Approaches to Industrial Heritage. What works? (original) (raw)

Twenty years after Malta: taking stock

The conference organized by IBC and INRAP to conclude the ACE project (2007-2012) aims to take stock of the situation twenty years after the Malta Convention drawn up by the Council of Europe in 1992. The Convention defined, among other things, many of the principles and goals of preventive archaeology and in the countries where it has been applied it has produced an undoubted evolution from not only a legislative and technological standpoint, but also a social and economic one. Italy has never ratified the Convention: its failure to do so is a symptom of the difficulties weighing upon Italian archaeology at every level, starting from the cultural one. That we are lagging behind also emerged clearly from the survey on the condition of archaeologists conducted by IBC for the ACE project. The current situation of economic crisis has negatively impacted the institutional and professional crisis in many European countries and even more so in Italy.

Portrait Gallery of the Malta Chamber

LA BORSA - The People, The Building, The History, 2013

co-authored with Emmanuel Fiorentino. Book chapter on the portraits at the Malta Chamber of Commerce

Country Brief: Malta

2010

C Co ou un nt tr ry y B Br ri ie ef f: : M Ma al lt ta a A Au ut th ho or rs s: : B B. . R Re es st ta al ll l, , S S. . G Gi ie es st t, , J J. . D Du um mo or rt ti ie er r, , J J. . A Ar rt tm ma an nn n

Tradition, Tourism and Memory in Malta

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Malta and its consequences: a mixed blessing

V.M. van der Haas & P. Schut (eds.), The Valletta Convention: Twenty Years After. Benefits, Problems, Challenges, EAC Occasional Paper No. 9, Brussels 2014, 151-156., 2014

The Valletta Convention has drastically changed archaeology and its role in society. Nevertheless, its almost universal adoption by European countries has not only had positive consequences. The paper discusses a number of different developments, some foreseen, some unforeseen, that have had positive as well as negative consequences and some, such as commercialization, that can be said to have had both. This is also true of the concept of 'preservation in situ' that is examined at length because it has become a dogma and the holy grail of preventive archaeology. While recognizing its value the paper shows how the concept has also become an instrument that favors simplistic CRM archaeology and hampers innovation of archaeological research in Europe. When the concept is 'exported' to developing countries, recent experiences show that its dangers are even more apparent.

JOVAN STEFANOVSKI, THE MACEDONIAN ARCHITECT CAPTIVATED BY MALTA AND ITS CHRISTIAN LEGACY

Astra Salvensis, 2022

Through its long cultural history, Malta has long been a favourite of artists and scholars alike for various reasons ranging from the political to the aesthetic. Many have visited and left a memento in the form of literature and/or a work of art. Jovan Stefanovski, a leading contemporary architect from the Republic of North Macedonia, was one such personality. Following a short visit with his family in 2007, he got to know the topography of Malta, information which supplemented his knowledge on the history and culture of the island and its dependencies. He travelled to the islands a decade later, delivering a lecture at the University of Malta, revisiting a number of cultural heritage sites and holding meetings to identify a location for the erection of a Cross, a project for which he offered to waive his professional fees. This article concludes by providing an insight into his significant professional interest in Malta, effectively providing a cultural diplomatic bridge between his native North Macedonia and Malta.

Os arquivos fotograficos e a agenda da Uniao Europeia : entrevista ao diretor dos Arquivos Nacionais de Malta durante a presidência maltesa da Uniao Europeia

2017

The European Union (EU) has a system of six-month rotation whereby each Member State holds the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, which is the main governing body of the EU. Malta is leading its first term in such a role spanning from 1 January to 30 June 2017. Such an opportunity often stimulates the various sectors and this is the case with the archives domain in Malta during the Presidency. The National Archives of Malta is responsible to organise four high level meetings and support three others. Heading the organisation team is Dr. Charles J. Farrugia, Malta’s national archivist. He is not a new face to the sector and has worked in archives for the last twenty-eight years, eighteen of which leading the national archives. He also has the organisational experience of the highly successful CITRA conference held in 2009. That event welcomed in Malta 251 archivists from 91 countries. But the Presidency is different. It spans over six months and includes a high dose of policy fo...