1) Participation of local communities,
2) Expansion of governance system where the role
of the private sector is emphasized,
3) Need for sustainable development for the future
of the planet, and
4) Importance of cultural diversity and intangible
heritage becoming the focus in conservation
and management policies
2 EXPANSION OF
INTERNATIONAL AWARENESS
OF INTANGIBLE CULTURAL
HERITAGE
With an increasing international awareness of
intangible heritage, UNESCO adopted the
Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible
Cultural Heritage in 2003 as the first international
legal instrument in the field of culture. The
convention was widely supported by countries
particularly in Asia and Africa as soon as it was
adopted and currently has 178 states parties since its
birth. It is recognized as one of UNESCO’s most
well-known and influential cultural instrument
together with the World Heritage Convention.
Intangible cultural heritage, transmitted from
generation to generation, is constantly recreated by
communities and groups in response to their
environment, their interaction with nature and their
history. It provides us with a sense of identity and
continuity, thus promoting respect for cultural
diversity and human creativity. In accordance with
provisions of 2003 Convention, the intangible
cultural heritage means 1) the practices,
representations, expressions, knowledge, skills – 2) as
well as the instruments, objects, artefacts and cultural
spaces associated therewith. The convention is
classifying the ICH elements into five categories,
They are oral traditions and expressions including
language; performing arts; social practices, rituals
and festive events; knowledge and practices
concerning nature and the universe; and traditional
craftsmanship.
In order to safeguard elements spanning across the
above five categories of ICH elements, all measures
have to be taken to ensure their viability. The 2003
Convention recommends the following nine
measures- “identification, documentation, research,
preservation, protection, promotion, enhancement,
transmission, particularly through formal and non-
formal education, as well as the revitalization of the
various aspects of such heritage”.
3 INTANGIBEL HERITAGE AT
RISK
According to the ICOMOS’s report “Heritage at
Risk”, damage to the intangible value of cultural
heritage from the destruction of traditional values due
to commercialization, rapid changes in lifestyle,
destruction of community due to migration, aging
populations, ghettoization, population declines etc. is
becoming more severe with time. Of course, the top
of physical destruction of heritage mainly caused by
development, natural disasters and wars.
This is also true in Korea’s traditional villages,
designated as World Heritage sites. Village
populations are dwindling as younger generations
leave and residents grow older, making it difficult to
maintain the traditional ways of life. The
safeguarding and transmission of heritage is not the
responsibility of a single nation or state but of the
world as a whole. The UNESCO Medium-term
Program and Budget, C/4 states the need to protect
vulnerable intangible heritage very clearly as follows:
“....in discussing the safeguarding of cultural
heritage, intangible cultural heritage is an area that
cannot be overlooked. Intangible heritage, including
symbols and expressions transmitted through oral
tradition, artistic and literary forms, language, way of
life, beliefs and myths, rituals, value systems,
traditional knowledge and various skills and
techniques, are targets of safeguarding.
The current situation on cultural heritage is grave
indeed. Industrialization, rapid urbanization, serious
pollution, various signs of climate change and large-
scale tourism are causing damage, destruction and
loss of cultural heritage. Risk to intangible heritage is
at a peak, as changes in the economic structures
within societies are leading to the extinction of
traditional ways of life.”
Summing up, intangible heritages are diminishing
and being decontextualized in its significance due to
changes in their natural setting or isolation from
cultural spaces (development, migration etc.), rapid
changes in lifestyle (elimination of cultural meaning)
and over-emphasis on the material world (break from
traditions).
Since implementing the Cultural Properties
Protection Act in 1962, Korea has been putting
remarkable efforts and investments into the
protection of tangible and intangible heritage. Key
factors behind the Korean policy were almost the
same of global challenges and trends. They were
urgent needs to 1) recover identity following
liberation from Japanese rules, 2) overcome the side
effects of rapid socioeconomic development, 3)