Normative Criteria for Relevant Evaluation
recording best practices
Changes at "promotes social collaboration within a neighborhood"
Body
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- Harrison, Rodnay. 2013. Heritage: Critical Approaches. London: Routledge.
- -- Högberg, Anders. 2016. Rodney Harrison: Heritage. Critical Approaches. London: Routledge, 2013.
- -- Norwegian Archaeological Review, pp. 268.ICOMOS. 2019.
- -- “European quality principles for EU-funded interventions with potential impact upon culturalheritage.” Paris: Manual. ICOMOS International.
- -- ICOMS. 1994.“Nara document on authenticity.”Availableat:whc.unesco.org/document/116018.
- -- Karim van. 2019.“Towards an Evolutionary Heritage Approach: Performances, Embodiment, Feelings andEffects.”In AESOP 2019 Conference: Planning for Transition: Book of Abstracts, 166–166. Association ofEuropean Schools of Planning (AESOP).
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Social collaboration is the process of helping multiple people or groups interact and
share information to achieve common goals. Listening to others is the starting step
how people begin to collaborate, which leads to the sharing of collective knowledge
and the process also creating value through partnerships. This collaborative action and
learning through collective reflection is an important source of understanding of
practices that can improve the process of creating or identifying common
goods and values of the neighborhood.
References
Dennis Sandow, Reflexus Company and Anne Murray Allen, Hewlett-Packard
Company. 2005. “The Nature of Social Collaboration: How Work Really Gets Done.”
Reflections: the SoL Journal on Knowledge, Learning, and Change. Volume 6,
Number 2/ 3: 1-14.