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Increasingly, the role of heritage management is to anticipate and guide future environmental change rather than to simply protect landscapes of the past. This charge presents a paradox for those invested in the preservation of the past: in order to preserve the historic environment, they have to collaborate with others who wish to change it, and in order to apply their expert knowledge, they must demonstrate its benefits for policy and society. The solution advocated here is an integrative landscape approach that draws on multiple disciplines and establishes links between archaeological-historical heritage and planning and between research and policy.
Landscapes --- Patrimoine historique --- Protection. --- Philosophy and psychology of culture --- Archeology --- Netherlands --- Cultural property --- Historic preservation --- Landscape archaeology --- Archaeology --- Cultural landscapes --- Preservation, Historic --- Preservationism (Historic preservation) --- Cultural property, Protection of --- Cultural resources management --- Cultural policy --- Protection --- Government policy --- Biens culturels --- History --- History. --- Civilization, Medieval --- Manuscripts, Medieval. --- Books --- Medieval History, Book History, High Middle Ages, Manuscript culture, Culture studies.
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