Preservation of Scientific and Cultural Heritage in Balkan Countries
Özet
Purpose – The peoples living in the Balkan Peninsula over centuries have created a very rich
cultural heritage and the constant political upheavals in the region have affected the development and
preservation of their cultures. This paper aims to review the internet infrastructure and networked
readiness levels of the Balkan countries, which are conducive to scientific co-operation and
preservation of digitised cultural heritage. It also explores the destructive effects of wars on the
cultural riches of the region.
Design/methodology/approach – The internet facilities and the scientific production of the Balkan
countries were identified using published sources and Thomson’s Web of Science database. A
game-theoretic approach was used to expound the consequences of wars and the adverse effects of the
nation-building process on cultural heritage artefacts.
Findings – Balkan countries lack sound internet infrastructures, hindering their contributions to the
world of science and stifling scientific co-operation among themselves in terms of joint papers. The
co-ordinated efforts have yet to exist to streamline the digital preservation of the unique cultural
heritage of the Balkan countries.
Originality/value – This paper discusses the impact of the nation-building process on cultural and
scientific heritage artefacts using the concepts of the “game theory”. It reinforces the fact that
destroying the cultural heritage artefacts during wars is not a “zero-sum game” in which the dominant
culture wins and the “other” culture loses. It is not even a “lose-lose game” in which both parties lose.
Rather, humanity loses part of its whole cultural heritage forever
Bağlantı
http://bby.hacettepe.edu.tr/yayinlar/tonta-balkan-2009.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/11655/9952