Normative Criteria for Relevant Evaluation
recording best practices
Changes at "offers services and learning programs free of charge or at low costs for everyone interested – particularly disadvantaged communities"
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Heritage adaptive reuse practices are places of cooperation that connect their new functions with the needs of the community, particularly in low income and marginalized areas. They improve the responsiveness of services to the needs of the local community including other stakeholders (e.g. offering cultural services, welfare, refugee protection, health services, housing etc.) and provide support for educational and cognitive values by promoting learning programs.
Particularly, the latter contribute to the development of skills as well as awareness and knowledge e.g. by fostering further training or education or providing support through educational courses and workplace skills.
The creation, definition and sharing of both activities should not occur merely for the community but with the community by securing inclusivity, accessibility, impartiality and usability of the governance of the assets.
Key references
- IAIONE, 2015;
- OSTANEL, 2017;
- JENKINS, 2009;
- FALSER, 2015;
- THE CHCFE REPORT, 2015
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Adaptive reuse practices are places of cooperation that connect their new functions with the needs of the community, particularly in low income and marginalized areas (Ostanel 2017). They improve the responsiveness of services to the needs of the local community including other stakeholders (e.g. offering cultural services, welfare, refugee protection, health services, housing etc.) and provide support for educational and cognitive values by promoting learning programs.
Particularly, the latter contribute to the development of skills as well as awareness and knowledge e.g. by fostering further training or education or providing support through educational courses and workplace skills (CHCfE 2015). The creation, definition and sharing of both activities should not occur merely for the community but with the community (Jenkins 2009) by securing inclusivity, accessibility, impartiality and usability of the governance of the assets (Iaione 2015).
Key references
- CHCfE Consortium. 2015. Cultural Heritage Counts for Europe. Krakow: International Cultural Centre.
- Iaione, Christian. 2015. Governing the Urban Commons. Italian Journal of Public Law vol. 1, pp. 170-221.
- Jenkins, Henry. 2009. Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
- Ostanel, Elena. 2017. Spazi fuori dal comune: rigenerare, includere, innovare. Milan: Franco Angeli.