Interpret Europe wants to challenge mindsets through heritage interpretation

The Interpret Europe conference has a focus on Sustainability: Challenging mindsets through heritage interpretation.

By Creatives Unite Newsroom
January 04, 2024

There is hardly any layer in our societal tissue that is not concerned by the serious situation that we are currently facing. Mainstream politics advocate more sustainable growth, since any solution other than growth seems unacceptable to many people. On the other hand, activists believe that people need to make a radical shift in their mindsets and lifestyles.

Could museums, monuments, parks and other heritage sites help people to interpret heritage in a way that makes them more mindful towards our common future? Could they complement formal learning that is usually more focused on knowledge by reflecting upon our shared values? Could they also use the interpretive approach to initiate bottom-up movements and foster local small-scale initiatives leading to more sustainable thinking and acting?

Value-based heritage interpretation has been recognised by UNESCO as a promising approach for fostering peace and sustainability and it is already being adopted by dozens of World Heritage Sites across Europe. Can it challenge people’s mindsets in a way that doesn’t focus on doom and gloom but keeps their spirits up for successful transition?

Koper, a green-labelled multicultural destination, will be the location for the exchanges on such questions. Capodistria or Capo d’Istria, as the Venetians called it, is a small harbour city and the bilingual capital of the Slovenian coastal region, but the conference will also be hosted by a dozen of other heritage sites from Slovenia, Croatia, and Italy. This lively crossroads area of cultures and languages, the junction of South, West and East, is rich in history, with a difficult past but now a more peaceful coexistence in a united Europe that should be able to inspire us. What’s more, the karst hinterland with its countless underground caves, Mediterranean vegetation and the wild  fir and spruce forests of the Dinaric Alps, home to numerous rare species, will provide us with many opportunities for taking deep breaths in nature.

The conference will be organised by the UNESCO Chair for Interpretation and Education for Enhancing Integrated Heritage Approaches at the University of Primorska and the Faculty of Humanities UP. Primorska, on the Adriatic coast, is the westernmost region of Slovenia and the university building, on the picturesque mediaeval town square of Koper, will be the main venue.

Event: 21-24 March at Koper, Slovenia

Find more information here