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Small Island Developing States

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Titre
Small Island Developing States
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World Heritage Review n°66 Small Island Developing States
Date :
jeudi 7 février 2013
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Description

Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are islands of the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans.

The UNESCO World Heritage Programme for Small Island Developing States coordinates and develops activities in these areas, providing support for the preparation of new nominations to the World Heritage List, and conservation and management assistance for sites inscribed on the List with a view to sustainable development. 

These island states are spread through the oceans of the world, and not all are commonly known. Many of them attest to striking geological processes and a number bear the meaningful footprints of significant events such as colonization and sometimes of great crimes, slavery in particular, that should not be passed over in silence. Nor should we forget the great epic of transpacific migration that populated that ocean’s islands: this extraordinary and still insufficiently documented story is surely foremost among the memorable events which marked that part of the world.

The SIDS were recognized as a distinct group of developing countries in June 1992, at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, and have since become a point of focus for World Heritage identification and protection. The present issue of World Heritage is devoted specifically to this subject, with articles touching upon countries of this group which now have sites listed as World Heritage. Among them, Mauritius now has two World Heritage sites, the most recently listed (in 2008) being Le Morne Cultural Landscape, which commemorates the island’s founding experience of slavery. Le Morne Mountain is in fact a vestige of an extinct volcano surmounted by the impressive, solidified remains of the lava plug, which once served as a refuge to runaway slaves, known as Maroons. The site thus commemorates resistance to slavery on the island, asserting the dignity of the enslaved. The other site, listed in 2006, commemorates the hundreds of thousands of indentured workers who flocked to Mauritius when slavery was prohibited. The modest vestige commemorating this practice includes what remains of the buildings known as Aapravasi Ghat, through which newcomers to the island had to pass on arrival.

Rock Islands Southern Lagoon of the island state of Palau, listed in 2012, contains important traces of human occupation reaching back 3,000 years, and thus provide significant evidence touching upon the transpacific migration which set out from Southern China some 8,000 years ago. At over 400,000 km2, Phoenix Islands Protected Area in Kiribati is the largest designated Marine Protected Area in the world, with over 800 species of fauna, and Historic Bridgetown and its Garrison in Barbados, with its historic architecture from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, testifies to the spread of the British colonial empire in the Atlantic. We are pleased to introduce these little-known treasures and the challenges of protecting them. Much remains to be done to identify Outstanding Universal Value on these islands, and the more we know about them, the more we can all contribute to their preservation. 

Table of Contents

World Heritage in Small Island Developing States
Culture as the fourth pillar of sustainable development

The peoples and cultures of the SIDS are testament to human ingenuity in reaching these lands, utilizing their resources and building sustainable ways of life.

Preserving the Pacific

Ocean Phoenix Islands Protected Area
With limited financial resources, Kiribati participates in the conservation of this great maritime World Heritage site.

Mauritius
Memories of slavery and indentured labour 

The Mauritian sites, Aapravasi Ghat and Le Morne Cultural Landscape, serve to establish memorial tourism activities relating to the slave route.

The Rock Islands
Traces of an epic
The remains of stonework villages, as well as burial sites and rock art, bear testimony to the organization of small island communities over some three millennia.

Confronting Barbados’ colonial past
Reclaiming heritage
Barbados is working on projects that should balance the needs of locals, visitors, heritage practitioners and investors to create public heritage spaces that instil pride and purpose in communities living with their past.

Close-up
  • Capacity building in the SIDS
    For each of the SIDS regions, a different strategy needs to be deployed, due to the different levels of implementation of the World Heritage Convention, development of institutional networks, regional needs assessments and action plans.
Interview
  • Alissandra Cummins
    Director, Barbados Museum & Historical Society.
Advisory Bodies
  • ICOMOS: Filling the gaps in the World Heritage List.
Conventions
  • COP 11 – Eleventh Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity.
  • International Youth Forum Go4BioDiv at Sundarbans National Park
In Danger
  • Rapid Response Facility to help rebuild Okapi Wildlife Reserve field station;
  • Herat and Jam: outcomes and new priorities;
  • World Heritage properties in Mali under attack.
Preservation
  • 40th anniversary celebrations close in style;
  • UNESCO to showcase climate change adaptation;
  • World Heritage forests store billions of tonnes of carbon; Vigan in the Philippines: Model of Best Practices;
  • Launching of the Africa Nature Programme;
  • Risk Preparedness Pedagogical Programme.
Outreach
  • World Heritage youth-related activities in Asia;
  • IUCN World Conservation Congress celebrates the 40th anniversary of the World Heritage Convention;
  • Tribute to a renowned conservationist;
  • Panasonic and UNESCO organize eco-learning;
  • Indigenous peoples in World Heritage;
  • Over 300 delegates mark 40th anniversary in Africa;
  • Summer Academy celebrates the 40th anniversary of the World Heritage Convention;
  • The Case of the Lost World Heritage, 7th episode.
Auteur :
World Heritage Centre
Copyright :
© UNESCO
Langue : English en
Rédacteur : UNESCO
Éditeur : UNESCO
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