Cultural Landscape Management Guidelines and International Training Program
In 1992, the World Heritage Committee recognized cultural landscapes
as a new category eligible for the World Heritage List created by
the World Heritage Convention, an international treaty dating from
1972. In response to the growing number of landscapes being added
to the World Heritage List, the UNESCO World Heritage Centre (Paris),
in cooperation with ICCROM/International Centre for the Study of
the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property (Rome), initiated
the preparation of management guidelines for cultural landscapes.
The World Heritage Centre assembled an international team to guide
this effort and to provide a nexus for an exchange network. The
guidelines are scheduled for publication in 2003

Photo: Linas Sinkevicius |
Concurrently, ICCROM, an intergovernmental organization concerned
with training and conservation of cultural heritage, is adding a
new emphasis on cultural landscapes to its Heritage Settlements
Program. This program aims to improve the integration of cultural
heritage with sustainable planning, management, and development
of heritage resources associated with human settlements, both urban
and rural. At the international level, the program provides a forum
for sharing ideas and practices. ICCROM worked with the international
team described above to design a pilot one-month training program
on cultural landscapes that was offered in November 2002.