Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)

The pace at which cities grow and its impact on heritage management has meant that those heritage assets not linked to the traditionally monumental have been directly doomed to oblivion. The purpose of this article is to present a research methodology backed up by multidisciplinarity and stakeholder...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Julia Rey-Pérez, Victoria Domínguez-Ruiz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/22/9628
id doaj-5f68302d631245cfacf56adb50b21819
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5f68302d631245cfacf56adb50b218192020-11-25T04:11:10ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-11-01129628962810.3390/su12229628Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)Julia Rey-Pérez0Victoria Domínguez-Ruiz1Instituto Universitario de Arquitectura y Ciencias de la Construcción, Departamento de Historia, Teoría y Composición Arquitectónicas, Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura, Universidad de Sevilla, Av. Reina Mercedes 2, 41012 Seville, SpainInstituto Universitario de Arquitectura y Ciencias de la Construcción, Departamento de Construcciones Arquitectónicas I, Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura, Universidad de Sevilla, Av. Reina Mercedes 2, 41012 Seville, SpainThe pace at which cities grow and its impact on heritage management has meant that those heritage assets not linked to the traditionally monumental have been directly doomed to oblivion. The purpose of this article is to present a research methodology backed up by multidisciplinarity and stakeholders’ diversity that allows us to highlight the values and singular aspects of this rural heritage. To achieve this, a methodology was devised that is divided into three phases: mapping of human, cultural, and natural resources based on studies undertaken by the Public Sector Administration, experts, and the citizens themselves. The second phase involved the establishment of what to protect amongst all the stakeholders involved. Finally, the third stage entails integration of the information within an urban development framework. In order to work on the development of a diagnosis from three highly different approaches, Geographic Information Systems was used as information management tools, as a means of contrasting it and performing a comprehensive analysis of the same. The development of such a holistic approach provided a patrimonial map of essential resources in the municipality to be taken into account to shape sustainable development strategies inherent to a rural environment of low density. The lack of this comprehensive approach when managing rural heritage in which citizens take on centre stage in decision-making processes unearths two fundamental issues: firstly, the ascertainment of the existence of cultural heritage hitherto abandoned, alongside the need to endow urban governance powers to the public administration, as it falls to them to spearhead this shift in public management.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/22/9628historic urban landscapeurban governanceUNESCO heritageprotectionterritorycultural heritage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Rey-Pérez
Victoria Domínguez-Ruiz
spellingShingle Julia Rey-Pérez
Victoria Domínguez-Ruiz
Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)
Sustainability
historic urban landscape
urban governance
UNESCO heritage
protection
territory
cultural heritage
author_facet Julia Rey-Pérez
Victoria Domínguez-Ruiz
author_sort Julia Rey-Pérez
title Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)
title_short Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)
title_full Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)
title_fullStr Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)
title_full_unstemmed Multidisciplinarity, Citizen Participation and Geographic Information System, Cross-Cutting Strategies for Sustainable Development in Rural Heritage. The Case Study of Valverde de Burguillos (Spain)
title_sort multidisciplinarity, citizen participation and geographic information system, cross-cutting strategies for sustainable development in rural heritage. the case study of valverde de burguillos (spain)
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-11-01
description The pace at which cities grow and its impact on heritage management has meant that those heritage assets not linked to the traditionally monumental have been directly doomed to oblivion. The purpose of this article is to present a research methodology backed up by multidisciplinarity and stakeholders’ diversity that allows us to highlight the values and singular aspects of this rural heritage. To achieve this, a methodology was devised that is divided into three phases: mapping of human, cultural, and natural resources based on studies undertaken by the Public Sector Administration, experts, and the citizens themselves. The second phase involved the establishment of what to protect amongst all the stakeholders involved. Finally, the third stage entails integration of the information within an urban development framework. In order to work on the development of a diagnosis from three highly different approaches, Geographic Information Systems was used as information management tools, as a means of contrasting it and performing a comprehensive analysis of the same. The development of such a holistic approach provided a patrimonial map of essential resources in the municipality to be taken into account to shape sustainable development strategies inherent to a rural environment of low density. The lack of this comprehensive approach when managing rural heritage in which citizens take on centre stage in decision-making processes unearths two fundamental issues: firstly, the ascertainment of the existence of cultural heritage hitherto abandoned, alongside the need to endow urban governance powers to the public administration, as it falls to them to spearhead this shift in public management.
topic historic urban landscape
urban governance
UNESCO heritage
protection
territory
cultural heritage
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/22/9628
work_keys_str_mv AT juliareyperez multidisciplinaritycitizenparticipationandgeographicinformationsystemcrosscuttingstrategiesforsustainabledevelopmentinruralheritagethecasestudyofvalverdedeburguillosspain
AT victoriadominguezruiz multidisciplinaritycitizenparticipationandgeographicinformationsystemcrosscuttingstrategiesforsustainabledevelopmentinruralheritagethecasestudyofvalverdedeburguillosspain
_version_ 1724418585766395904