Periodic Reporting for period 1 - ECO-HERITAGES (Heritage Ecologies: culture, resilience and development in Island States)
Berichtszeitraum: 2023-02-13 bis 2025-02-12
This research enables disciplinary bridges to address socioeconomic and environmental vulnerabilities in insular and archipelagic contexts in the face of climate change. Being extremely vulnerable to climate change due to their small territory and particular exposure to sea-level rise, small islands and archipelagos became crucial case studies for its consequences in a global scenario. While climate change affects cultural and natural contexts, heritage management and indigenous cultures may provide solutions through traditionally established cultural systems that integrate ecological preservation and social development.
The results of this research are aimed to inform operational programs in the context of SIS, SIDS and island SNIJs promoting the integration of heritagization processes and indigenous knowledge systems in actions for sustainable futures. Furthermore, this research addresses the pressing challenge, at a European and global level, of developing expertise to promote effective mitigation of the social, economic and ecological consequences of climate change.
Through an innovative interdisciplinary methodology this proposal aims at advancing knowledge and contribute, overall, to the role of Malta, a European Union (EU) Small Island State, and of ISSI, in the commitments pledged by the EU in the context of the United Nations Actions for Sustainable Development and its Development and Cooperation policy, as well as the mission areas related to the oceans, climate change and societal transformation of the Horizon Europe 2021-2027 Framework.
Several periods of ethnographic fieldwork were carried out in Malta, Mauritius, Seychelles, Reunion, Mayotte and Comoros. This was the core of the project research. One of the most relevant achievements is to have a multi-sited study of the relations between cultural heritage in the small African islands in the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean state of Malta. This focused on the diverse heritage elements studied, their governance and management aspects, the public debates regarding the impact these elements have in the lives of the local populations and their access to natural resources, and their role in sustainability and climate change actions, as well as their contribution to social and sustainable development.
This allows a relevant contribution to the existing literature with the analysis of comparative case studies and to forward the importance of small islands in studies on climate change and the place culture has in contributing to adaptation measures.
Another achievement is to enhance dialogues between the contexts of small insular states and subnational island jurisdictions, opening the research focused on SIDS (Small Island Developing States) to include territories with a diversity of jurisdiction status.
Finally, establishing and enhancing connections between the stakeholders contacted in the different territories is a positive output, allowing for dialogues and future collaborative research proposals.
The project’s concerns, methodologies and results have been shared in several academic conferences and international meetings, confirming the initial hypothesis that the role of cultural heritage is relevant for climate change actions as well as it is a field of growing interest in forging collaborations and future initiatives. The scientific publications coming out of the project (finalised and under review) will contribute to the body of literature in the field, enlarging the importance of small islands in the study of the intersection of cultural heritage and climate change.
This research has also been shared and discussed in several events that we organized and integrated, both in academic conferences, in South Africa, Aruba and Indonesia, as well in the UN SIDS4 Conference in Antigua and Barbuda and the UN Ocean Conference in Barcelona (2024), the forthcoming Island Innovation Summit on Sustainable Islands in Saint Kitts and Nevis and the UN Oceans Conference in Nice. These activities have an impact not only in the direct dissemination of the research but also in the building of networks and collaborations for research and conference events that go beyond the geographical scope of the project.
These results express the project’s contributions at an academic level as well as at policy-making and international platforms, as UN SIDS and UNESCO.