Bianchi, A.; Sakal, F., Entre patrimonio y desarrollo urbanístico: retos para la gestión del patrimonio cultural en Qatar, Revista del patrimonio mundial 72 (2014), 70-75. (original) (raw)

A Holistic Overview of Qatar’s (Built) Cultural Heritage; Towards an Integrated Sustainable Conservation Strategy

Sustainability, 2019

Historic urban cores are the backbone of a city’s cultural identity. Maintaining and preserving the socio-cultural, environmental and economic characteristics of the built heritage is vital for cultural identity survival. The Gulf region gathered important architectural and urban richness observed through the massive military towers, mosques, houses, palaces and grand souks. The state of Qatar is under huge pressure to preserve its cultural identity, which resulted from the rapid development, population growth, urban expansion and economic boom since the 1970s. The cities of Qatar are facing difficult challenges to preserve the cultural identity and built heritage without compromising the need for development. Consequently, this study aims to define a set of heritage restoration-preservation tools and an integrated sustainable conservation strategy as part of deliberate planning and design processes. This, certainly, will help achieve sustainable future scenarios for the survival of...

Reconstructing Qatari Heritage: Simulacra and Simulation

Journal of Literature and Art Studies, 2017

Qatar today focuses so much on reconstructing its cultural heritage. It is clear that the reconstruction of Qatari heritage has stemmed from a nostalgic mood. Thus, the government subsumed that heritage into certain interpretations and readings. Therefore, as presented today, Qatari heritage is no longer a self-referential heritage of an indigenous culture. Rather, it has become a principle to reflect the social and economic existence of the Qatari community along with other global communities. The mass use of heritage and the implementation of Western museum culture, however, might be viewed by some as the importation of a culture rather than the preservation of an existing one. To minimise such potential problem, the government opted to ignore any distinctions between representing heritage, interpreting it, or imposing new ideas and thinking around it. Instead, it has focused on introducing a heritage based on linking images of foreign elements that characterise Qatari heritage with new social and economic experiences.

World Heritage: Challenges for the Millennium

2007

The authors are responsible for the choice and the presentation of the facts contained in this publication and for the opinions expressed therein, which are not necessarily those of UNESCO and do not commit the Organization. The designations employed and the presentation of material throughout the publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNESCO concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The publication of this volume was financed by the Italian Funds-in-Trust.

The Heritage Collection/ Library of Qatar: History, Development, Potential, Goals and Trends

Museums in Arabia Conference Programme, London, King's College, 26 - 28 June, 2019

The Heritage Collection has grown out of a private book collection that Sheikh Hassan b. Mohammad b. Ali Al Thani inherited at the late 1970s. Heavily enlarged and developed over many years, it got an integral part of the Qatar National Library (QNL) in 2012. The very prominent place in the new library building (opened in 2017/ 2018) clearly indicates the important role the Heritage Collection is given in the quickly developing cultural landscape of Qatar (Museum of Islamic Art, Mathaf, National Museum). The paper will offer a closer look into the history in order to understand the achievements and the goals of this project, and what kind of material is covered (using examples from different areas of the collection). Finally some remarks will be made regarding the relationship between the physical collection and the digital collections presented in the Qatar Digital Library (QDL) which went online in 2014.

CULTURAL HERITAGE Experience & Perspectives in International Context

International Conference Proceedings , 2020

The proceedings of the RՕCHEMP International Conference 2020 are now published. With a general theme of “Cultural Heritage: Experience and Perspectives in International Context” this book is a collection of scientific and practical articles by distinguished experts coming from various fields of cultural heritage, representing Armenia, Iran, Italy, Lebanon and Turkey. The publishing was coordinated by the staffs of the ROCHEMP Center and the Publishing Department of the NGA in close cooperation with the Project Scientific Director Mariangela Vandini. The editor is the director of the Center Ani Avagyan. This publication is addressed to the professionals in the fields of cultural heritage protection, management and enhancement, as well as professional development, students, architect restorers, archaeologists, museologist, restoration, conservation professionals, cultural anthropologists, officials, and in general those who are interested in above mentioned topics. Please feel free to read and share within your networks. http://www.rochemp.org/newsevents/ #ROCHEMP_publication #ROCHEMPCenter #culturalheritage #ROCHEMP_international_conference_2020

The 40th Anniversary of the World Heritage Convention and Overview of the 36th Committee Meeting

Every year UNESCO World Heritage Committee Members sit in a conference for the evaluation of latest status of heritage sites under consideration. This year in 2012, the committee sat together for the 36 th times for the same purpose. Apparently this date also marks the 40th anniversary of the World Heritage Convention which was adopted in 1972 for the protection of cultural and natural sites.

'World-Heritage-and-Sustainable-Development', 2013 04 (2011 06).pdf

In the last session of the second day of the conference a round-table panel session was held where the pros and cons of the establishment of an ICOMOS Global Heritage Monitoring Network -an ICOMOS International initiative currently in its initial phases of development -was discussed. The panel was headed by Gustavo Araoz (President, ICOMOS) and comprised of other prominent ICOMOS members including Kristal Buckley (Vice-President, ICOMOS), Prof. Dr. Leo Schmidt FSA (Head of Department, Department of Architectural Conservation, BTU Cottbus), Prof. Dr. Nobuko Inaba (Director, World Heritage Studies, Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba), and Christoph Machat (Executive Committee Member, ICO-MOS). The proposed establishment of a network, now renamed as "Global Heritage Trends Network", which would assist the international conservation community in understanding and documenting changes taking place at heritage sites worldwide and thus develop a better management system for safeguarding the sites for future generations, was welcomed with much enthusiasm. In addition, during this session, which was moderated by Sheridan Burke (President, ICOMOS ISC20C), the possible ways in which BTU Cottbus, as represented by its Department of Architectural Conservation, and IAWHP e.V. could collaborate with ICOMOS International in taking this initiative forward were discussed.

Al Zubarah: Qatar's World Heritage City

Qatar University Press & Qatar Museums, 2022

In the study of the lively historical events that accompanied the determined emergence of a post-colonial Gulf in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries CE, archaeology and heritage are especially equipped to make a significant contribution to understanding the main social, political, and economic factors that came to shape this period of fundamental change. Of the many social transformations that occurred at that time, none was more important than the foundation and development of the modern emirate states of the southwestern coast of the Arabian Gulf. Al Zubarah was an essential catalyst in the formation of a new Gulf epitomized by Arab independence, born of commercial acumen, steely political determination, and the expression of an independent and distinct cultural identity. This book, for the first time, brings together history, archaeology and heritage in one comprehensive study to highlight the pivotal role played by the people of Al Zubarah in the emergence of the modern Gulf. _Editor/authors_ HE Sheikh Hassan Bin Mohammed Bin Ali Al-Thani, Noof Ibrahim Abdulla, Sultan Muhesen, Alan G. Walmsley, Fatema Hassan Al-Sulaiti, Sandra Rosendahl, Ingolf Thuesen, et al.