Asset integrity
Introduction
Cultural heritage is the cultural heritage of a community's past, maintained to the present day and transmitted to future generations.[1].
The entities that identify and classify certain assets as relevant to the culture of a people, a region or all of humanity, also ensure the safeguarding and protection of these assets, so that they are properly preserved for future generations and that they can be an object of study and a source of emotional experiences for all those who use, enjoy or visit them.
International protection
The Convention on the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage[2] was adopted by the General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) on November 16, 1972, whose objective was to promote the identification, protection and preservation of cultural and natural heritage considered especially valuable to humanity.[3].
As a complement to that treaty, UNESCO approved, on October 7, 2003, the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage,[4] which defined that:
Some heritage experts and museologists who study cultural links with nature or natural heritage have warned about the specific consequences of environmental alterations both in folk music[5] and in the production of traditional crafts[6] and in the survival of deities, myths and popular legends.[7] They maintain that the destruction of nature blurs the identity of people. In particular, those of those who have best preserved their traditions or worldviews, as is usually the case of indigenous or aboriginal people.
National cultural heritage
Virtually all countries have legislation aimed at the protection of their own cultural heritage. Based on this legislation, the real estate and personal property that must be protected is declared, establishing a regime that regulates its use, conservation and restoration.
Extensive information on the cultural heritage of different countries can be consulted in the article National monument.