Today as was in the past, the Caribbean is the setting for the intersection among peoples, cultures, economies and the natural environment, of which the local territorial heritage is the historical outcome. Thanks to their origins, natural and anthropic fragilities affecting these habitats are likely the most suitable to be cared by interventions based on knowledge sharing and exchange. In the Lesser Antilles, climate change and market globalization threaten the physical and human environment, imposing unsustainable socio-economic transformations and affecting namely disadvantaged and at risk young people. The islands of Barbados and Dominica share the duty of preserving their territorial heritage against urban degradation, economic vulnerability and social disintegration. The Caritalents cooperation project fostered the sharing of expertise on territorial heritage between international and local experts and its transfer to local actors, especially by training young people with innovative participatory tools. Actions aimed at enhancing awareness and knowledge about local heritage are the hinge of Experimental Laboratories developed throughout the territory of the islands.. Two laboratories amongst the other are accounted, as selected cases useful to the assessment of the project effectiveness in renovate a collective vision on local territorial heritage from the perspective of young generations.
Training the Caribbean Heritage: The Caritalents cooperation project in Barbados and Dominica / Raffaele Paloscia. - In: SCIENZE DEL TERRITORIO. - ISSN 2384-8774. - ELETTRONICO. - 7 - 2019:(2019), pp. 185-196.
Training the Caribbean Heritage: The Caritalents cooperation project in Barbados and Dominica
Raffaele Paloscia
2019
Abstract
Today as was in the past, the Caribbean is the setting for the intersection among peoples, cultures, economies and the natural environment, of which the local territorial heritage is the historical outcome. Thanks to their origins, natural and anthropic fragilities affecting these habitats are likely the most suitable to be cared by interventions based on knowledge sharing and exchange. In the Lesser Antilles, climate change and market globalization threaten the physical and human environment, imposing unsustainable socio-economic transformations and affecting namely disadvantaged and at risk young people. The islands of Barbados and Dominica share the duty of preserving their territorial heritage against urban degradation, economic vulnerability and social disintegration. The Caritalents cooperation project fostered the sharing of expertise on territorial heritage between international and local experts and its transfer to local actors, especially by training young people with innovative participatory tools. Actions aimed at enhancing awareness and knowledge about local heritage are the hinge of Experimental Laboratories developed throughout the territory of the islands.. Two laboratories amongst the other are accounted, as selected cases useful to the assessment of the project effectiveness in renovate a collective vision on local territorial heritage from the perspective of young generations.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



