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Adélie De Marre

Participates in 1 Session
Adélie De Marre is a PhD candidate in Environmental Planning and Design at the Université de Montréal, Canada. Her research project focuses on the use of the concept of "natural beauty" in the designation and management of protected areas, especially in the context of the UNESCO World Heritage Convention. Specialized in World Heritage issues, Adélie worked at the ICOMOS International Secretariat in Paris. She is also involved in the work of the Canada Research Chair in Built Heritage at the Université de Montréal, taking part in the Oral Archives of the World Heritage Convention project and in a study on the politicization of the World Heritage Committee.

Sessions in which Adélie De Marre participates

Saturday 14 December, 2019

Time Zone: (GMT+10:00) Canberra
1:30 PM
1:30 PM - 2:00 PM | 30 minutes
Heritage and Conflicts

This paper examines the concept of natural beauty with respect to the designation of sites to UNESCO's World Heritage List: it will explore this criterion in light of the fact that beauty is subjective, culturally specific and non-universal, unlike the other measurable criteria. In order to illustrate this issue, the author traces the history of UNESCO world heritage regulations as it leans heavily on historic concepts of wilderness, the picturesque, and the sublime. This paper will explain p...