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oapen-20.500.12657-24673
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oapen-20.500.12657-246732023-12-06T12:58:04Z Chapter 3 The instruments of European heritage Zito, Anthony R. Eckersley, Susannah Turner, Sam European heritage instruments EU COE bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JF Society & culture: general This chapter differs from others in this monograph in its focus on two political organisations, the EU and the COE, and their top-down efforts to engage with issues of heritage and identity. These organisations represent the two most visible post-1945 political efforts to transform Europe as a region, by promoting further integration; both are driven by a fluid collective memory of the impact made by world wars, genocide, economic deprivation and other forms of societal disruption. By their very nature, both organisations have sought to engage with the construction and reconstruction of history and identity, both to pursue a vision of a common Europe and to build a sense of purpose and value in their organisational efforts to build integration (and therefore justify their existence). They have selected particular policy instruments, which Hood (1983) defines as the tools by which actors implement their governance strategies. The core research question is: how do these two institutions seek to intervene and make people engage with memories, histories and identities by creating cultural heritage institutions and instruments? 2019-10-17 13:21:06 2020-04-01T10:04:56Z 2020-04-01T10:04:56Z 2019 chapter 1005439 OCN: 1135848305 9781138589476 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/24673 eng application/pdf n/a 9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf Taylor & Francis Dimensions of Heritage and Memory Routledge 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb fa054862-9641-4888-88f8-644a6bb89b73 9781138589476 Routledge 23 open access
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OAPEN
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DSpace
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| language |
English
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| description |
This chapter differs from others in this monograph in its focus on two political
organisations, the EU and the COE, and their top-down
efforts to engage with
issues of heritage and identity. These organisations represent the two most
visible post-1945
political efforts to transform Europe as a region, by promoting
further integration; both are driven by a fluid collective memory of the impact
made by world wars, genocide, economic deprivation and other forms of societal
disruption. By their very nature, both organisations have sought to engage with
the construction and reconstruction of history and identity, both to pursue a
vision of a common Europe and to build a sense of purpose and value in their
organisational efforts to build integration (and therefore justify their existence).
They have selected particular policy instruments, which Hood (1983) defines as
the tools by which actors implement their governance strategies. The core
research question is: how do these two institutions seek to intervene and make
people engage with memories, histories and identities by creating cultural heritage
institutions and instruments?
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| title |
9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf
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| spellingShingle |
9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf
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| title_short |
9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf
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| title_full |
9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf
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| title_fullStr |
9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf
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| title_full_unstemmed |
9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf
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| title_sort |
9781138589469_oachapter3.pdf
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| publisher |
Taylor & Francis
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| publishDate |
2019
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| _version_ |
1799945270337732608
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