A/HRC/58/60
77.
Various stakeholders may have an interest in the digitalization of cultural
heritage, ranging from source and heritage communities, public bodies, museums and
libraries, teachers and academics, and private companies. Such parties do not all have
the same level of rights in terms of digitalization. The Special Rapporteur emphasizes
the need for source communities to be given the first say in decision-making regarding
the digitalization of their heritage. For example, if the source community is an
Indigenous People, it will have the right to free, prior and informed consent derived
from the right to self-determination. Minorities must be guaranteed effective
participation. The heritage community will have more of a say than a private company,
the aim of which is not necessarily the protection of heritage but economic benefits.
78.
Digitalization is not a neutral exercise. Attention should be paid to ensuring that
it does not perpetuate historical bias and prejudice, maintain power structures or
decontextualize cultural heritage.
79.
Participation is an essential prerequisite of the right to heritage and cultural
rights. It is a right that must be enjoyed by all, at different levels and in different ways.
The various elements of participation must continuously be reflected upon and
re-evaluated at all phases of the digitalization process, as well as after the item has been
digitalized. Source and heritage communities must also participate in sharing the
benefits of digitalization processes.
80.
Maintaining open access to cultural heritage is an important element of the right
of everyone to heritage. However, open access must not lead to less control on the part
of the original source community to the benefit of the commercial interests of the owners
of digital copies of the heritage.
81.
To this end, intellectual property regimes must adopt a cultural rights approach
as a matter of urgency. Although some specific initiatives may bring positive results,
unless and until the intellectual property systems address holistically and coherently
the limitations of copyright in digitalization, intellectual property will not ensure the
non-violation of cultural rights.
82.
States must prioritize investments in financial, human and technological
resources to address key challenges, including ethical practices, cultural sovereignty
and the meaningful participation of source and heritage communities.
83.
The digital divide remains a significant barrier, particularly for marginalized
communities who often lack access to digital resources and technologies and whose
heritage may be excluded from digitization efforts. Careful attention must be given to
this infrastructure to ensure that local, heritage and Indigenous communities are
adequately consulted and that digitalization efforts respect their protocols, priorities
and the meaning they convey to their heritage assets.
84.
To ensure culturally diverse and inclusive digital heritage repositories and
collections, Governments, public and private cultural institutions and professionals in
the field of digitalization should:
(a)
Adopt a cultural rights perspective that respects source and heritage
communities’ authority over their heritage;
(b)
Identify and involve diverse teams representing the various source
communities from which the materials originate;
(c)
Ensure that all individuals have meaningful participation in the various
elements and phases of digitalization on the basis of their interests and their different
roles;
(d)
Ensure that Indigenous communities be accorded free, prior and
informed consent in all matters that affect them in the digitalizing of cultural heritage;
(e)
Expand funding for community support and align open access efforts with
key actors;
(f)
Ensure broad accessibility for all, including by diversifying the languages
represented online to explain and contextualize heritage assets;
GE.25-01705
19