Cultural Heritage and Disaster

Tuesday, 8 July 2025: 09:00-10:45
Location: ASJE024 (Annex of the Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences)
RC39 Sociology of Disasters (host committee)

Language: English

Cultural heritage is the legacy we inherit from the past, experience in the present, and pass on to the future, revealing the achievements, aspirations, and hardships of a community. Cultural heritage can include tangible objects such as buildings, monuments, landscapes, books, artworks, photographs and artefacts; intangible cultural heritage includes folklore, traditions, language, and knowledge, and natural heritage including culturally significant landscapes, and biodiversity. Cultural heritage is regarded as a major component of quality of life and plays a crucial role in societal and individual well-being. Loss or deterioration of cultural heritage can have severe economic and psychological repercussions, especially for individuals who lose personal mementos. The reaction to the loss of cultural heritage, for communities or individuals, is significant because it serves as a reminder of what people truly value and the role it plays in our sense of place and self, as well as our sense of safety and resiliency.
This session will consider the role that cultural heritage plays in disaster cycles, the increasing recognition traditional practices are gaining in providing knowledge and expertise in risk reduction, such as environmental management and building techniques, and the function that memorials and commemorations have in remembering and reflecting on disasters.
Session Organizer:
Tiffany COUSINS, Virginia Tech, USA
Oral Presentations
Inequitable Climate Responses and Their Impacts on Southern Louisiana Tribal Communities
Michele COMPANION, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, USA
Roots in Water: How Fijians Deepen into Their Traditions to Combat Current Crises
Jay MALAGA, Fiji; Giulio PANETTIERE, University of Oslo, Norway