Heritage conservation is an obstacle to the technological advancement.
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it is " Against " !
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Explanation:
Values are the subject of much discussion in contem-
p o ra ry society. In this postmodern, post-ideology,
post-nation-state age, the search for values and mean-
ing has become a pressing concern. In the field of
c u l t u ral heritage conservation, values are critical to
deciding what to conserve — what material goods will
re p resent us and our past to fu t u re genera t i o n s — a s
well as to determining how to conserve. Even brief
c o n s i d e ration of a typical conservation decision
reveals many diffe rent, sometimes dive rgent values at
p l ay: think of the artistic and aesthetic values of a n
old building, as well as the historical values of i t s
a s s o c i a t i o n s, plus the economic values tied up in its
use, and so on. In short, values are an import a n t ,
d e t e rmining factor in the current practices and
fu t u re prospects of the conservation fi e l d .
This re p o rt presents the results of re s e a rc h
on the subject of the values and benefits of c u l t u ra l
heritage conservation undertaken by the Getty
C o n s e rvation Institute ( ) through its Agora ini-
t i a t ive ,
as a means of a rticulating and fu rt h e r i n g
ideas that have emerged from the conservation fi e l d
in recent ye a rs. This tra n s d i s c i p l i n a ry re s e a rc h ,
along with a parallel project on the economics of
heritage conservation, re p resents an effo rt of t h e
to advance understanding of c o n s e rva t i o n’s cur-
rent role in society, to educate ours e l ves and the
c o n s e rvation community at large about the poten-
tial role of c o n s e rvation in the fu t u re, and, ulti-
m a t e ly, to strengthen the capacity of the conserva-
tion field to enrich cultural life and the visual arts in
societies wo rl dw i d e .
The overall aim of research on social and
economic issues is understanding the processes—
s p e c i fic and genera l — by which material heritage
c o n s e rvation functions in the context of m o d e rn
s o c i e t y, with the end of i m p r oving conserva t i o n
practice and policy. By elucidating the ways in which
we, as societies, profe s s i o n a l s, and citize n s, deter-
mine what to conserve and how to conserve it, we
hope to foster greater understanding of the wo r k
that conservators do and of the ways in which other
p r o fe s s i o n a l s, academics, and community members
c o l l a b o rate in and info rm this work—and how they
might be more effe c t ive ly integrated in the fu t u re .
Such insight can, in turn, make conservation pra c-
tice more re l evant to the societies of which it is a
p a rt, info rm policy and decision makers about the
potential of c o n s e rvation for fostering civil society,
and strengthen the role of conservation as a part of
civil society.
In late , the b egan development of a
multiyear inquiry to explore the values and benefits
o f c u l t u ral heritage conservation. The re s e a rch wa s
launched with a meeting held in Los Angeles and
R ive rside, Califo rnia, Ja nu a ry to , . Th e
meeting invo l ved a mu l t i d i s c i p l i n a ry and mu l t i n a-
tional group of p r o fessionals and academics from
the conservation and cultural heritage fields and
associated disciplines (see Pa rticipants section
below). Meeting participants were asked to examine
the state of k n owledge about the multiple defi n i-
t i o n s, roles, and meanings of c u l t u ral heritage and
its conservation; to look at the kinds of social and
c u l t u ral dynamics making the greatest impact on
c o n s e rva t i o n’s role in society, pre s e n t ly and in the
future; and to consider ideas, concepts, and research
themes that wa rrant fu rther study. Through an
online discussion that fo l l owed the Ja nu a ry
meeting, through correspondence, and through sev-
e ral commissioned essay s, these ideas we re honed
and debated.
The fi rst part of this document, “Re p o rt on
Re s e a rch,” provides a summary of the ideas and
ove ra rching themes that have emerged during the
c o u rse of our re s e a rch and meetings, in our ongo-
ing discussions with colleagues at the Getty,
e l s ewh e re in the conservation field, in academia,
and in litera t u res from other disciplines that bear on
c o n s e rvation. The second part of the document,
“ E x p l o ra t o ry Essay s,” is a compendium of p ap e rs
on specific topics written by scholars who have par-
ticipated in this re s e a rch. These essays ex p l o re some
c o re ideas in greater depth and provide diffe rent dis-
c i p l i n a ry pers p e c t ives on how broad s o c i a l
dynamics influence our understanding of c u l t u ra l
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