Networks, Markets & People

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Networks, Markets & People

  • Networks, Markets & People International Symposium

    May 22, 2024 – May 24, 2024

    Networks, Markets & People for transitioning settlement systems.
    Communities, Institutions and Enterprises towards post-humanism epistemologies and AI challenges

    The 2024 edition of International Symposium “Networks, Markets & People” (#NMP2024) aims to promote the scientific debate about the effects that the contemporary environmental, technological, social and economic global challenges produce on settlement systems, especially in Inner Areas and metropolitan cities of the Mediterranean basin.

    The Networks, Markets & People International Symposium is promoted by the UNESCO MED LAB – Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria (Italy), with ASTRI Scientific Association and the National Italian Committee of ICOMOS, in partnership with a qualified international network of academic institutions and scientific societies. The Symposium is mainly supported by: CETRAD – Centre for Transdisciplinary Development Studies, University of Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Vila Real (Portugal), NEUROLAB – DICEAM Department, Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria (Italy), GRUPO ANTE – University of Santiago de Compostela (Spain), and LABOREM – Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria (Italy).

    May 22th-24th, 2024 Symposium

Cross. Centro studi storici per l’architettura, la città, l’ambiente

  • One needs a town. Studies and perspectives for abandoned or depopulated small towns

    November 7, 2019 – November 9, 2019

    IMPORTANT: the submission deadline has been extended until 9 April 2018

     

    One needs a town, if only for the pleasure of leaving it.
    A town means not being alone, knowing that in the people, the trees, the soil,
    there is something of yourself, that even when you're not there it stays and waits for you.

    Cesare Pavese, The moon and the bonfires (1950)

     

    The conference aims at analysing the effects of processes of abandonment on the tangible and intangible cultural heritage of European small towns and at identifying possible strategies for their social and economic re-launch.

    Today, in some countries, including Italy, the phenomenon of depopulation is dramatic: notwithstanding the recent increase of interest towards cultural heritage and attention to social and environmental problems related to big urban areas, in reality, many small towns and villages continue to lose inhabitants.

    The history of European small towns, often located in peripheral, internal or mountain areas, almost always concerns people moving away, abandonments and, only rarely, people coming back. Migrations, falling birth rates, natural catastrophes, epidemics, wars, climate change, new road systems, cultural and social transformations: these are only a few of the numerous factors which, over the time - singularly or jointly, suddenly or gradually -, have led people to leave their places of origin.

    In this perspective, the conference intends to be a moment of in-depth analysis on the reasons that caused, and continue to cause, the depopulation of villages and small towns.

    The conference intends also to investigate the effects – permanent or reversible – which those processes have produced on the landscape and in the local communities. In losing inhabitants, in fact, local communities risk losing their cultural identity, architectural heritage deteriorates rapidly, working activities are abandoned and ancient traditions risk being forgotten. In addition, hydro geological instability often relevant increases due to the absence of land maintenance and, simultaneously, urban congestion grows unsustainably.

    Moreover, the conference intends to launch a wide discussion on possible strategies aimed at contrasting depopulation phenomena and identifying solutions in order to valorise abandoned small towns.

    The conference will have a transdisciplinary approach through which the disciplines that traditionally study the processes of transformation of architectural heritage and landscape – such as restoration, history of architecture, urban history – may productively work with the support of different fields, such as sociology, anthropology, history of economy, urban and territorial geography.

    Call for papers

    Submission online

    Registration Fees

    Deadlines