26 giugno 2019
Sala di Ulisse - Palazzo Poggi, via Zamboni 31, Bologna
Dalle 9:00 alle 19:00
On 26 June 2019, UNA Europa will hold its third workshop on “Heritage of Knowledge and Sustainable Management for the Cultural Route of European Universities” in Bologna.
The oldest European universities were established at the centre of urban settlements. They have played a pivotal role in designing the urban fabric of many European cities for centuries and continue to do so today. As the oldest university in Europe, Universita di Bologna is a perfect example of this phenomenon. However, university staff, students and visitors are often unaware of the universities’ heritage of knowledge. This is the starting point for the UNA Europa workshops.
The focus of the workshop in Bologna will be on the values and the sense of European belonging, embedded in this heritage of knowledge. The workshop will also reflect upon the societal contribution of universities with regards skills and competences in the organization, planning and coordination of knowledge. Finally, the workshop will explore the possibility of developing a route of European universities – in the footsteps of the ancient medieval routes and where students are the main players.
The meeting will take place on the fringes of the Ceremony event to celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the Bologna Process, which will be held in Bologna on 24-25 June 2019.
PROGRAMME
9.00 - 9.15 | Registration with coffee
9.15 | Welcome address
Prorector Alessandra Scagliarini (University of Bologna)
Valentina Orioli (Municipality of Bologna)
Patrizia Battilani (University of Bologna - Cast)
9.45 - 11.15 | Session 1. Sustainable management for an academic heritage
Introduction by Luca Zan (University of Bologna)
In this session, we will enquire about the role of heritage management in a sustainability perspective. The way in which academic heritage is preserved, promoted and used is not neutral and depends on the characteristics of internal organizational processes and patterns relating to the given university. Since the role of cultural heritage in our society is not only impacting the economy, but also other social dimensions such as cultural capital, social responsibility and democracy, we will here enquire about the role of universities’ museums, collections and building in a managerial and governance perspective supporting cultural Europeanisation.
Joanna Slaga (Jagiellonian University)
Roberto Grandi (University of Bologna, Municipality of Bologna)
Alain Duplouy (UP1)
Annalisa Managlia (University Museum Network - University of Bologna)
Chiara Panciroli and Anita Macauda (University of Bologna)
11.15 - 12.45 | Session 2. Heritage of knowledge: how can European Universities understand and develop their heritage built on knowledge?
Introduction by Maria Gravari Barbas (UP1)
Heritage is conceptualised as ‘the meanings attached in the present to the past’, and is regarded as knowledge situated within a social, political and cultural context. Since the first “communities of practice” were set up, a fundamental element of the University is “civil knowledge”. This was a kind of network based on peer-to-peer collaborative activities aiming at strengthening not only members’ skills but also the capacities of the entire society (Snyder and Briggs, 2010, p. 5). Indeed, the concept “community of practice” (CoP) is commonly considered as the first knowledge known to human beings that was based on social structures, where place attachment and intangible heritage preservation provide an accountable link between the individual, the group, and place in the broader social order.
Roberto Balzani (University Museum Network - University of Bologna)
Natalia.Bahlawan (Jagiellonian University)
Carolina Rodriguez Lopez (Università Complutense Madrid)
Christine Beese (Freie Universitat – Berlin)
Edward Hollis (University of Edinburgh)
12:45 – 13:45 | Lunch
14.00 - 15.30 | European Universities Route: roadmap and next steps
Maria Gravari Barbas (UP1); Luisella Pavan-Woolfe (Council of Europe); Alessia Mariotti (University of Bologna - Cast); Patrizia Battilani (University of Bologna - CAST)
15.30 - 16.15 | Brainstorming in two parallel workshops
Atelier 1- Sustainable management | Atelier 2- Heritage of knowledge and the European cultural routes |
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Rapporteur: Roberto Grandi (University of Bologna, Municiplity of Bologna) | Rapporteur: Carolina Rodriguez Lopez (Università Complutense Madrid) |
Annalisa Managlia (University Museum Network - University of Bologna) | Roberto Balzani (University Museum Network - University of Bologna) |
Jan van der Berg (Ku Leuven) | Alessia Mariotti (University of Bologna - CAST) |
Joanna Slaga (Jagiellonian University) | Chiara Panciroli (University of Bologna - CAST) |
Staff University Libraries (UP1) | Christine Beese (Freie Universitat –Berlin) |
Antonella Mascio (University of Bologna) | Dominique Vanneste (Ku Leuven) |
Elena Corradini (Unimore) | Natalia Bahalawan (Jagiellonian University) |
Benedetta Castiglioni (Unipd) | Edward Hollis |
Alain Dupouy (UP1) | Romeo Farinella (Unife) |
Krzysztof Kowalski (Jagiellonian University) | |
Giacomo Nerozzi (Staff University Libraries - University of Bologna) |
16.15 - 17.00 | Restitution of the Conclusion of the two workshops (Roberto Grandi; Carolina Rodriguez Lopez) and general discussion
17.15 - 18.45 | Visit to Palazzo Poggi
Introduction by Fiorella Dallari (University of Bologna - CAST)