
New research by Benjamin Isakhan, Lynn Meskell, and scholars from Arab Research and Analytics Associates surveyed 1,600 residents in the Syrian city of Aleppo about heritage restoration projects in order to better understand how locals in conflict zones feel about the post-war rebuilding of heritage sites and who should be involved.
The authors highlight four key themes that were identified by the survey, themes which they believe will have important implications for the future of heritage sites:
- locals don’t want heritage reconstruction to be privileged over security
- they want local religious sites rebuilt as much as significant non-religious sites
- they want heritage sites transformed into more useful structures for the community
- and they want control and agency over the future of their own heritage.
The research has been published in the International Journal of Heritage Studies, with a summary appearing online at The Conversation.
Image of the Great Mosque of Aleppo in 2013, after destruction of the minaret, by Gabriele Fangi, Wissam Wahbeh, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons (Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license).
Latest News & Alerts
March 13, 2026
In an article published by the Associated Press on March 12, 2026, USCBS President, Patty Gerstenblith, comments on cultural property protection during the current conflict and the importance of language surrounding rules of engagement. Image of [...]
March 12, 2026
In an article published on March 10, 2026, Museums Association highlighted statements and remarks made by heritage organizations expressing their concern about the conflict in Iran, the Gulf region, and the Eastern Mediterranean. The article discussed [...]
March 5, 2026
The recording of our virtual panel event, "20 Years of USCBS: Our Beginnings and Our Relevance Today," held on March 4, 2026, is now available online. Many thanks to all who tuned in during the live [...]


