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[Protecting Heritage places]

[Step 1 What is your heritage place?]

[Step 10 Review it!]

[Step 9 Do it!]

[Step 8 What is your plan?]

[Step 7 What do you need to do?]

[Step 2 Who has an interest]

[Step 3 What do you need to know?]

[Step 4 Why is this place important]

[Step 5 What are the issues?]

[Step 6 What do you want to achieve?]

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Protecting your heritage

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Principles for heritage conservation

These are the basic principles for natural and cultural heritage conservation.

  • Conservation is based on respecting all heritage values of the place without unwarranted emphasis on any one aspect at the expense of others.
  • Conservation of a place should include provision for its security, maintenance and future.
  • Conservation should involve the least possible physical intervention: do as much as necessary and as little as possible.
  • Conservation of a place should make use of all disciplines and experience that can contribute to the study and safeguarding of a place.
  • Conservation requires accurate recording about decisions and changes to the place.
  • Where threats or potential threats of serious or irreversible damage exist, lack of full scientific certainty should not be used as a reason for postponing measures to prevent degradation (the precautionary principle).

In guidelines currently being developed for Indigenous heritage, three additional principles apply to the conservation of Indigenous heritage places:

  • Indigenous people are the primary sources of information about the significance of their places.
  • Culturally sensitive information about indigenous heritage areas and objects should be protected from unnecessary disclosure.
  • Indigenous traditional owners and custodians have rights and obligations toward their cultural heritage places which must be recognised in their full involvement in the management of their cultural heritage.

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