A Dialogue between the Humanities and Social Sciences: Cultural Landscapes and Their Transformative Potential for Social Innovation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review and Conceptual Foundations
2.1. Humanities and the Notions of Landscape/Cultural Landscape
2.2. Conceptual Approaches to (Cultural) Landscapes
2.3. Social Sciences and Space/Landscape as Analytical Categories
2.4. The Concept of Social Innovation
3. (Cultural) Landscape and Social Innovation as Applied Concepts
3.1. ‘Cultural Landscape’ as an Applied Concept
3.2. Developing a Joint Approach—Cultural Landscape as a Resource for Social Innovation
- Promotion of local heritage as a pole of attraction for visitors;
- Utilization of local/indigenous knowledge for the conservation of cultural diversity and biodiversity;
- Development of new and innovative product ideas with a transformative potential;
- change of regulations and legal provisions (e.g., recognition of customary law, non-standard legal entities, divergent legal views);
- Initiation of new networks for local collaboration and cooperation (e.g., agricultural cooperatives which produce and market agricultural products);
- Fostering of social integration/inclusion (e.g., greater openness to community participation as enabled by a ‘Structured Democratic Dialogue’).
3.3. Application of the Social Grid Model (Beckert 2010) and the Structured Democratic Dialogue (SDD) in a ‘Cultural Landscapes’-Context
- (a)
- The Discovery Phase: During initial meeting(s), a series of questions are addressed to assist in appreciating the complexity of the situation. In this phase, the SDD practitioners responsible for the application engage in an inquiry which involves: (a) conducting interviews with members of the community of stakeholders in order to explore their alternative understandings and perceptions of the situation, (b) gathering and studying relevant documentation and data, (c) selecting a Core Planning Team (CPT), which includes at least one member of the community, called the Broker, for guidance in the design of the Co-Laboratory, (d) framing a Triggering Question (TQ) for focusing the deliberations of the participants during the Co-Lab, and (e) identifying a representative group of participants for the Co-Lab, in accordance with the Law of Requisite Variety [122], i.e., all perspectives should be present at the Co-Lab. Finally, logistics for the Co-Laboratories are addressed during the Discovery Phase.
- (b)
- The Co-Laboratory Phase: This phase of SDD focuses on applying the theory and methodology to engage the group of participants in a productive, effective, authentic, and democratic dialogue. This approach to deliberative democracy is based on four distinct and overlapping steps, namely: (a) generation of ideas in response to the Triggering Question, (b) evaluation of proposed ideas by participants’ vote on the relative saliency of the ideas at various points during the deliberation, (c) clustering the set of ideas into affinity groups by employing the similarity relationship, and (d) mapping a priority subset of ideas by exploring pairwise relationships of influence among them and producing a tree of influence (diagraph).
- (c)
- Follow-up Action Phase: This phase focuses on implementing the findings and recommendations of the Co-Lab. For example, if the group work has produced a consensus action plan, then specific activities are assigned to members of the group of participants, or the community at large, for implementation. This phase might produce the requirement for additional Co-Labs with different groups of stakeholders focusing on diverse and sometimes more detailed Triggering Questions [123].
4. Implications of a Joint Approach for Two Intervention Regions
4.1. Koumasa: An Archaeological Landscape in Southern Crete (Greece)
- Crete’s Framework for Spatial Planning and Sustainable Development, which was ratified in 2017, prescribing a zoning system for specific activities in each area (https://ypen.gov.gr/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/3827.2010-ΦΕΚ-Α30.pdf [accessed on 5 May 2023]);
- The ambitious plans of the Heraklion Ephorate of Antiquities to create a network of archaeological sites of the Mesara and Asterousia region using the new Archaeological Museum of the Mesara at Gortyn as a gate to this network [132];
- The inscription of the Asterousia Mountain Range on UNESCO’s World Network of Biosphere Reserves in 2020 [133].
- Can archaeology, as an academic field, contribute to this dialogue by practicing the turn to an ‘applied discipline’ and thus acquire a relevance and significance for our society through the sensible implementation of theoretical concepts for practical modern concerns [139]?
- Finally, is it possible that citizens/local communities participate in this dialogue as active agents, being able to determine the fate of their heritage sites and—more important still—to implement them as basis of sustainable economic development?
4.2. The Honghe Hani Rice Terraces: An Agricultural Landscape in Southwestern China (Yunnan Province)
- Changes in cognitive framing to support more inclusive ethnic tourism development that reduces exoticization and challenges perceptions of Han-Chinese superior modernity [145];
- Recognition of the more active role and ability of cultural landscape inhabitants participating in tourism activities to renegotiate heritage values and to reclaim ethnic identity (alteration of cognitive frames);
- Strengthening of local social structures through water regulation and management that follows Hani customary law, thereby sustainably using natural resources and preserving local knowledge;
- Establishment of cooperative agricultural production mechanisms that improve local farmers’ economic situation and prevent out-migration of young community members;
- Increase in social inclusion of marginalized groups (e.g., women) through the enhancement of (agri)culture-related business opportunities;
- Participatory management of shared resources and generation of new network relationships by establishing community seedbanks [155] to support on-farm conservation of local crop species, and improve access and sharing systems.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Panagiotopoulos, D.; Wallenwein, F.; Mildenberger, G.; Schimpf, G.-C. A Dialogue between the Humanities and Social Sciences: Cultural Landscapes and Their Transformative Potential for Social Innovation. Heritage 2023, 6, 7674-7705. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6120404
Panagiotopoulos D, Wallenwein F, Mildenberger G, Schimpf G-C. A Dialogue between the Humanities and Social Sciences: Cultural Landscapes and Their Transformative Potential for Social Innovation. Heritage. 2023; 6(12):7674-7705. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6120404
Chicago/Turabian StylePanagiotopoulos, Diamantis, Fabienne Wallenwein, Georg Mildenberger, and Gudrun-Christine Schimpf. 2023. "A Dialogue between the Humanities and Social Sciences: Cultural Landscapes and Their Transformative Potential for Social Innovation" Heritage 6, no. 12: 7674-7705. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6120404
APA StylePanagiotopoulos, D., Wallenwein, F., Mildenberger, G., & Schimpf, G. -C. (2023). A Dialogue between the Humanities and Social Sciences: Cultural Landscapes and Their Transformative Potential for Social Innovation. Heritage, 6(12), 7674-7705. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6120404