<P> The site was inscribed on the list in 2011 by the World Heritage Committee at its 35th session in Paris, France . The site was inscribed on the basis of Criterion (iii), "bearing unique testimony to a cultural tradition", as it is an outstanding example of Mediterranean agro-pastoralism, and Criterion (v), "an outstanding example of human interaction with the environment", as the landscape demonstrates the way the system has developed over millennia . </P> <P> The site was originally added to France's Tentative List in 2002 and was considered for inscription by the Committee at its 30th session in Vilnius, Lithuania under criteria (v) and (vi). ICOMOS recommending deferring inscription . France framed Criterion (v) for the site as being the "last bastion of the agropastoral system in Western Europe" while ICOMOS considered this to not be the case . Criterion (vi) was framed as the site "keeps alive the memory of episodes related to the diffusion of French Protestantism, fights with the Catholic Church, and the development of ideas of liberty and freedom". ICOMOS considered that this element was not of universal significance, but of national significance only as sites elsewhere in Europe also testify to the persecution of Protestants and the impact thereof on national history . In 2009, ICOMOS also requested that France justify the boundary of the property and provide a basis for managing and sustaining the site's agro-pastoral traditions . When France resubmitted its nomination file, focus was laid on the historic aspect of pastoralism and its impact to the site's cultural development, while reference to the site's testament to historical events, Criterion (vi), was dropped . The site successfully inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2011 . </P>

The causses and the cévennes mediterranean agro-pastoral cultural landscape