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UN Sustainable Development Goals

GOAL 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities

Description

A monument is a type of structure that was explicitly created to commemorate a person or event, or which has become relevant to a social group as a part of their remembrance of historic times or cultural heritage, due to its artistic, historical, political, technical or architectural importance. Examples of monuments include statues, (war) memorials, historical buildings, archaeological sites, and cultural assets. If there is a public interest in its preservation, a monument can for example be listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Cultural Heritage and Conflict gives the next definition of monument:

Monuments result from social practices of construction or conservation of material artifacts through which the ideology of their promoters is manifested. The concept of the modern monument emerged with the development of capital and the nation-state in the fifteenth century when the ruling classes began to build and conserve what were termed monuments. These practices proliferated significantly in the nineteenth century, creating the ideological frameworks for their conservation as a universal humanist duty. The twentieth century has marked a movement toward some monuments being conceived as cultural heritage in the form of remains to be preserved, and concerning commemorative monuments, there has been a shift toward the abstract counter monument. In both cases, their conflictive nature is explicit in the need for their conservation, given that a fundamental component of state action following the construction or declaration of monuments is litigating vandalism and iconoclasm. However, not all monuments represent the interests of nation-states and the ruling classes; their forms are also employed beyond Western borders and by social movements as part of subversive practices which use monuments as a means of expression, where forms previously exclusive to European elites are used by new social groups or for generating anti-monumental artifacts that directly challenge the state and the ruling classes. In conflicts, therefore, it is not so much the monument which is relevant but rather what happens to the communities that participate in its construction or destruction and their instigation of forms of social interaction.

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Organizations relating to Monuments

World Monuments Fund / New York NY, USA / Est. 1965
Cairns Group / Est. 1986
Olof Palme Memorial Fund for International Understanding and Common Security / Stockholm, Sweden / Est. 1986
Strømme Foundation / Kristiansand, Norway / Est. 1976
Evatt Foundation / Sydney NSW, Australia / Est. 1979
Association franco-européenne de Waterloo / Nivelles, Belgium / Est. 1986
Rotary Yoneyama Memorial Foundation / Tokyo, Japan / Est. 1956
Memorial Foundation of Latin America / Sao Paulo, Brazil / Est. 1989
Fédération Européenne des Sites Clunisiens / Cluny, France / Est. 1994
Commemorative Collectors Society / Newark, UK / Est. 1972
Church Monuments Society / Okehampton, UK / Est. 1979
Canadian Tribute to Human Rights / Ottawa ON, Canada / Est. 1983
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation / New York NY, USA / Est. 1925
International Memorial Holocaust Fund - Kharkov's Drobitsky Yar / Bat Yam, Israel / Est. 1989
International Roerich Memorial Trust / Naggar, India
Convention Concerning the Transfer to the French State of the Property in the Sites of British Monuments / Est. 1938
Agreement Regarding British War Memorial Cemeteries and Graves in Egypt / Est. 1937
Treaty on the Protection of Artistic and Scientific Institutions and Historic Monuments / Est. 1935
Agreement Concerning the Voluntary Contributions to be Given for the Execution of the Project to Preserve and Develop the Monumental Site of Mohenjodaro / Est. 1980
International Monuments Trust
Fundación Canovas del Castillo / Est. 1980
ICOMOS International Committee on the Pacific Islands
Errol Barrow Memorial Trust
Europe et liberté / Paris, France / Est. 1988
Gandhi Memorial International Foundation / Orinda CA, USA / Est. 1983
Réseau des centres européens - lieux historiques / Villeneuve-lès-Avignon, France
European Committee on Monuments and Sites
Chanoinesses Régulières du Saint-Sépulcre de Jérusalem
Union of European Castles
Manorial Society of Great Britain / London, UK / Est. 1906
Europäischer Kongress über die Nutzung, Bewirtschaftung und Erhaltung historisch bedeutender Gebäude
European Conference of Phaleristic Societies
Pontifical Commission for Sacred Archeology / Vatican City, Vatican / Est. 1852
Battelle Memorial Institute / Columbus OH, USA / Est. 1925
International Coordinating Committee on the Safeguarding and Development of the Historic Site of Angkor / Phnom Penh, Cambodia / Est. 1993
International Catacomb Society / Boston MA, USA / Est. 1980
World Heritage Committee / Paris, France / Est. 1976
ICOMOS International Committee on Economics of Conservation / Naples, Italy / Est. 1988
ICOMOS - IFLA International Scientific Committee on Cultural Landscapes / Charlotte VT, USA / Est. 1970
ICOMOS International Committee on Interpretation and Presentation / Port Melbourne VIC, Australia
ICOMOS International Committee on Historic Cities, Towns and Villages / Brussels, Belgium / Est. 1982
ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Legal, Administrative and Financial Issues / Est. 1997
ICOMOS International Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage / Delhi, India / Est. 2005
ICOMOS International Polar Heritage Committee / Canberra ACT, Australia / Est. 2000
ICOMOS International Scientific Committee for the Conservation of Stained Glass / Est. 1984
ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Risk Preparedness / Istanbul, Türkiye / Est. 1997
ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Shared Built Heritage / Lisbon, Portugal / Est. 1998
ICOMOS International Committee on the Underwater Cultural Heritage / Buenos Aires, Argentina / Est. 1991
ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Analysis and Restoration of Structures of Architectural Heritage / Charenton-le-Pont, France / Est. 1996
ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Archaeological Heritage Management / Charenton-le-Pont, France / Est. 1985

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