01296nas a2200181 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002653001800043653002200061653003300083653001500116100001300131245003100144856011800175300001000293520079100303022002001094 d10aCompagnonnage10acultural identity10aIntangible cultural heritage10aMoral turn1 aN. Adell00aHeritage, ethics, identity uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84878741304&partnerID=40&md5=5abc7de3e85693c13555e52b6a93309a a81-933 aThe notion of intangible cultural heritage adopted by UNESCO has extended the concept of heritage as a whole. It has produced, or even strengthened, a double turning point in the cultural policies of the countries that signed the 2003 Convention: a spatial turning point on one hand (where the places of crystallisation of this type of heritage play an important role due to its intangibility) and a moral turning point on the other. The author starts with a historical and ethnographic study of the complex heritage of initiatory groups of travelling workers who form a compagnonnage, a sort of guild, and develops the concept of "equitable heritage". More specifically, this notion undergoes another mutation, which leads one to think that a "good life" is a life steeped in heritage. a03919099 (ISSN)