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BONUS BALTSPACE has received funding from BONUS (Art 185), funded jointly by the EU and Baltic Sea national funding institutions.
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Culturally significant areas

The concept of culturally significant areas (CSA) helps planners and managers to take account of immaterial cultural values in MSP.

Areas can be defined as culturally significant for various reasons and based on different community value sets. Within Baltspace, we set out how to do a cultural values baseline as a first step in a CSA assessment.

The CSA approach is a method for identifying places of cultural importance on the coast and in the sea. It establishes what is valued by people, where these values are located, when in time they are relevant and to whom, and which places, features or areas are particularly significant compared to others.  CSAs support MSP in that they make cultural values spatially explicit, enabling them to be considered in decision-making.

Significance in this context is no absolute measure, but intimately linked to the cultural connection of a community to a given area, place or activity. CSAs must therefore be identified in a participative process based on locally relevant classifications and assessments, bearing in mind there may be issues of scale (e.g. national significance vs. local significance). 

Baltspace took the first steps towards identifying CSAs, namely a baseline assessment to determine the range (type) and spatial (and temporal) extent of cultural values in the area concerned. This can be done by referring to existing information (such as designated heritage sites), but should ideally also involve the local community and communities of interest to ask for their specific views. Mapping is an essential part of the baseline survey, although this is subject to various constraints. Baltspace used a case study area in Sweden to determine the range and spatial extent of perceived cultural values within a local community.

The training module describes CSA and the application of the concept in the project:

 

 

 

Contact

Andreas Kannen

Andreas Kannen
Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht
andreas.kannen@hzg.de
+49 4152 871 874

Partner profile

Approaches and tools

Culturally significant areas

Culturally significant areas

Marxan site selection tool

Marxan site selection tool

Spatial economic benefit analysis tool

Spatial economic benefit analysis tool

Integrated indicator system

Integrated indicator system

Bow-tie approach

Bow-tie approach

Governance baselines

Governance baselines

BALTSPACE research activities

Analytical framework

Analytical framework

Read more

Case studies

Case studies

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Approaches and tools

Approaches and tools

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MSP Dialogue Forum

MSP Dialogue Forum

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BONUS logo
EU flag
  • Home
  • News
  • Background
  • BALTSPACE research
    • Analytical framework
    • Case studies
    • Approaches and tools
      • Marxan site selection tool
      • Spatial Cost-Benefit Analysis Tool
      • Integrated indicator system
      • Bow-tie approach
      • Governance baselines
      • Open Standards
    • MSP Dialogue Forum
  • Outputs (reports, articles)
  • Partner Contacts
    • Södertörn University
    • Aarhus University
    • Swedish Institute for the Marine Environment
    • Maritime Institute in Gdańsk
    • Coastal Research and Planning Institute
    • Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht
    • Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde
    • s.Pro – sustainable projects