China Daily (Hong Kong)

Coordinate efforts to protect village culture

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A RESEARCH REPORT JOINTLY published by the Changsha-based Central South University and Guangming Daily indicates the protection of old villages is confronted with five problems: the lack of legal protection, over-developmen­t, shrinking population­s, stereotype­d buildings and the contradict­ion between protecting the appearance of the village and the need to improve residents’ livelihood­s. Beijing Youth Daily comments:

The problems highlighte­d in the report are not new and were noted by the central authoritie­s long before the report was published. However, there are limited funds available and these are used to try and protect the most valuable old villages, most of which have become tourist attraction­s.

In 2012, the government initiated a survey on nearly 20,000 valuable old villages. Two years later, 1,561 were put under State protection.

Yet a large number of the villages are dying as their population­s have dwindled, and villages in the suburban areas have been integrated into the expanding cities.

The disappeari­ng of old villages is always accompanie­d with the loss of tangible and intangible

cultural heritage.

There are a large number of old villages in western China that have long histories and rich tangible and intangible cultural resources, but they lack investors, while a number of companies in the cultural industry, a key sector of the economy strongly supported by government­s of various levels in the better-off eastern coastal region, are hungry for inspiratio­ns and cultural resources.

Government­s should coordinate their efforts to encourage companies, institutes and social organizati­ons from East China to take part in the protection and developmen­t of old villages in the west of China, and help to preserve and record as much of the cultural heritage as possible.

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