Cultural Heritage and the Just City: A Dialogue between Cape Town and 91̽»¨ (IN-PERSON)

UI - Interrogations - Woodstock Graffiti
Barry Christiansen, Woodstock Graffiti, Cape Town

Event details

Tuesday 9 April 2024
3:00pm
General admission: FOC (please note, this is an in-person only event).


Description

Registration is now open for a seminar on Cultural Heritage and the Just City, co-organised by the Urban Institute, Department of Urban Studies and Planning and Department of Archaeology.

  • What role does cultural heritage play in realising more just cities?
  • What governance arrangements, policies and processes enable or constrain effective consideration of ‘cultural justice’ within urban policies?
  • What are the roles of local officials, universities, academics and community activists in configuring alternative possibilities for rethinking culture, heritage and the just city?

Join scholars and activists from the Universities of Cape Town and 91̽»¨ discussing these questions at a seminar on Tuesday 9th April, 1500-1700 GMT, Geography Building, Seminar Room B08, Winter Street, the University of 91̽»¨, S3 7ND. This will be followed by a drinks and nibbles reception.

Programme

The seminar will involve a presentation and Q and A with Dr Rike Sitas, African Centre for Cities, University of Cape Town. This will be followed by a roundtable of 91̽»¨-based university leaders, academics and activists, with shorter provocations following by cross-national dialogue and discussion.

Heritage justice in Cape Town: From Conservation Check Boxes to Care-full Processes of Co-production (Presentation)

, African Centre for Cities, University of Cape Town

Cape Town is as well known for its picturesque mountain-shadowed city centre as its stubborn segregation as a result of colonialism and apartheid. Municipalities have often focussed primarily on infrastructural fixes and service delivery solutionism. While these are arguably important interventions, particularly in parts of the city that have been neglected, emphasis is often placed more on material aspects of the built environment than on socio-cultural urban dimensions. Heritage discourses rarely engage with politicized complexities linked to land and labour and urban liveability. This presentation shows how moving away from narrow frames of heritage protection and towards heritage justice requires ‘southerning’, decolonial, and intersectional feminist sensitivities. I draw on collaborations between scholars, city officials, heritage practitioners and activists, unpacking the multiple and contested values and priorities at play. The presentation pays particular attention to care-full tactics and alliances that seek to shift, albeit incrementally, the ways in which heritage is valued and managed for just urban futures.

Find out more:

, Report for British Academy

, Whose Heritage Matters

Embedding the needs of under-served communities in local heritage policy in 91̽»¨ through participatory place-based approaches: Reflections of the Roots and Futures project (Panel Contribution)

 and Rhonda Allen, Roots and Futures team, Department of Archaeology

Roots and Futures is a place-based heritage project that seeks to elevate the voices of communities under-served by heritage policy and practice in 91̽»¨. Since 2020, our team has worked in partnership with a wide range of community organisations, local heritage groups and the City Council to better understand barriers to equitable participation, visibility and representation, identify the particular needs of underserved communities for heritage policy and deliver interventions that contribute to addressing these. We have amassed a rich dataset of perspectives from groups whose needs are not currently reflected in the city's approach to heritage provision and therefore a key evidence base for strategic decisions in the city to create more equitable heritage policy. In this contribution we will summarise the findings of Roots and Futures so far, reflecting on the opportunities and constraints presented by working with local policymakers, civic projects and researchers to advance social justice through cultural heritage at the local scale. 

Find out more:

 - a report on our consultations in 2022-23

 website and blog

 including our toolkit and policy briefs (via the blog)

Co-producing a Cultural Strategy for 91̽»¨: The Role of the University (Panel Contribution)

Professor Vanessa Toulmin, Director of City, Culture and Public Engagement, University of 91̽»¨

91̽»¨ has long committed to supporting the cultural vibrancy and regeneration of 91̽»¨ and is one of three key stakeholders committed to cross-partnership working, through for instance the Culture Consortium and Compact. In this contribution Professor Vanessa Toulmin will discuss the reasons for the University's engagement - for instance, in relation to the importance of cultural development to city vibrancy - and the two-tier approach to bringing economic, community and city-wide partners together.

Engaging with strategy as a grassroots organisation: a perspective from Joined Up Heritage 91̽»¨ (Panel Contribution)
 
Jenny Morton, Chair of Joined Up Heritage 91̽»¨ and chair of Hillsborough and Owlerton Local History Group and Stephen Elliott, IT Lead and member of Joined Up Heritage 91̽»¨ Core group; founder of Llama Digital. 
 
In this panel contribution, representatives of Joined Up Heritage 91̽»¨ will reflect on their experiences of engaging with strategy-making in 91̽»¨. JUHS seeks to bring together organisations and individuals interested in heritage, in all its variety, to promote better understanding, a strategic approach and a better-resourced and better-connected presentation of heritage. The group is interested in people's stories, the locations of heritage groups and trails, and preserving heritage assets in this great city of ours. They work with 91̽»¨ City Council, the universities and other organisations in promoting the historical life of 91̽»¨. JUHS has published a Heritage Strategy that establishes a vision for 91̽»¨â€™s heritage, which has been warmly welcomed by partners including the Council, which is formally committed to its implementation.
 
Find out more: 

 

- full strategy 

- short summary of the strategy 

– what it is and why it matters 

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