Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - Measures for the protection and inheritance of intangible cultural heritage

Measures for the protection and inheritance of intangible cultural heritage

Legal analysis: 1, filing: establishing a complete file for the application project through collection, recording, classification, cataloging, etc.;

2. Preservation: Use text, audio, video, digital multimedia and other means to make true, comprehensive and systematic records of the protected objects, actively collect relevant physical information, and select relevant institutions to properly preserve and rationally use it;

3. Inheritance: Through social education, school education and other means, the intangible cultural heritage can be inherited and carried forward as a living cultural tradition in relevant communities, especially young people;

4. Dissemination: Use festival activities, exhibitions, observation, training, professional seminars and other forms to deepen the public’s understanding and understanding of this heritage through mass media and Internet publicity, and promote social sharing;

5. Protection: Take practical and specific measures to ensure the preservation, inheritance and development of the intangible cultural heritage and its intellectual achievements, and protect the cultural expressions and culture passed down from generation to generation by the inheritors (groups) of the heritage. The rights and interests enjoyed by the space must, in particular, prevent the misunderstanding, distortion or abuse of intangible cultural heritage.

Legal basis: "Interim Measures for the Application and Assessment of National Intangible Cultural Heritage Representative Works" Article 7 The application project must propose a feasible ten-year protection plan and commit to taking corresponding specific measures for effective protection. These measures mainly include:

(1) File creation: Establish a complete file for the application project through collection, recording, classification, cataloging, etc.;

(2) Preservation: Use text, audio, video, digital multimedia and other means to make true, comprehensive and systematic records of the protected objects, actively collect relevant physical information, and select relevant institutions to properly preserve and rationally use it;

(3) Inheritance: Through social education, school education and other means, the intangible cultural heritage can be inherited and carried forward by successors, so that it can continue to be inherited and carried forward as a living cultural tradition in relevant communities, especially young people;

(4) Communication: Use festival activities, exhibitions, observation, training, professional seminars and other forms to deepen the public's understanding and understanding of this heritage through mass media and Internet publicity, and promote social enjoyment;

(5) Protection: Take practical and specific measures to ensure the preservation, inheritance and development of the intangible cultural heritage and its intellectual achievements, and protect the inheritors (groups) of the heritage from the cultural expressions and forms passed down from generation to generation. The rights enjoyed by cultural spaces must, in particular, prevent misunderstanding, distortion or abuse of intangible cultural heritage.