paper presents the advantages of incorporating Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) disciplines in the protection of underwater sites. The integrated safeguarding approaches can enhance professional capacity and can lead to a knowledge pool that…

Seabee Junkyard: A holistic and locally inclusive approach to site management and interpretation
The United States of America (U.S.) Navy’s Construction Battalion called ‘Seabees’ were born in January 1942 from the demand for a unique set of both engineering and combat skills: “We Build, We Fight”. The Seabees were instrumental in the…
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