PCAH’s
Sister Cultural Parks Conference Breaks New Ground in International Cooperation
The President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities and the
National Park Service Office of International Affairs in cooperation with
Mesa Verde National Park brought together more than 50 leaders from culture,
parks, tourism, philanthropy, preservation and businesses, as well as
representatives from Mexico to develop a new international approach to
collaboration, Sister Cultural Parks.
Mesa Verde National Park’s Cliff House
is one hundreds of ruins in this World Heritage site that are a living
link to earlier civilizations, which predate modern nation states and
offer new opportunities for cross-border cooperation.
To date, National Park Service Sister Park agreements have typically
addressed specific management issues shared by U.S. national parks and
counterparts abroad. Building on this framework, the conference sought
to expand on these international relationships by exploring how to enhance
the cultural connections between these sites. This includes addressing
issues of sustainability, documentation, interpretation, civic engagement
and other aspects that would help define a sister cultural park relationship.
The two and a half day meeting culminated in the signing of a Sister Cultural
Park agreement between three World Heritage sites in the U.S. and Mexico
and a world-class-site in Belize.
President’s Committee Chairman Adair
Margo described the relationship between these parks in her remarks
as a “gravitational pull among the indigenous people and cultures,
which keeps these places alive. By using the arts we can keep them alive
for future generations and form bridges between our cultures.
Keynote Speaker Tomas Ybarra-Frausto, a scholar, writer, teacher and
former foundation executive, opened the meeting by making the following
observations:
• Nature and culture are non-renewable resources
• There are rights and responsibilities of living in an international
global community, particularly in terms of World Heritage sites
• Borrowing and exchange is the basis of international relationships
• Creating communities of knowledge and sentiment across borders
is key to international cooperation
• We must understand what kind of assets we have here in the communities
and the parks
• Civic engagement between parks and citizens, parks and the community,
drawing on the arts to tell the stories of these places
Each of these ideas raised questions and connected to other issues that
were addressed in sessions throughout the meeting. For example, how do
parks and communities renew or keep alive culture and heritage; how do
you foster the emotional connections to these places (sentiment) and the
necessary knowledge to sustain those connections; or how can these sites
spur local economies by drawing on and helping to grow the human, cultural
and business capital of their communities.
Session Highlights
Sessions were designed to address issues, components and potential partners
in a Sister Cultural Park relationship and among the highlights were the
following.
Chairman Adair Margo and Peter Pino of Pueblo
Zia in New Mexico discuss an important aspect of these parks—Native
Americans, who work closely with Mesa Verde in interpreting the park’s
cultural traditions
• Sister Parks provide a means for developing international tourism,
creating cooperative approaches to interpretation and preservation and
a mechanism for working across borders
• Integrating arts and humanities into Sister Cultural park relationships
creates a broader base of stakeholders, by using the arts to engage local
communities and by creating common cultural threads that join different
World Heritage sites.
• Sister Cultural Parks also offer opportunities to commission new
work specific to parks; new partners to help develop interpretive programs;
and a means to highlight the traditions and cultures of first peoples.
The latter is key to national parks that remain living sites for Native
Americans like Mesa Verde.
• Sister Cultural Parks reflect the fact that the National Park
Service is one of the U.S’s largest cultural agencies, something
which often goes unnoticed. Yosemite National Park, for example, developed
two sister park arrangements with Chinese parks, which although focused
on management issues, were based in part on the cultural connections between
both parks.
• Critical Challenges for Sister Cultural Parks:
• Identifying committed staff in the respective parks interested
in international cooperation
• Identifying the dedicated staff needed to manage such partnerships
• Securing housing for exchanges of personnel
• Securing funding and resources to support travel
• Creating an institutional backbone to implement international
relationships
•Sister Cultural Park relationships empower communities to drive
tourism spending and development
• Models: Geotourism mapping projects. Heritage tourism-“Share
Your Heritage” workshops and principles. Each provides criteria
and a template for parks to assist in developing community-centric sustainable
development and tourism approaches.
• Sister Cultural Park relationships can help visitors understand
the cultural behavior of a place by drawing on the knowledge of local
people and turning that knowledge into an economic asset.
• Junior Ranger Programs provide a vital component to Sister Cultural
Park relationships.
• Parks become points of contact for students from different countries
to engage in international learning
• Use of the Web (such as through “Electronic Field Trips”)
provides common ground for students to meet and learn about other countries
and cultures through a curriculum focusing on the World Heritage sites
involved.
• Challenges: Helping other cultures understand U.S. icons such
as Park Ranger and other concepts that they might be unfamiliar with
• Technology developments can further protection of fragile cultural,
natural and heritage resources. High definition scanning equipment and
photography can offer accurate representation and documentation of World
Heritage sites. Model: Mesa Verde and CyArk partnership
• Private sector funders have an important role to play in supporting
sister cultural park relationships.
Each funder has its own particular mission and parameters governing any
funding that it can offer, but activities taking place under the umbrella
of a sister-park relationship are appealing to funders.
• Critical challenges
• Demonstrating tangible outcomes needed for private sector support
in the short-term is not always feasible given the often long-term nature
of outcomes that develop from the relationship.
• Lack of a cross-sector—public/private, cultural/environment--
approach to funding international sister park relationships.
• A combined effort to seek funding for several sister-park relationships
to establish a general sister park support fund should be explored.
The closing morning of the conference was devoted to developing recommendations
in the potential next steps for the Sister Cultural Parks.
Signing the Sister Parks Agreement are from
left to right: Stephen Morris, Chief, Office of International Affairs,
National Park Service; Adair Margo, PCAH Chairman; Larry Wiese, Superintendent,
Mesa Verde; Laura Pescador Canton, National Coordinator, Mexico’s
Institute of Archaeology and History; and Nelly Robles, Director, Monte
Alban.
The next steps will address the general goals of the conference:
• Take steps to help meet the goals of the Joint Communiqués
on Cultural Cooperation on preservation of cultural heritage, exchange
of artists, sustainable tourism and address broader issues related to
this, in particular the relationship between the parks and their local
communities.
• Identify some best practice components and a larger network for
learning that could be used by other interested U.S. parks to develop
similar international cultural relationships.
• Enhance the cultural connections between these World Heritage
and world-class sites by expanding exchange of artists, scholars, performers
and engaging cultural partners in community outreach efforts and interpretation.
See also:
Sister Parks Declaration—highlights
the importance of the cultural connections between the three World Heritage
sites in the U.S. and Mexico and a world class-site in Belize.
Arizona-Sonora Geotourism
Map guide—example of U.S. –Mexico partnership focusing
on a region’s natural, cultural and historic resources and connections.
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