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LEBANON - CIVIL WAR (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   125006


Pity the nation: Lebanon at war / Fisk, Robert 2001  Book
Fisk, Robert Book
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Edition 3rd ed.
Publication Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2001.
Description xxi, 727p.Pbk
Standard Number 9780192801302
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
057504956.92044/FIS 057504MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   084765


When memory repeats itself: the politics of heritage in post civil war Lebanon / Volk, Lucia   Journal Article
Volk, Lucia Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract On 4 August 2005 the Lebanese English-language paper the Daily Star reported that Lebanon's ancient inscriptions at Nahr al-Kalb had been accepted into the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's (UNESCO's) collection of "worldwide rare documents" through its Memory of the World Programme. UNESCO established the Memory of the World Programme in 1992, after realizing that its World Heritage Programme, which seeks to protect historic landscapes and architectural landmarks, did not safeguard a category of less visible, yet equally important, documents of the past: texts. The Memory of the World Programme made the preservation of "documentary heritage [which] reflects the diversity of languages, peoples and cultures" its goal, hoping that its work would help prevent "collective amnesia." An eight-member Lebanese national committee made up of cultural and political elites affiliated with Lebanon's Ministry of Culture and Lebanese University, the country's largest public university, submitted a unanimous proposal to UNESCO's International Advisory Committee (IAC) to include Nahr al-Kalb in its collection of "documentary heritage." The IAC reviewed and accepted the proposal in June 2005, placing the inscriptions along the river of Nahr al-Kalb in the company of 156 other universally memorable texts from around the world.
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