4.6 Article

Sustainable Biocultural Heritage Management and Communication: The Case of Digital Narrative for UNESCO Marine World Heritage of Outstanding Universal Value

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13031449

Keywords

marine heritage; biocultural heritage; heritage management; heritage communication; digital narrative; social media; Instagram; UNESCO; marine protected areas of outstanding universal value; sustainability

Funding

  1. European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF) of the European Union (EU) [863524]

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This study analyzes the digital narrative footprint of UNESCO's Marine World Heritage on social media, revealing a lack of shared management and communication strategy, as well as a disconnect between the biological and socio-ecological ecosystems in marine heritage management and communication. The findings indicate a need to strengthen marine heritage management and communication in order to align with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and the Ocean Literacy Decade.
The paper addresses sustainability, heritage, management, and communication from UNESCO's Marine World Heritage (MWH) perspective, analyzing its digital narrative footprint through social media. It aims to understand how MWH is conceptualized, managed, and communicated and whether it is framed with sustainability and biocultural values facilitating interactivity, engagement, and multimodal knowledge. Hence, a content analysis of the Instagram accounts of the MWH of Outstanding Universal Value (OUV) sites and protected areas has been conducted. The study included evidence from their Instagram profile, posts, features, and reactions. The findings indicated the dearth of a management and communication strategy being shared among and across UNESCO's MWH of OUV sites and protected areas, capturing the lifeworld and the voice of the marine heritage as unified. They also revealed that nature and human, and biological and socio-ecological ecosystems of MWH of OUV sites and protected areas are not interlinked in marine heritage management and communication featuring the whole and the entirety of the marine heritage site ecosystem. The lack of this expansion of meaning and engagement does not facilitate the shift of the route in the marine-scape, from discovery and being listed as World Heritage to human-nature interaction, diversity, dynamicity, and ocean literacy. The study contributes to setting the ground rules for strengthening marine heritage management and communication in light of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Ocean Literacy Decade (2021-2030).

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