Tehran – University professor and researcher Hojatra Farahani emphasizes the important role of empowering artisans with resilience and perseverance to navigate the inevitable crisis.
He emphasized the use of Indigenous peoples’ capabilities as a means to minimize damage and achieve sustainable development.
He told the IRNA: “It is inevitable that we will launch workshops that focus on the emergence of crises in human society, and we are confident that these crises are natural, whether human crises existed at the same time as human life, and that what we face and continue to continue to them allows humans to continue.
“The workshop I will be hosting is called “Handicrafts in an Era of Crisis: Strategies for Resilience, Survival and Reconstruction,” and within this workshop we will discuss ways to have practical solutions for resilience in times of crisis and how to create a platform for survival and reconstruction for survival and reconstruction after a crisis. Promoting craft activists in rural settings, small towns, and even big cities will help you significantly reduce this vulnerability, or some of it, prepare you to anticipate the essentials needed to deal with the workshop crisis, prepare you to know how to maintain your business to maintain the crisis to turn existing threats into opportunities, and what actions to take.
He added: “One of the characteristics of a crisis is that it is a combination of threats and change. In fact, we should not see a crisis from the negative aspects. There is an opportunity at every depth of change. If we encounter it wisely, these opportunities can turn into stepping stones.
Moradkhani explained: “This workshop will divide the area of handicrafts during the crisis and their business exposure into three stages: pre-crisis stage, during the crisis, after the crisis, after each of these stages. There will also be cyberspace, communications networks, posts and events within Iran.
In fact, this view is completely localized. Define goals for stages during crisis, detail their applications, and the post-crisis phase identify the solutions presented. ”
He added that the interdisciplinary nature of the workshop is defined as all destinations of the workshop are involved in the handicraft sector and the target audience is thought to be broadly handicraft activists, researchers, students and managers of the public and private sectors. He pointed out that in some way each person will definitely be involved in the field, in some way, and they will take part in this work, and of course sharing the topics of these trainings leads to synergistic effects.
“In the field of handicrafts, the more resilient activists in many ways, including students, researchers, managers and craft producers, the more effective the movement of this ecosystem to sustainable development is undoubtedly better and more effective. It certainly does not promote revival, revival, revival.
He said: “The problem of promoting different ecosystems of innovative ecosystems is the strategic axis of the world. It is placed in the macropolicies of different countries. There are two very important aspects here: these two social and economic aspects.”
“Achieving this potential across the nation through training and capabilities of innovative industries and innovative economies will lift the burden off the shoulders of official bodies. Also, more self-employed or freelancers will take over and move forward, and this trend will increase exponentially within the country.”
KD
