The International National Trusts Organisation (INTO)

INTO Entebbe 2013

Conferences November 6, 2013

In 2013 the INTO Conference, Our Heritage, Our Future: Cultural diversity for responsible development was held in Entebbe, Uganda from 30 September – 4th October, attended by almost 200 delegates.

Ten years previously, the global National Trust community came together in Scotland for the 10th International Conference of National Trusts, where we agreed to work more closely together to increase efforts to conserve natural and cultural heritage in their respective communities.

It is interesting to look back at the Edinburgh Declaration of 2003 and see just how far we have come.  Those who remember the buzz of the conference discussions may not have foreseen how INTO would look in 2013 or that we would be holding our 15th such Conference in Uganda!

A learning journey

This was the first time that the National Trusts of the world had met in Africa. In addition to plenary and workshop sessions, our hosts, the Cross-Cultural Foundation of Uganda, organised a series of “Learning Journeys”.  This was a unique opportunity to experience the conference themes in action through demonstrations of Ugandan cultural practices, visits to community museums and the Kasubi Tombs UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The first Conference strand focused on safeguarding our heritage: How can various forms of cultural expression be better protected, including for indigenous communities and minority groups? In the face of increasing man-made and natural threats, what is the role for youth and heritage education? We had the opportunity to listen to committed voices and to be moved by heroic endeavours.

Who could fail to be inspired by the Bolivian Society for Historical Studies, Heritage and Restoration and its tenacious efforts to safeguard the Bickenbach country house in Cochabamba? Built in the Moorish style for the German family of Ernesto Bickenbach, the house and its garden setting became neglected and at risk of redevelopment. After a lengthy and menacing battle, the Society lobbied for the property to be expropriated and put to cultural use for the benefit of the city. They also successfully used ICOMOS’s 1981 Florence Charter to argue that the historic garden could not be separated from the house and have managed to keep the site intact for future generations.

As a self-help network, INTO seeks to facilitate the sharing of expertise and learning between our member organisations so that they are not continually reinventing the wheel. Our Conference provides the perfect space for this to happen.
- Catherine Leonard, INTO Secretary-General
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Balancing different values

As part of the second thread of the conference, delegates discussed how to balance cultural values with conservation and the need for sustainable development.

We heard from the Trust for African Rock Art (TARA), about successful efforts to engage local communities emotionally with rock art sites, finding alternative solutions to damaging practices to create sustainable tourism infrastructure. With rapidly growing populations there has been increasing pressure on the rock art sites and the conservation area through deforestation, farming, quarrying, and charcoal burning. TARA has worked with local partners to increase understanding and community engagement, without which the rock art could be completely destroyed.

Unlocking potential

Unlocking potential was the third conference strand: What can we learn from the experience of National Trusts in protecting heritage in different contexts? What new experiences and ideas exist for financing, managing, and promoting heritage development?

One workshop shone the spotlight on the different National Trusts models from Australia to Zimbabwe. We saw that although the organisations we represent are incredibly different, there are common threads running through our thinking, set-ups, priorities, what inspires us, and the challenges we face. We all have an important role to play within the INTO family and can contribute to the debate.

We are grateful to the Getty Foundation and the Helen Hamlyn Trust for their support in enabling us to involve as wide a range of delegates as possible.

INTO Entebbe 2013 Resources

Programme

Browse the INTO Entebbe 2013 programme

Entebbe Declaration

Delegates at INTO Entebbe 2013 agreed a common position on the protection and promotion of tangible and intangible heritage, especially within the least economically developed nations

Conference summary

A short summary of INTO Entebbe 2013 sent to delegates following the conference

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