October 28, 2025

School of Agricultural and Environmental Engineering (ETSIAMN–UPV)
Auditorium, Building 3P, Vera Campus – Polytechnic University of Valencia

Opening session

15:30

Speakers

Constanza Rubio

Director of the Higher Technical School of Agricultural Engineering.

José Alfonso Soria

President of the Central Board of Users and Regulation Union of the Turia River and a senior representative of the Irrigation Communities in the Huerta de Valencia.

José María García Álvarez-Coque

Professor of Applied Economics (UPV) and current Chair of the Scientific Advisory Group of the FAO GIAHS Programme.

  • The opening remarks celebrated the interconnection between tradition and innovation as the foundation for dynamic conservation.
  • Constanza Rubio highlighted the university’s role as a “bridge between generations,” linking scientific knowledge with ancestral wisdom.
  • José Alfonso Soria emphasized the Huerta of Valencia as a living example of balance between culture, sustainability, and community, noting that technological innovation can serve as an ally in preserving and enhancing the traditional systems built by past generations.
  • Finally, Professor García Álvarez-Coque reflected on GIAHS sites as living systems that connect agriculture, identity, and resilience in the face of climate change.
“Dynamic conservation invites us to see tradition as something alive — capable of evolving without losing its essence.”
Constanza Rubio

Key contributions of the Opening Session to the Seminar

Set the conceptual foundation of dynamic conservation as a balance between tradition and innovation.

Strengthened the connection between academic institutions, water governance bodies, and local communities.

Positioned the Huerta of Valencia as a model GIAHS site and anchor of the system’s identity.

Introduced the idea that technology can support—not replace—traditional systems.

Marked the strategic focus of the seminar: resilience, culture, and sustainable governance.

Valorization of traditional agricultural systems at the international level

16:00

Speakers

Clelia María Puzzo

Agricultural Officer (Agrifood Systems) at FAO and participant in the PhD program in Agrifood Economics at the UPV.

Tania Eulalia Martinez Cruz

PhD in Social Sciences from the WUR, member of the FAO SIPAM Scientific Advisory Group, and specialist in knowledge management for indigenous peoples.

Tania presented a global view of traditional food systems and their relevance for food security and climate adaptation, with examples from Mexico and Chile. She emphasized how Indigenous knowledge forms resilient agroecosystems that blend biodiversity, culture, and sustainability.

Clelia explained the criteria and purpose of the GIAHS programme, describing dynamic conservation as a process that “combines tradition and innovation to support sustainable community development.”

The discussion addressed the challenges of integrating modern technologies, safeguarding traditional knowledge, and encouraging youth participation in the future of rural landscapes.

“GIAHS are not static museums — they are living systems where tradition and innovation work hand in hand.”
Clelia Puzzo

Key Contributions

Provided a global framework for understanding GIAHS as living, evolving systems.

Highlighted scientific and Indigenous knowledge as complementary forces.

Clarified FAO criteria and the meaning of dynamic conservation internationally.

Brought attention to youth involvement and knowledge transmission.

Marked the strategic focus of the seminar: resilience, culture, and sustainable governance.

Tania’s intervention
Clelia’s intervention
Clelia’s intervention

Governance and Resilience of Traditional Systems: Managing the Commons

17:00

Speaker

Catherine M. Tucker

Interdisciplinary scientist at the Department of Anthropology and the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Florida (Gainesville). Vice Chair of the Scientific Advisory Group of FAO’s GIAHS.

“The reason many forests still exist is because people know how to manage them.”
Catherine M. Tucker
  • Professor Tucker presented comparative research on 88 GIAHS sites across 26 countries, focusing on community based resource management, particularly of water systems.
  • She demonstrated that communal governance strengthens social cohesion, local knowledge, and long-term sustainability.

Key Contributions

Demonstrated how community-based resource governance strengthens resilience.

Presented comparative insights from 88 GIAHS sites in 26 countries, offering global evidence.

Emphasized trust, social cohesion, and shared responsibility as pillars of sustainability.

Contributed a clear theoretical framework for understanding common-resource management.

Reinforced the idea that heritage systems survive because communities know how to manage them.

Discussion Panel "Dynamic Conservation in Vulnerable Systems"

18:30

Participants

Carles Sanchis

President of the Governing Board of the Albufera Natural Park

Marisa Alba

Predoctoral researcher at the Department of  Economics and Social Sciences on the incorporation of Artificial Intelligence into the development of sustainable tourism in GIAHS.

Lola Vicente-Almazán

R&D&I technician in the agri-food area of València Innovation Capital, the innovation foundation of the Valencia City Council. She is responsible for the European RescueME project in Valencia and will speak about the Huerta de
Valencia as a space for resilience.

Ximena Pardo Fuentes

Predoctoral researcher in international cooperation and local development (Ingenio UPV-CSIC) on the role of women seed guardians in the GIAHS of Chiloé (Chile).

Moderator

Norat Roig Tierno

Professor of Applied Economics and member of the International Economics and Development Group (GEID) at the Universitat Politècnica de València.

The roundtable explored resilience and sustainability in fragile agricultural systems, and Huerta de Valencia as a case study.

  • Carles Sanchis discussed the hydrological and governance challenges of the Albufera Natural Park.
  • Marisa Alba presented her doctoral research on artificial intelligence and sustainable tourism in GIAHS, showing how digitalization can enhance conservation while protecting cultural identity.
  • Ximena Pardo shared her work on women seed guardians in Chiloé.
  • Lola Vicente highlighted the European RescueME project, which strengthens the Huerta of Valencia as an urban resilience landscape.

The session concluded that collaboration among science, institutions, and local communities is key to maintaining traditional agricultural systems in the face of market and climate pressures.

SIPAM Chiloé

Key Contributions

Showed diverse real-world cases (Albufera, Chile, Valencia urban resilience).

Introduced AI and digital tools as opportunities for sustainable tourism and conservation.

Highlighted the role of women as custodians of biodiversity.

Encouraged multi-actor collaboration: researchers, institutions, communities, innovation sectors.

Provided practical examples of adaptation strategies in vulnerable agricultural landscapes.

L’Horta de València
L’Horta de València
Map of the Albufera
Map of the Albufera
Privacy preferences center

When you visit any website, it may obtain or save information in your browser, generally through the use of cookies. This information may be about you, your preferences, or your device, and is mainly used to make the site work as expected. The information does not usually directly identify you, but it can give you a more personalized web experience. Because we respect your right to privacy, you can choose not to allow some types of cookies. Click on the different category headings to find out more and change our default settings. However, blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience of the site and the services we are able to offer.

More information

Technical cookies

These are those that allow the user to navigate through a website, platform or application and the use of the different options or services that exist therein, such as, for example, controlling traffic and data communication, identifying the session, accessing restricted access parts, remembering the elements that make up an order, carrying out the purchase process of an order, making the request for registration or participation in an event, using security elements during navigation, storing content for the dissemination of videos or sound or sharing content through social networks.

Analysis or measurement cookies

These are those that allow the person responsible for them to monitor and analyze the behavior of the users of the websites to which they are linked. The information collected through this type of cookies is used to measure the activity of the websites, application or platform and to create navigation profiles of the users of said sites, applications and platforms, in order to introduce improvements based on the analysis of the data on the use made by the users of the service.