This thesis explores heritage-making dynamics in relation to universal accessibility and community participation in contexts shaped by collective memory and human rights. Focusing on former prisons converted into memory sites in Argentina, Italy, France, and Senegal since 1978, it analyzes how local communities participate in heritage valorization and how these places incorporate physical, cognitive, and symbolic accessibility criteria. The methodology is based on a comparative approach involving fieldwork, interviews, and document analysis. The study highlights the tensions between official and lived memory, as well as the challenges of inclusion in contemporary heritage transmission.
Ce mémoire explore les dynamiques de patrimonialisation en relation avec l’accessibilité universelle et la participation communautaire dans des contextes marqués par la mémoire collective et les droits humains. En prenant comme étude de cas les anciennes prisons devenues lieux de mémoire en Argentine, en Italie, en France et au Sénégal depuis 1978, cette recherche analyse comment les communautés locales participent aux processus de valorisation patrimoniale et comment ces lieux intègrent des critères d’accessibilité physique, cognitive et symbolique. La méthodologie comprend une approche comparative fondée sur des études de terrain, des entretiens et l’analyse documentaire. Ce travail met en lumière les tensions entre mémoire officielle et mémoire vécue, ainsi que les enjeux d’inclusion dans la transmission patrimoniale contemporaine.
« Accessibilité universelle et participation communautaire dans les processus de patrimonialisation. Étude de cas : anciennes prisons et lieux de mémoire en Argentine, en Italie, en France et au Sénégal (1978 – aujourd’hui). »
MORALES, DANIEL JUAN
2024/2025
Abstract
This thesis explores heritage-making dynamics in relation to universal accessibility and community participation in contexts shaped by collective memory and human rights. Focusing on former prisons converted into memory sites in Argentina, Italy, France, and Senegal since 1978, it analyzes how local communities participate in heritage valorization and how these places incorporate physical, cognitive, and symbolic accessibility criteria. The methodology is based on a comparative approach involving fieldwork, interviews, and document analysis. The study highlights the tensions between official and lived memory, as well as the challenges of inclusion in contemporary heritage transmission.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Morales_Daniel.pdf
accesso aperto
Dimensione
3.36 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
3.36 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
The text of this website © Università degli studi di Padova. Full Text are published under a non-exclusive license. Metadata are under a CC0 License
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/91251