Skip to content
Policy|Belgium|EU level

European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018

Project title

European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018

Description of initiative

The proposal for this thematic year came from the European Commission and it was adopted by Decision (EU) 2017/864 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 May 2017. EYCH was a wide-ranging and inclusive initiative involving all EU institutions, all EU Member States, 9 partner countries (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Georgia, Iceland, Norway and Switzerland), as well as a broad array of cultural stakeholders. In EU Member States and in associated countries it was implemented by National Coordinators designated by the relevant Ministries.
The aim of the European Year was to encourage more people to discover and engage with Europe's cultural heritage, and to reinforce a sense of belonging to a common European space. The general objectives were: to encourage and support the efforts of the Union, the Member States and regional and local authorities, in cooperation with the cultural heritage sector and broader civil society, to protect, safeguard, reuse, enhance, valorise and promote Europe's cultural heritage. It created the momentum for cultural heritage to be placed higher on the EU’s agenda, through an integrated approach.
In order to prepare the European Year, a special edition of the Eurobarometer survey was carried out in late 2017, according to which 71% Europeans agreed that cultural heritage can improve quality of life. The types of actions during EYCH consisted in: initiatives and events to promote debate and raise awareness of the importance and value of cultural heritage and to facilitate engagement with citizens and stakeholders; information, exhibitions, education and awareness-raising campaigns to convey values such as diversity and intercultural dialogue; the sharing of experience and good practices of national, regional and local administrations and other organisations, and the dissemination of information about cultural heritage, including via Europeana; studies and research and innovation activities and the dissemination of their results on a European or national scale; and the promotion of projects and networks connected to the European Year.
EYCH highlighted the contribution of sustainable cultural tourism to urban and regional development and was an opportunity to explore how to balance the sustainability of cultural heritage with the benefits of tourism, not just in economic terms, but also for the well-being of local communities.

Further information on the initiative

Themes: Culture and...

Individual well-being
Community well-being
Quality of spaces and built environments
Quality of social relations
Quality of services for specific groups

Keywords

EU policy initiative, thematic year, cultural heritage, quality of life, community well-being

Target group

Adults | Children | Early age | Older people | Youth

Cultural field

Heritage

Timeframe

2018 - 2018

Sources of funding

The European Commission made funding available for cultural heritage projects across different EU funding programmes. In order to fund the preparation of the Year, EUR 1 million was financed from existing resources in the 2017 budget. For the 2018 budget, EUR 3 million came from the Creative Europe Programme and EUR 4 million were reallocated from other existing resources (e.g. Erasmus+, Europe for Citizens, Horizon 2020 and other EU programmes).

Results, benefits, impact and lessons learnt

According to the ”Report from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions on the implementation, results and overall assessment of the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018”, EYCH had a positive impact on the perception of Europe’s cultural heritage as a powerful resource for Europe. Overall over 23 000 events were organised in 2018, reaching more than 12.8 million participants. The Commission launched a dedicated call for proposals under the Creative Europe programme and, as a result, 29 transnational cooperation projects were selected out of 77 applications, for a total amount of 4.8 million euro. The European Year led to numerous deliverables and policy outcomes, such as the European Framework for Action on Cultural Heritage, which sets out a common direction for heritage-related activities at European level, primarily in EU policies and programmes.

Organizer(s)

European Commission
Belgium
Public / State | Other