710 resultados para heritage places


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Para el aprendizaje temprano del niño. Tiene las respuestas a muchas de las preguntas que un niño puede hacer sobre sí mismo y las sociedades humanas en todo el mundo. El texto tiene dos niveles de dificultad y varios tamaños de letra. El segundo nivel es el de mayor dificultad con un vocabulario apropiado pensado para lectores más expertos. Hay un glosario alfabético.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Pertenece a una colección que quiere despertar la curiosidad de los pequeños lectores y desarrollar sus destrezas de lectura. En este caso, se tratan varios conceptos, el de país y el de bandera, ésta como una especie de insignia nacional. También, se explican otros temas, el número de países y de idiomas existentes, las características de algunas ciudades, sus tipos de viviendas, el folclore.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Para que una civilización pueda considerarse como tal, debe reunir todas ó algunas de estas características: una escritura desarrollada, un sistema de gobierno, una religión organizada y capacidad para construir edificios y monumentos a gran escala. Se describe el desarrollo de antiguas civilizaciones en varios continentes. En Asia: las culturas de Mesopotamia, del valle del Indo, de China, Japón y Camboya y los imperios persa e islámico. En Europa sobresalen: Creta, Micenas, Etruria, Grecia y Roma; en África: además de la gran civilización egipcia al norte, se encuentran otras al sur del Sahara. Y, por último, en América, civilizaciones desarrolladas en Estados Unidos, y las más importantes de los mayas en Centroamérica y de los pueblos andinos, al sur.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Se presenta como un alegato a favor de un enfoque críticamente reflexivo que reconozca la complejidad y ambigüedad del mundo y busque oportunidades para explorarlo con los estudiantes. Se eligen lugares que no se estudian normalmente en la etapa 3 (key stage 3) de secundaria y no aparecen en los libros de texto escolares de geografía para demostrar, así, que las ideas se pueden aplicar para una amplia variedad de lugares y no solo para los que aparecen en el plan de estudios.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Resumen basado en el de la publicación

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The guidelines presented in this document are a preliminary strategy for establishing a comprehensive policy for the needs of training and education wiyhin the sector and adjoining areas, across fields of knowledge and professions concerned, on relevant levels and for the varies institutions and operators. The objective of these guidelines is to analysis the problems, objectives and goals for development of a far reaching system of educational and training programs and courses for museums, cultural heritage and related fields of activities. This objective comprises a close collaboration between museum, cultural heritage organizations and educating organizations, notably within universities and colleges, but also other kinds of educating bodies.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This essay presents some parameters for the study of Museology and its respective contribution for the constitution of preservationist processes, biased towards heritage education. From the decoding of some parameters that delimit this applied discipline’s action and reflection field, the text presents some paradigms, which have stimulated its epistemological construction and have guided its social functions. These paradigms are considered responsible for a new methodological order within the scope of the museum and, further, for the new commitments that these institutions have taken up.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In a UK context, the importance of heritage tourism, the potential of the disabled market, and government policies concerning tourism, social inclusion, and the historic environment provide the setting within which access improvements at heritage attractions for disabled visitors are studied. At issue is how disabled access and conservation can be reconciled. The stakeholders range from the central actors, the disabled tourists and the heritage tourism service providers, through to the gatekeeper and lobby players in the conservation, disability, and tourism contexts. The critical power structures are identified. Changes to the historic environment are managed through the conservation planning system in which disability interests are not formally represented. Recent disability discrimination legislation has not altered this balance of power, and is a source of uncertainty over the access standards that should apply to heritage attractions. An evaluation of progress in implementing access improvements at heritage attractions reveals the limited extent of improvements undertaken to date. Consideration is given not only to physical access but also to alternative methods (intellectual access) of providing the heritage tourism service. In conclusion, the situation is examined from three perspectives. From the disabled tourists' perspective, choice of heritage attractions to visit remains restricted compared to that of nondisabled tourists. The lack of consultation with disabled stakeholders in the access improvements decision-making process is discussed, including the acceptability of alternative methods of service delivery to disabled tourists. The uncertainties facing heritage tourism service providers arising from the disability discrimination legislation are considered but, to ensure a more balanced recognition of disability interests, both conservation planning and disability discrimination legislation need to be amended, adjusting the roles of the legislative gatekeepers.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Heritage tourism depends on a physical resource based primarily on listed buildings and scheduled monuments. Visiting or staying in a historic building provides a rich tourism experience, but historic environments date from eras when access for disabled people was not a consideration. Current UK Government policy now promotes social inclusion via an array of equal opportunities, widening participation and anti-discrimination policies. Historic environments enjoy considerable legislative protection from adverse change, but now need to balance conservation with public access for all. This paper discusses the basis of research being undertaken by The College of Estate Management funded by the Mercers Company of London and the Harold Samuel Trust. It assesses how the 1995 Disability Discrimination Act has changed the legal obligations of owners/operators in managing access to listed buildings in tourism use. It also examines the key stakeholders and power structures in the management of historic buildings and distinguishes other important players in the management process.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This article explores conflicts over a series of ruins located within Zimbabwe's flagship National Park. The relics have long been regarded as sacred places by local African communities evicted from their vicinity, and have come to be seen as their ethnic heritage. Local intellectuals' promotion of this heritage was an important aspect of a defensive mobilization of cultural difference on the part of a marginalized minority group. I explore both indigenous and colonial ideas about the ruins, the different social movements with which they have been associated and the changing social life they have given the stone relics. Although African and European ideas sometimes came into violent confrontation - as in the context of colonial era evictions - there were also mutual influences in emergent ideas about tribe, heritage and history. The article engages with Pierre Nora's notion of 'sites of memory', which has usefully drawn attention to the way in which ideas of the past are rooted and reproduced in representations of particular places. But it criticizes Nora's tendency to romanticize pre-modern 'memory', suppress narrative and depoliticize traditional connections with the past. Thus, the article highlights the historicity of traditional means of relating to the past, highlighting the often bitter and divisive politics of traditional ritual, myth, kinship, descent and 'being first'. It also emphasizes the entanglement of modern and traditional ideas, inadequately captured by Nora's implied opposition between history and memory. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In this article I provide a critical account of the 'placing' of England's M1 motor-way. I start by critiquing Marc Auge's anthropological writings on 'non-places' which have provided a common point of reference for academics discussing spaces of travel, consumption and exchange in the contemporary world. I argue that Auge's ethnology of supermodernity results in a rather partial account of these sites, that he overstates the novelty of contemporary experiences of these spaces, and that he fails to acknowledge the heterogeneity and materiality of the social networks bound up with the production of non-places/places. I suggest that, rather than focusing on the presences and absences associated with the polarities of place and non-place, academics should examine the multiple, partial, dynamic and relational 'placings' which arise through the diverse performances and movements associated with travel, consumption and exchange. I then trace the topologies of England's M1 motorway, examining some of the different ways in which the motorway has been assembled, performed and placed over the past 45 years.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Much of the writing on urban regeneration in the UK has been focused on the types of urban spaces that have been created in city centres. Less has been written about the issue of when the benefits of regeneration could and should be delivered to a range of different interests, and the different time frames that exist in any development area. Different perceptions of time have been reflected in dominant development philosophies in the UK and elsewhere. The trickle-down agendas of the 1980s, for example, were criticised for their focus on the short-term time frames and needs of developers, often at the expense of those of local communities. The recent emergence of sustainability discourses, however, ostensibly changes the time focus of development and promotes a broader concern with new imagined futures. This paper draws on the example of development in Salford Quays, in the North West of England, to argue that more attention needs to be given to the politics of space-time in urban development processes. It begins by discussing the importance and relevance of this approach before turning to the case study and the ways in which the local politics of space-time has influenced development agendas and outcomes. The paper argues that such an approach harbours the potential for more progressive, far-reaching, and sustainable development agendas to be developed and implemented.