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| FoU-Katalog Projekt finansierade med Riksantikvarieämbetets FoU-anslag |
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Titel | Heritage and Urban Resistance: Exploring Identity Politics, Commons and Conflict | |
Dnr | 3.2.2-3408-2014 | |
Medelsförvaltare | Göteborgs universitet | |
Institution | Institutionen för kulturvård | |
Projektledare | Feras Hammami | |
Programperiod | 2012-2016 | |
FoU tema | Förutsättningar för kulturarvsarbetet | |
Undertema | Kulturarv som politikområde | |
Vetenskaplig slutrapport för projektet | PDF-fil | |
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Beviljat belopp |
Anslagsår | Belopp | |
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2015 | 1 222 462 | |
2016 | 1 279 608 | |
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Kortfattat syfte This project will investigate how heritage and urban resistance, both as concepts and as empirical realities for people on the ground, are fundamentally interdependent and today constitute multiple sites of conflict. Looking at these interdependencies in Sweden, Turkey and Palestine would activate a new dialogue on the role of heritage authorities in the making of contemporary societies. |
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Sammanfattning Urban resistances have erupted in several countries, disrupting everyday life and challenging urban policies and planning. This project looks at how heritage and resistance both as concepts and as empirical realities for people on the ground are fundamentally interdependent and today constitute multiple sites of conflict. The same sites, objects, and evidence of the past are often claimed by diverse community groups in ways that make everyday life a micro dynamics of negotiating identity, recognition and sense of place. How often-contradictory positions on heritage are entangled in policies for the management of contested heritage sites will be investigated in Palestine, Turkey, and Sweden |
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Summary Urban resistances have erupted in several countries, disrupting everyday life and challenging urban policies and planning. This project looks at how heritage and resistance both as concepts and as empirical realities for people on the ground are fundamentally interdependent and today constitute multiple sites of conflict. The same sites, objects, and evidence of the past are often claimed by diverse community groups in ways that make everyday life a micro dynamics of negotiating identity, recognition and sense of place. How often-contradictory positions on heritage are entangled in policies for the management of contested heritage sites will be investigated in Palestine, Turkey, and Sweden |
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