International Museum Day 2025: The future of museums in rapidly changing communities

In this section
International Museum Day 2025: The future of museums in rapidly changing communities

What does the future of museums look like in the wake of rapidly changing communities?

This is the question the International Council of Museums seeks to explore during this year’s International Museum Day (IMD), a global event which highlights the transformative role of museums in society on the 18th of May each year. The 2025 theme focuses on how museums continue evolving alongside the technological, environmental, and societal changes we are seeing across the world.

Museums are more than spaces for preserving the past; as the International Council of Museums notes, they are “essential for building sustainable, inclusive, and forward-thinking communities.”

From their origins in 1542 to today, the University of Aberdeen’s University Collections have a long history. Today the collections, of human culture, natural sciences, and medicine, gathered throughout the university histories are a 'Recognised Collection of National Significance.' As well as having two on-campus venues open to the public – the Zoology Museum and The Gallery within the Sir Duncan Rice Library – we have curated a number of online exhibitions to ensure the University Collections are accessible to audiences around the world.

The collections continue to develop as new and important acquisitions are made, and are being reinterpreted using new techniques and re-evaluated from different perspectives. This includes reviewing the collections to identify items that were looted or unethically returned, so it can initiate discussions and respond to proposals about returning these items. To date this has included the 2021 return of a Benin Bronze, the first such return in the world by a museum, and – more recently – the return of Tasmanian ancestral remains to the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre.

Ensuring the museum and heritage sectors continue evolving alongside wider societal changes also plays a key role in the University’s delivery of museum-related programmes and courses. MLitt Museum Studies students gain an appreciation of contemporary issues museums face through choosing from optional courses which focus on emerging digital technologies as they relate to museums, or decolonising museums, which tackles one of the most pressing issues facing the sector today.

The University has also developed numerous short online courses addressing these challenges. Courses such as Digital Museum Practice and Museums and Sustainable Futures help museum and heritage professionals worldwide continue developing their skillsets.

Search News

Browse by Month

2026

  1. Jan
  2. Feb There are no items to show for February 2026
  3. Mar There are no items to show for March 2026
  4. Apr There are no items to show for April 2026
  5. May There are no items to show for May 2026
  6. Jun There are no items to show for June 2026
  7. Jul There are no items to show for July 2026
  8. Aug There are no items to show for August 2026
  9. Sep There are no items to show for September 2026
  10. Oct There are no items to show for October 2026
  11. Nov There are no items to show for November 2026
  12. Dec There are no items to show for December 2026

2004

  1. Jan
  2. Feb
  3. Mar
  4. Apr
  5. May
  6. Jun
  7. Jul
  8. Aug
  9. Sep
  10. Oct
  11. Nov There are no items to show for November 2004
  12. Dec

2003

  1. Jan
  2. Feb
  3. Mar
  4. Apr
  5. May
  6. Jun
  7. Jul
  8. Aug
  9. Sep
  10. Oct
  11. Nov
  12. Dec There are no items to show for December 2003

1999

  1. Jan There are no items to show for January 1999
  2. Feb There are no items to show for February 1999
  3. Mar
  4. Apr
  5. May
  6. Jun
  7. Jul
  8. Aug
  9. Sep
  10. Oct
  11. Nov
  12. Dec

1998

  1. Jan
  2. Feb
  3. Mar
  4. Apr There are no items to show for April 1998
  5. May
  6. Jun
  7. Jul There are no items to show for July 1998
  8. Aug There are no items to show for August 1998
  9. Sep
  10. Oct
  11. Nov There are no items to show for November 1998
  12. Dec